Probing a new strongly interacting sector via composite diboson resonances
P. Ko, Chaehyun Yu, Tzu-Chiang Yuan

TL;DR
This paper explores the possibility that a diphoton resonance at the LHC arises from a composite (pseudo)scalar boson made of new hyperquarks confined by a hypercolor force, and discusses how to test this scenario through various collider processes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel composite hypercolor model explaining diphoton resonances with specific testable predictions for LHC experiments.
Findings
Constraints on hypercolor model parameters from LHC data
Predictions for spin and quantum numbers of resonance partners
Potential signals in dijet and monojet+monophoton channels
Abstract
Diphoton resonance was a crucial discovery mode for the 125 GeV SM Higgs boson at the LHC. This mode or the more general diboson modes may also play an important role in probing for new physics beyond the SM. In this paper, we consider the possibility that a diphoton resonance is due to a composite (pseudo)scalar boson, whose constituents are either new hyperquarks Q or scalar hyperquarks tilde{Q} confined by a new hypercolor force at a confinement scale Lambda_h. Assuming the mass m_Q (or m_{tilde Q}) >> Lambda_h, a diphoton resonance could be interpreted as either a Q bar{Q} state eta_Q with J^{PC} = 0^{-+} or a tilde{Q} tilde{Q}^dagger state eta_{tilde Q} with J^{PC}=0^{++}. For the Q bar{Q} scenario, there will be a spin-triplet partner psi_Q which is slightly heavier than eta_Q due to the hyperfine interactions mediated by hypercolor gluon exchange; while for the tilde{Q}…
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