Abstract

Searches for supersymmetry (SUSY) at the LHC frequently assume the conservation of -parity in their design, optimization, and interpretation. In the case that -parity is not conserved, constraints on SUSY particle masses tend to be weakened with respect to -parity-conserving models. We review the current status of searches for -parity-violating (RPV) supersymmetry models at the ATLAS and CMS experiments, limited to 8 TeV search results published or submitted for publication as of the end of March 2015. All forms of renormalisable RPV terms leading to prompt signatures have been considered in the set of analyses under review. Discussing results for searches for prompt -parity-violating SUSY signatures summarizes the main constraints for various RPV models from LHC Run I and also defines the basis for promising signal regions to be optimized for Run II. In addition to identifying highly constrained regions from existing searches, also gaps in the coverage of the parameter space of RPV SUSY are outlined.

1. Introduction

One of the primary objectives of the detectors at the LHC is the search for new particles and phenomena not described by the Standard Model (SM) of particle physics. Weak-scale supersymmetry (SUSY) [19] is a well-motivated and well-studied example of a theory beyond the SM (BSM) used to guide many of these searches. One attractive feature of SUSY is that it can solve the SM hierarchy problem [1015] if the gluino, higgsino, and top squark masses are not much higher than the TeV scale. Closely related to this is the paradigm of naturalness, and see, for example, [16, 17].

In this document, we review constraints on SUSY models in the presence of lepton- or baryon-number violating interactions ( and , resp.) at the end of LHC Run I. These interactions are present in generic SUSY models with minimal particle content. They are renormalizable and are described by the following superpotential terms:In this notation, and indicate the lepton and quark SU(2)-doublet superfields, respectively, while , , and are the corresponding singlet superfields. The indices , , and refer to quark and lepton generations. The Higgs SU(2)-doublet superfield contains the Higgs field that couples to up-type quarks. The , , and parameters are new Yukawa couplings, referred to as trilinear -parity-violating couplings. The parameters have dimensions of mass and are present in models with bilinear -parity violation (). The terms in (1a) and (1b) are forbidden in many models of SUSY by the imposition of -parity conservation (RPC) [10, 1821] in order to prevent rapid proton decay. However, proton decay can also be prevented by suppressing only one of or , in which case some -parity-violating interactions remain in the theory.

Introducing RPV couplings in the minimal supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) can significantly weaken mass and cross section limits from collider experiments and also provide a rich phenomenology; see, for example, the articles [2224] or [25, 26]. A systematic phenomenological overview of possible signatures for specific RPV scenarios is summarized in [26] going through all possible mass orderings and determining the dominant decay signatures. Many papers have investigated signatures beyond the focus of most searches for SUSY at the LHC. Among such challenging scenarios are highly collimated LSP decay products [27, 28], same-sign dilepton signatures [29, 30], taus and -jets with reduced missing transverse energy [31], resonances of dijets [32, 33], high object multiplicities [34], or, more specifically, a charged lepton plus multiple jets [35].

In this note, we review the current constraints from various ATLAS and CMS searches for SUSY based on approximately 20 fb−1 of collision data with  TeV collected in 2012. This review is organized as follows: After a short overview of -parity-violating parameters and previous constraints of RPV SUSY in Section 2, the main characteristics of analyses searching for RPV SUSY at ATLAS and CMS are presented in Section 3. The next sections focus on the results assuming the dominance of particular -parity-violating couplings: After the results for scenarios in Section 4, several limits for simplified models assuming , , or a combination of and relevant for resonance production are discussed in Sections 5, 6, and 7, respectively. In order to constrain models based on couplings, Section 8 summarizes several results both from ATLAS and from CMS searches. Finally, conclusions from -parity-violating searches at LHC Run I are drawn and some implications for strategies to investigate uncovered parts of the RPV SUSY parameter space for Run II are outlined.

2. -Parity-Violating Parameters and Constraints

For each particle, -parity is defined as in terms of the corresponding spin, baryon, and leptons numbers. All Standard Model particles and the Higgs bosons have even -parity, while all supersymmetric particles (sparticles) have odd -parity. As described, for example, in [36], an extension of the minimal supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) with -parity-violating interactions, does not extend the number of the supersymmetric particles. Direct phenomenological consequences of -parity-violating interactions are as follows:(i)The lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) is not necessarily stable.(ii)Sparticles can also be produced in odd numbers; in particular single-sparticle production is possible.

