| Literature DB >> 28775669 |
Andrei Angelescu1, Giorgio Arcadi2.
Abstract
We will investigate the scenario in which the Standard Model (SM) Higgs sector and its two-doublet extension (called the Two Higgs Doublet Model or 2HDM) are the "portal" for the interactions between the Standard Model and a fermionic Dark Matter (DM) candidate. The latter is the lightest stable neutral particle of a family of vector-like leptons (VLLs). We will provide an extensive overview of this scenario combining the constraints coming purely from DM phenomenology with more general constraints like Electroweak Precision Test (EWPT) as well as with collider searches. In the case that the new fermionic sector interacts with the SM Higgs sector, constraints from DM phenomenology force the new states to lie above the TeV scale. This requirement is relaxed in the case of 2HDM. Nevertheless, strong constraints coming from EWPTs and the Renormalization Group Equations (RGEs) limit the impact of VLFs on collider phenomenology.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28775669 PMCID: PMC5512533 DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-017-5015-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Phys J C Part Fields ISSN: 1434-6044 Impact factor: 4.590
Fig. 1Allowed values of S and T [46] at, from the innermost to the outermost ellipse, 68, 95.5 and 99.7% confidence level (CL)
Fig. 2Model points satisfying EWPT and Higgs width constraints and providing the correct DM relic density (see main text for clarification) reported in the bidimensional plane . The blue region is excluded by current constraints from DM direct detection
Fig. 3Top panel evolution of the Higgs quartic coupling with the energy scale for three assignations, i.e. 0.5, 1 and 2, of the Yukawa coupling . The VLL have been assumed to be at a scale while the neutral Yukawa coupling has been set to 0.01. The other two Yukawa couplings have been set to zero in order to have a SM-like diphoton rate for the Higgs boson. Bottom panel evolution of the scale , defined by with the coupling . The other parameters have been set as in the upper panel
Fig. 4Constraints in the plane on the four types of flavor-conserving 2HDMs, coming from Higgs signal strength measurements [47, 48]. The signal strengths we have considered are (red), (gray), and (blue)
Couplings of the Higgses to the SM fermions as a function of the angles and and in the alignment limit where
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Fig. 5Impact of EWPT constraints in the bidimensional plane for two fixed assignations of , i.e. 500 and 800 GeV. The blue, purple, orange and red regions represent the allowed parameter space for, respectively, . The green points represent the configurations allowed by the constraints reported in Eqs. (34) and (35)
Fig. 6Contours of the process for the two values (upper panel) and (lower panel), as function of the parameters (see main text). In both plots we have considered type-I 2HDM with . The yellow region in the left panel is excluded by present LHC searches. In the region at the left of the 1 fb (upper panel) and 0.05 fb (lower panel) contours, the production cross section varies in a negligible way with and basically coincides with the prediction of the 2HDM without VLLs. The blue region corresponds to theoretically inconsistent, because of RGE effects, values of the Yukawa parameters
Fig. 7Two examples of resolution of the RGE equations. The corresponding assignations of the relevant model parameters are reported on top of the panels. In the upper panel the initial values of the Yukawa couplings are sufficiently small such that the conditions (34) and (35) are satisfied up to energy scales of the order of . In the lower panel the assignation of the Yukawas causes, instead, the couplings to become negative already at the energy threshold of the VLLs
Fig. 8Isocontours of the correct DM relic density in the bidimensional plane for two values of , (upper panel) 1 and (lower panel) 45, and for the following assignations of the other parameters of the fermion sector: , , . We have finally set and considered the three values of 500 GeV, 750 GeV and 1 TeV
Fig. 9Comparison between the different DM constraints from one of the benchmarks considered in Fig. 8. In addition to the already considered constraints from relic density and DD the figure reports (in orange) the excluded region by searches of gamma-rays in DSph [81] as well as the limit (yellow dashed line) from gamma-ray lines [82]
Fig. 10Top panel isocontours of the correct DM relic density in the bidimensional plane for , , , and two assignations of , i.e. 0.1 and 1. Notice that we have set . Bottom panel isocontours of the correct relic density, assuming , for two values of , namely 5 and , and the corresponding excluded region by LUX, in, respectively, blue and dark blue
Fig. 11Isocontour (purple line) in the bidimensional plane of the correct DM relic density for . The orange region is excluded by searches of gamma-ray signals in DSph. The coupling has been set to to evade constraints from DM direct detection
Fig. 12Model points satisfying the correct DM relic density and passing EWPT, perturbativity and unitarity constraints, in the bidimensional plane . The blue region is excluded by current limits by LUX while the purple and magenta regions represent the reach of Xenon1T and LZ
Fig. 13Decay branching ratios of the heavy CP-even (top panel) and CP-odd (bottom panel) scalar into , as function of their masses
Fig. 14Production cross section for the process for the set of models with viable relic density. The colors distinguish the type of 2HDM realizations. The gray region is excluded by current limits [87, 88]
Fig. 15Upper panel cross section for type-II 2HDM. Lower panel for 2HDM type-I realizations in the low regime. In both plots the points follow a color code according to the value of . The gray regions are already experimentally excluded
Fig. 16Expected diphoton cross section, as function of for the model points featuring the correct DM relic density and pass constraints from EWPT, perturbativity and unitarity. The red points refer to type-I couplings of the Higgs doublets while the blue ones to the other type of couplings considered in this work
Fig. 17Main constraints from dark matter phenomenology, i.e. in the two proposed scenarios for flavor conserving VLF sector
Fig. 18Summary plots including all the constraints discussed throughout this work. Each of the three panels of the figure refers to a different regime of values of (see main text for details), indicated on the top of each panel