Probing a Heavy Dark $Z$ Boson at Multi-TeV Muon Colliders: Leveraging the Optimized Recoil Mass Technique
Kingman Cheung, Jinheung Kim, Soojin Lee, Prasenjit Sanyal, and, Jeonghyeon Song

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of multi-TeV muon colliders to detect heavy dark Z bosons using an optimized recoil mass technique, improving sensitivity across a range of masses and decay modes, surpassing proton collider capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces an optimized recoil mass method with mass-dependent cuts, enhancing detection sensitivity for heavy dark Z bosons at muon colliders across various decay channels.
Findings
Achieves sensitivity to kinetic mixing parameter down to 10^{-3}
Surpasses the reach of 100 TeV proton-proton colliders
Effective even if Z_D decays into dark-sector particles
Abstract
We investigate the discovery potential of multi-TeV muon colliders for a heavy dark boson () with a mass above 1 TeV through the associated production channel . This process enables precise reconstruction using the photon recoil mass (). Focusing on the and decay modes, we present strategies for achieving high sensitivity to the kinetic mixing parameter at 3, 6, and 10 TeV muon colliders with integrated luminosities of 1, 4, and 10 ab respectively, assuming decays exclusively into Standard Model particles. A key innovation is our optimized implementation of -dependent cuts on , which accounts for the energy-dependent detector response. For heavier , the associated photon becomes less…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle Detector Development and Performance