Conversely, in -parity-conserving models, only pair production of SUSY particles is possible in collision processes, with the stable LSP being a possible candidate for dark matter. An excellent review of LHC Run I searches with one focus on RPC SUSY is given by [37]. In this section a short overview of RPV parameters and also of constraints previous to LHC searches is given.

2.1. Parameters for RPV SUSY

The number of -parity-violating parameters can be obtained from (1a) and (1b): Counting the possible generation indices in the terms and leads to 3 and 27 parameters, respectively. As explained, for example, in [22], antisymmetries in the summation over gauge indices, suppressed in the notation of (1a) and (1b), lead to and . Due to these antisymmetric relations, 9 independent -parity-violating parameters of type and arise, respectively. The structure of trilinear -parity-violating couplings leads to Feynman diagrams as illustrated in Figure 1 from [22].

Possible signatures implied in various RPV scenarios are summarized in [26]. Although the majority of -parity-violating analyses focus on neutralino () LSPs, alternative types of LSPs have been studied in [48] and within the framework of models also in [49]. It is also interesting to note that constraints for RPV couplings from theoretical considerations have been discussed, for example, in [22]: In contrast to fixing individual RPV couplings explicitly, the assumption of spontaneous breaking of -parity can lead to high predictivity for the actual values of these couplings. One possible mechanism is based on right-handed sneutrino fields aquiring vacuum expectation values thus generating RPV couplings; see [22] and references therein. In this context also the SSM [50] as a natural extension of (1a) and (1b) is relevant, leading to interesting implications for LHC signatures, as recently discussed in [51]. Constraints for RPV couplings can also be derived from flavor symmetries, investigating, for example, flavor symmetry groups related to the Yukawa couplings and hierarchy of fermion masses. Within the so-called minimal flavor violation model [52], the size of the small -parity-violating terms is determined by flavor parameters, and in the absence of neutrino masses only the terms remain in the superpotential equation (1a) and (1b). Recently, implications of fundamental symmetries on -parity-violation have been reviewed in [53], emphasizing, for example, that the simplest supersymmetric theories based on local predict that -parity must be a broken symmetry.

2.2. Pre-LHC Constraints

A very large number of bounds for the trilinear -parity-violating couplings have been deduced from studies of low and intermediate energy processes. In particular, rare decays, involving flavor violation, constitute constraints on RPV couplings. Processes that violate lepton number or baryon number also provide strong limits on -parity-violating couplings. Presenting these indirect bounds is beyond the scope of this review, referring the reader to corresponding reviews; see for example [22, 54]. Many indirect bounds on the trilinear couplings assume single coupling dominance, where a single -parity-violating coupling dominates over all the others.

However, it is important to note in general these bounds on -parity-violating couplings are relaxed for increased masses of SUSY particles involved; see, for example, [55]. In this context it is illustrative to look at the strong constraint derived from nonobservation of proton decay; see [56]: where is the typical squark mass. As already noted before, it is sufficient to eliminate only one of or from (1a) and (1b) to forbid proton decay. The form of the above constraint also shows the anticorrelation between the mass scale of intermediate SUSY particles and the size of their RPV couplings. It is interesting to note that a possible solution to circumvent proton decay has also been established in the minimal flavor violation model [52].

Various results of analyses searching for nonvanishing -parity-violating couplings have been obtained in pre-LHC collider experiments. Constraints from existing searches for RPV SUSY can be classified, for example, by the category of contributing RPV couplings:(i)LEP results [5762] have investigated various trilinear RPV couplings, typically leading to mass limits at the scale of 100 GeV.(ii)HERA searches have mainly focused on signatures from couplings assuming the dominance of a single coupling [6366]. A very distinctive signature from a narrow-width resonance in sparticle production with subsequent decay can be possible for a nonzero coupling or a combination of and couplings. Therefore couplings of -type at HERA would allow resonant single squark production, corresponding to high sensitivities in different search channels. Expressing the limits in terms of the sparticle masses, squark masses above 200 GeV have been excluded.(iii)Several searches at the Tevatron [67] have constrained various trilinear couplings and/or sparticle masses even stronger. The signatures studied at the Tevatron include searches for multileptons [68, 69] (via ) or multijets [70] and pairs of dijets [71] (via , resp.). Also resonant sparticle production [7274] with subsequent decay (via a combination of and couplings) has been considered.

