The LHC has ruled out Supersymmetry -- really?
L. Constantin, S. Kraml, F. Mahmoudi

TL;DR
This paper reviews the impact of LHC results on supersymmetry, highlighting that no supersymmetric particles have been detected yet and discussing the future prospects of discovering them.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of how LHC findings challenge the viability of weak-scale supersymmetry and explores future discovery possibilities.
Findings
LHC has not detected supersymmetric particles
Supersymmetry's viability is increasingly questioned
Future searches may still uncover supersymmetric particles
Abstract
Despite early hopes that the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) would quickly unveil supersymmetric particles, none have been detected to date. This review examines the impact of the LHC results on the viability of weak-scale supersymmetry, and discusses whether the possibility of discovering supersymmetric particles remains within reach.
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