Imperial College London

ProfessorRobertoTrotta

Faculty of Natural SciencesDepartment of Physics

Visiting Professor
 
 
 
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Contact

 

+44 (0)20 7594 7793r.trotta Website CV

 
 
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Assistant

 

Mrs Sheila Ekudo +44 (0)20 7594 2086

 
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Location

 

1009Blackett LaboratorySouth Kensington Campus

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Summary

 

Publications

Citation

BibTex format

@article{Strege:2013:04/013,
author = {Strege, C and Bertone, G and Feroz, F and Fornasa, M and Ruiz, de Austri R and Trotta, R},
doi = {04/013},
journal = {JOURNAL OF COSMOLOGY AND ASTROPARTICLE PHYSICS},
title = {Global fits of the cMSSM and NUHM including the LHC Higgs discovery and new XENON100 constraints},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1475-7516/2013/04/013},
volume = {2013},
year = {2013}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - We present global fits of the constrained Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (cMSSM) and the Non-Universal Higgs Model (NUHM), including the most recent CMS constraint on the Higgs boson mass, 5.8 fb−1 integrated luminosity null Supersymmetry searches by ATLAS, the new LHCb measurement of BR(bar Bs → μ+μ−) and the 7-year WMAP dark matter relic abundance determination. We include the latest dark matter constraints from the XENON100 experiment, marginalising over astrophysical and particle physics uncertainties. We present Bayesian posterior and profile likelihood maps of the highest resolution available today, obtained from up to 350M points. We find that the new constraint on the Higgs boson mass has a dramatic impact, ruling out large regions of previously favoured cMSSM and NUHM parameter space. In the cMSSM, light sparticles and predominantly gaugino-like dark matter with a mass of a few hundred GeV are favoured. The NUHM exhibits a strong preference for heavier sparticle masses and a Higgsino-like neutralino with a mass of 1 TeV. The future ton-scale XENON1T direct detection experiment will probe large portions of the currently favoured cMSSM and NUHM parameter space. The LHC operating at 14 TeV collision energy will explore the favoured regions in the cMSSM, while most of the regions favoured in the NUHM will remain inaccessible. Our best-fit points achieve a satisfactory quality-of-fit, with p-values ranging from 0.21 to 0.35, so that none of the two models studied can be presently excluded at any meaningful significance level.
AU - Strege,C
AU - Bertone,G
AU - Feroz,F
AU - Fornasa,M
AU - Ruiz,de Austri R
AU - Trotta,R
DO - 04/013
PY - 2013///
SN - 1475-7516
TI - Global fits of the cMSSM and NUHM including the LHC Higgs discovery and new XENON100 constraints
T2 - JOURNAL OF COSMOLOGY AND ASTROPARTICLE PHYSICS
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1475-7516/2013/04/013
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/28635
VL - 2013
ER -