Since several of these signatures investigated at the Tevatron have set the strongest collider-based RPV limits before the LHC, we shortly mention some of these limits as benchmarks in comparison to LHC constraints to be discussed later. Using the multijet final state, the CDF collaboration has excluded gluino masses up to approximately 150 GeV for light-flavor models [70]. Based on the search for pairs of dijets, as predicted from decays in stop-quark pair production, stop masses up to 100 GeV have been excluded [71]. The CDF experiment has also set a limit on the expected cross section at approximately 100 fb from multilepton search results [69]. In a benchmark scenario of resonant sneutrino production and subsequent lepton-flavor violating (LFV) decay into different charged lepton flavors, -sneutrino masses around 500 GeV have been excluded [73].

Prior to LHC searches, no direct exclusion limits from LEP, HERA, or Tevatron have been obtained for models. However, several studies have investigated phenomenology at the Tevatron [67, 7577], elaborating, for example, signatures of multileptons or displaced vertices.

Significantly reducing the size of -parity-violating couplings generically leads to late LSP decays. Since the corresponding part of the RPV parameter space for small -parity-violating couplings does not predict prompt signatures at the LHC, no further details used in the searches for late decays are discussed here. It should however be mentioned that a number of analyses at ATLAS [7882] and CMS [8387] have probed signatures related to long-lived sparticles and displaced vertices expected in such cases deriving also strong limits on SUSY masses. A phenomenological overview of these searches for long-lived sparticles has recently been presented, for example, in [88].

3. Overview of Analyses Searching for RPV SUSY

Both ATLAS [89] and CMS [90] are multipurpose detectors designed for the study of and heavy-ion collisions at the LHC. They provide nearly full-solid angle coverage around the interaction point. Each detector uses a right-handed coordinate system with its origin at the nominal interaction point in the centre of the corresponding detector and the -axis along the beam pipe. Cylindrical coordinates are used in the transverse plane, being the azimuthal angle around the beam pipe. The pseudorapidity is defined in terms of the polar angle as .

3.1. Strategies for Simulating and Selecting Events

The 8 TeV data set, after the application of beam, detector, and data quality requirements, has an integrated luminosity of approximately 20 fb−1 both for ATLAS and for CMS detectors. It is interesting to note that the average number of interactions occurring in the same bunch crossing at 8 TeV varies between approximately 10 and 30, necessitating systematic studies of related pile-up effects. The trigger system of ATLAS and CMS consists a hardware-based systems, with subsequent software-based systems. Using so-called high level triggers, the events of interest are finally recorded. For each analysis, a combination of different triggers is used, before the offline selection of events is done. The main requirements of the latter are summarized for each analysis in Sections 3.3 and 3.4. In order to ensure the quality of reconstruction, various requirements on transverse momenta and criteria for the isolation to other objects have been developed at the LHC detectors, with more details presented in [89, 90]. After reconstruction of final states, the most relevant physical objects for prompt RPV SUSY analyses can shortly be classified as follows.

Electrons, muons, and hadronically decaying -leptons are collectively referred to as charged leptons. Depending on the specific analysis, it is possible to discriminate hadronic jets according to their flavor contents: In particular, -tagged jets can often be distinguished from jets consisting of only light quark-flavors. The missing transverse energy per event is computed using the transverse momenta of identified objects.

SUSY -parity-violating signal samples are generated using different event generators, for example,  HERWIG++   [91] or  PYTHIA  [92, 93]. The events are subsequently simulated within the framework of fast or full simulation, where, for the details of the specific setup of event generation or simulation, the corresponding analysis papers should be considered.

