Supersymmetry at a 28 TeV hadron collider: HE-LHC
Amin Aboubrahim, Pran Nath

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the potential of the proposed 28 TeV HE-LHC collider to discover supersymmetry, demonstrating it could significantly outperform the HL-LHC in discovery speed and reach within supergravity models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of HE-LHC's capability to discover supersymmetry, identifying benchmarks beyond HL-LHC reach and comparing discovery timelines.
Findings
HE-LHC can discover certain supersymmetry models in weeks to 1.5 years.
Some models require 5-8 years at HL-LHC but only weeks at HE-LHC.
HE-LHC significantly extends supersymmetry discovery potential.
Abstract
The discovery of the Higgs boson at GeV indicates that the scale of weak scale supersymmetry is higher than what was perceived in the pre-Higgs boson discovery era and lies in the several TeV region. This makes the discovery of supersymmetry more challenging and argues for hadron colliders beyond LHC at TeV. The Future Circular Collider (FCC) study at CERN is considering a 100 TeV collider to be installed in a 100 km tunnel in the Lake Geneva basin. Another 100 km collider being considered in China is the Super proton-proton Collider (SppC). A third possibility recently proposed is the High-Energy LHC (HE-LHC) which would use the existing CERN tunnel but achieve a center-of-mass energy of 28 TeV by using FCC magnet technology at significantly higher luminosity than at the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC). In this work we investigate the potential of HE-LHC for the…
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