Unless otherwise stated, signal cross sections are calculated to next-to-leading order in the strong coupling constant, adding the resummation of soft gluon emission at next-to-leading-logarithmic accuracy (NLO+NLL) [9498]. The nominal cross section and the uncertainty are taken from an envelope of cross section predictions using different PDF sets and factorisation and renormalisation scales, as described in [99].

Each analysis is based on a number of signal regions (SRs), each designed to maximize the sensitivity to different final state topologies in terms of the chosen discriminating variables. Additionally, a number of control regions are constructed to constrain the dominant backgrounds. These control regions are designed to have a high purity and a small statistical uncertainty in terms of the background process of interest and also to contain only a small fraction of the potential SUSY signal. Practically, control regions are often introduced to estimate the rate of SM processes, using data-driven methods or also normalization of Monte Carlo simulations.

3.2. Strategies for Presentation of Results

The large number of free mass parameters for sparticles in the MSSM is already severely constrained by many experimental bounds; see, for example, the discussion in [36]. As a consequence, several approaches to study SUSY particle spectra have been developed.

Within the phenomenological MSSM pMSSM [100], the high number of free SUSY parameters is reduced with realistic requirements on the flavor and CP structure, without imposing any SUSY-breaking scheme. In this framework also SUSY spectra consistent with various experimental constraints, as, for example, the LHC results for the Higgs mass, can be addressed [101, 102].

The approach of simplified models [103, 104] is commonly used in searches for SUSY at the LHC. In this case the decay cascades are modeled simply by setting the masses of most SUSY particles to multi-TeV values, effectively decoupling them for the reach at the LHC. This also implies selection of specific production channels, while other mixed production modes, for example, scalar plus fermionic SUSY particle, are typically neglected. The decay cascades of the remaining particles to the LSP, typically with zero or one intermediate step, are characterized only by the masses of the participating particles, allowing studies of the search sensitivity to the SUSY masses and decay kinematics.

In an alternative approach, complete SUSY models, for example, mSUGRA/CMSSM [105110] or minimal GMSB [111116], are simulated. These models typically impose boundary conditions at a high energy scale and determine the SUSY masses near the TeV scale by evaluating renormalization group equations. Due to the minimal number of input parameters at the high energy scale, it is realistic to scan the parameter space effectively.

One common strategy for obtaining results is to compute the level of agreement between the background prediction and data using the value for the number of observed events to be consistent with the background-only hypothesis. To do so, the number of events in each signal region is described using a Poisson probability density function. The statistical and systematic uncertainties on the expected background values are modelled with nuisance parameters constrained by a Gaussian function with a width corresponding to the size of the uncertainty considered.

Since no significant excess of events over the SM expectations is observed in any signal region of the -parity analyses, upper limits at 95% CL on the number of BSM events for each signal region can be derived in a model-independent way. Here the prescription [117] is used. Normalising these events by the integrated luminosity of the data sample, they can be interpreted as upper limits on the visible BSM cross section (), where is defined as the product of acceptance, reconstruction efficiency, and production cross section. If a limit on non-SM events () has been obtained in a BSM analysis, the visible signal cross section can also be determined as .

Model-dependent limits will be discussed in detail in Sections 4 to 8. For many models, the limits are calculated from asymptotic formulae [118] with a simultaneous fit to all signal regions based on the profile likelihood method. Alternatively, the limit can also be obtained from pseudo experiments; further details can be found in each paper.

The systematic uncertainties on the signal expectations originating from detector effects and the theoretical uncertainties on the signal acceptance are included. The impact of the theoretical uncertainties on the signal cross section is shown on the limit plots obtained. The lines around the observed limits are obtained by changing the SUSY cross section by one standard deviation (). All mass limits on supersymmetric particles quoted later are derived from the theory line. The band around the expected limit shows the uncertainty, including all statistical and systematic uncertainties except the theoretical uncertainties on the SUSY cross section. If several SRs contribute to exclusion limits in a model investigated, the general strategy is to obtain limits by performing a statistical combination of the most sensitive signal regions.

3.3. Details for RPV Searches at ATLAS

In this section the main requirements for signal selections developed in ATLAS searches for -parity-violating SUSY are summarized, also introducing relevant kinematic variables. Some of these analyses have been optimized also for RPC scenarios; however the focus of this review is on RPV-related signal regions. Each of these analyses has investigated RPV-related constraints in at least two different RPV models or several SRs have been developed particularly for RPV signatures. (When finalizing this review, a recent ATLAS analysis [119] has also considered stop -type decays to light charged lepton plus b-quark, constraining stop masses up to 1 TeV.)

(i) Multilepton Analysis (ATLAS). In this case at least four charged leptons in every signal event are required, at least two of which must be electrons or muons, in the following referred to as “light leptons.” The events are separated into signal regions based on the number of light leptons observed [40], and the absence of a boson candidate among the pairs of light leptons facilitates suppression of backgrounds in -parity-violating searches. The SM background is further reduced using the missing transverse momentum and the effective mass , defined in this case as the scalar sum of the , the of all selected charged leptons, and the of reconstructed jets. In most signal regions, events with a pair of light leptons forming a boson candidate are vetoed, and possible and candidates are also rejected. Three signal regions are based on threshold requirements only for , thus being useful in particular for RPC searches for low sparticle masses. Additionally, in the SRs used for RPV results, either high or high is required: thus, a selected event may have one quantity below the threshold, but never both. As the SRs used have disjoint selection criteria, they are statistically combined when setting constraints on the specific SUSY models considered in [40].

(ii) Same-Sign/Three-Lepton Analysis (ATLAS). The search [38] requires two light leptons with same charge or three light leptons in conjunction with requirements on the number of jets. It designed in particular for SUSY models where pair-produced Majorana particles (e.g., gluinos) can decay semileptonically with a large branching ratio. The effective mass, , is a key discriminating variable, defined by this analysis as the sum of and the values of the signal leptons and all signal jets. If the event contains a third light lepton the event is regarded as three-lepton event, otherwise it is a two-lepton event. Five nonoverlapping signal regions have been defined in total. The signal regions SR3b and SR1b use leptons, large , and also the presence of -jets to suppress the SM background. There is no explicit requirement in SR3b, implying that this SR does not depend on the assumption of a stable LSP escaping the detector unseen. SR1b additionally uses the transverse mass, , to reject background events with bosons, defined aswhere is the larger of the values of the two charged leptons and is the missing transverse momentum vector.

(iii) Tau Plus Jets Analysis (ATLAS). Requiring at least one tau lepton in events with jets and large the search [39] can also be sensitive to RPV models with relatively high multiplicities of taus. The search channels are separated by the numbers of taus and light charged leptons involved, leading to , , and channels, respectively. The following kinematical variables are introduced to suppress background processes: the transverse mass formed by and the of the tau lepton in the and channels,Similarly the transverse mass formed by and the of the light lepton ( or ) is used. Two variants of -related variables have been defined as the scalar sum of the transverse momenta of the tau, light lepton, and signal jets: includes all signal jet ( GeV) candidates, whereas only considers two jets with the largest transverse momenta in the event. In this analysis the effective mass uses , that is, . Moreover a requirement on the minimal azimuthal angle between and either of the two leading jets is used to remove multijet events. As a result, also upper limits on the visible cross section have been obtained for the -related SRs of type , , and , respectively.

(iv) Multijet Analysis (ATLAS). Two complementary search strategies have been developed in this analysis [44]: The jet-counting analysis is searching for an excess in events with 6 jets or 7 jets, using the predictable scaling of the number of -jet events () as a function of the transverse momentum () requirement placed on the th leading jet in for background processes. It is interesting to note that this scaling relation differs significantly between the signal and the background. That analysis technique provides the opportunity to enhance sensitivity to specific heavy-flavor compositions in the final state and to explore various assumptions on the branching ratios of the benchmark signal processes studied. The number of jets, the requirement used in the selection of jets, and the number of -tagged jets are optimized separately for each signal model.

The second approach in [44] consists of a data-driven template-based analysis using a topological observable called the total-jet-mass of large-radius () jets. This analysis method is based on templates of the event-level observable formed by the scalar sum of the four leading large jet masses in the event, which is significantly larger for the signal than for the SM backgrounds. The total-jet-mass analysis uses a topological observable as the primary distinguishing characteristic between signal and background. The observable [120122] is defined as the scalar sum of the masses of the four leading large-radius jets reconstructed with a radius parameter ,  GeV and , andAs explained, for example, in [44], four-jet (or more) events are used, because four large- jets cover a significant portion of the central region of the calorimeter and are very likely to capture most signal quarks within their area. As a second discriminating variable for the design of SRs and CRs the pseudorapidity difference between the two leading large- jets is used. This is motivated by different angular distributions among jets expected from signal events as compared to backgroud processes. For the definition of SRs also the thresholds of the third and fourth jet have been included. Using the results from simulation studies, it has been demonstrated that typically has higher sensitivity than the kinematic variable . The latter is essentially a measure of the transverse energy (or transverse momenta) in the event, whereas the mass intrinsically also contains angular information to be used in high-multiplicity jet events. This analysis technique focuses primarily on the ten-quark models as further discussed in Section 8.1. The total-jet-mass analysis is designed to be independent of the flavor composition of the signal process and as a data-driven method it essentially removes any reliance on MC simulations of these hadronic final states. No explicit veto is applied to events with leptons or .

Also model-independent upper limits on non-SM contributions have been derived separately for each analysis in [44].

(v) LFV Resonance Analysis (ATLAS). The reconstruction of a narrow-width resonance from its decay products essentially relies on the invariant mass determined from the corresponding momenta. In this case the decay products are given by charged leptons of different flavor [43]. Therefore the selection for signal events requires exactly two leptons ( with ), of opposite charge and of different flavor. Good discrimination against background is obtained requiring that the two leptons are back-to-back in the azimuthal plane with , where is the difference between the two leptons. In events containing a hadronically decaying , it is additionally required that the transverse energy of the candidate is less than the corresponding of the light signal lepton due to the energy carried by the -neutrino.

In order to reconstruct the four-momenta of hadronically decaying -leptons, also the momenta of the emerging -neutrino have to be taken into account. A collinear neutrino approximation is used to determine the dilepton invariant mass () in the and channels. This approximation is well justified since the hadronic decay of a high-energetic lepton from a heavy resonance, the neutrino, and the resultant jet are nearly collinear. The four-vector of the neutrino is reconstructed from the and of the jet. Four-vectors of the electron or muon, candidate, and neutrino are then used to calculate the dilepton invariant mass . The minimal requirement on for signal events is  GeV. Finally, the expected and observed upper limits are obtained as a function of mass.

For further reference, the ATLAS analyses considered are summarized in Table 1 indicating the signatures and main variables for signal selections. An overview relating ATLAS analysis and corresponding RPV model investigated, is presented in Table 2.

3.4. Details for RPV Searches at CMS

An overview of CMS analysis strategies used in the search for prompt RPV is given below.

(i) Multilepton Plus -Jets Analysis (CMS). In this analysis, events with three or more charged leptons are selected, requiring two light leptons, which may be electrons or muons [41]. Accepting only opposite-sign, same-flavor pairs of electrons or muons with an invariant mass  GeV reduces backgrounds, for example, from Drell-Yan processes and low-mass resonances. Signal regions are defined with different requirements on the total number of light leptons and the number of hadronically decaying candidates in the event. Since no bosons are expected in the signal models under investigation, events in which any selected dilepton pair has an invariant mass consistent with that of the boson are rejected thus providing good suppression of -related backgrounds. Moreover, at least one -tagged jet is required in the signal regions. Additional discrimination against background events is obtained with cuts on the distribution. As was discussed in [41], that distribution has high sensitivity to the mass of the parent particle, produced in pair production.

Several kinematic regions relevant to results are introduced in [41], relating to different assumptions on stop masses in comparison to neutralino LSP masses. Relatively light stops (with respect to masses of ) would correspond to region A, while the case of heaviest stop masses (in comparison to ) is included in region E. It is interesting to note that, for example, in region B stop four-body decays or are possible.

(ii) SS-Leptons Analysis (CMS). The analysis [46] targets at topologies with same-sign leptons and additional jets from strong production processes. Events with at least two isolated same-sign leptons (, , or ) and at least two jets are selected. The lepton pairs are required to have an invariant mass above 8 GeV and also events with a third lepton are rejected if the lepton forms an opposite-sign same-flavor pair with one of the first two leptons for which the invariant mass of the pair () satisfies  GeV or  GeV. Signal regions are defined with different requirements on , , the number of jets, and the number of -tagged jets.

For each model considered, limits are obtained by performing a statistical combination of the most sensitive signal regions. The search region dedicated to RPV results is based on the selection of , , and  GeV without explicit requirement on [46].

(iii) Plus -Jets Analysis (CMS). Different assumptions for the decays of stops have motivated the search for signatures of -leptons and -jets [42]. Selected events are required to contain a light lepton and a hadronically decaying of opposite electric charge thus leading to the signal channels and . Events are vetoed if another light lepton is found, passing the kinematic, identification, and isolation criteria, which has an opposite electric charge from the selected light lepton. The -tagged jet with the highest is selected, and then the remaining four jets with the highest are selected whether or not they are -tagged. The distribution is finally used to extract the limits, where is defined as the scalar sum of the of the light lepton, the , and the five jets.

(iv) from Jet Pairs Analysis (CMS). This analysis [47] has been designed to search for pairs of jets where each jet decays to two jets, respectively. The strategy followed in this analysis first requires that signal events contain at least four jets. The leading four jets, ordered in , are used to create three unique combinations of dijet pairs per event. A distance variable is implemented to select the jet pairing that best corresponds to the two resonance decays, , where and are the differences in and between the two jets, respectively. This variable exploits the smaller relative distance between daughter jets from the same parent decays compared to that between uncorrelated jets. For each dijet pair configuration the value of is calculated: where represents the separation between two jets in dijet pair and an offset of 1 is used to maximize the signal efficiency. The configuration that minimizes the value is selected, with representing the minimum for the event.

Once a dijet pair configuration is chosen, two additional quantities are used to suppress the backgrounds from SM multijet events and incorrect signal pairings: The pseudorapidity difference between the two dijet systems , and the absolute value of the fractional mass difference , where is the difference between the two dijet masses and is their average value. As discussed in [47] the quantity is small with a peak at zero in signal events where the correct pairing is chosen, while for SM multijet background or incorrectly paired signal events, this distribution is much broader. An additional kinematic variable is calculated for each dijet pair: where sum is over the two jets in the dijet configuration. This type of variables has been used extensively in hadronic resonance searches at the Tevatron and the LHC; see, for example, [123] and references therein. Requiring a minimum value of results in a lowering of the peak position value of the distribution from background SM multijet events. With this selection the fit to the background can be extended to lower values of , making a wider range of supersymmetric particle masses accessible to the search [47].

(v) Multijet Analysis (CMS). This search targets jets final states with high multiplicities from pair-produced three-jet resonances [45]. Signal events have to contain at least six jets with additional requirements on thresholds. The jet-ensemble technique [70] is used to combine the six highest-jets in each event into all possible unique triplets. To maximize sensitivity to the presence of a three-jet resonance, an additional requirement is placed on each jet triplet to suppress SM backgrounds and remove incorrectly combined signal triplets. This selection criterion is based on the constant invariant mass of correctly reconstructed signal triplets and also on the observed linear correlation between the invariant mass and scalar sum of jet for background triplets and incorrectly combined signal triplets: where is the triplet invariant mass, sum is over the three jets in the triplet (triplet scalar ), and is an empirically determined parameter. The peak position of the distribution in data depends on the value of , where  GeV is found to be the optimal choice, yielding the lowest value of the peak of .

The use of -jet identification facilitates a heavy-flavor search in addition to the inclusive search for three-jet resonances. High-mass signal events lead to a more spherical shape than background events, which typically contain back-to-back jets. In order to significantly reduce the background in the high-mass searches, a sphericity variable, , is used, where the variables are eigenvalues of the following tensor [92]:Here and label separate jets, and the sphericity is calculated using all jets in each event. In summary, the SRs in this analysis are defined using , , and also cuts on the fourth jet , sixth jet , and . To optimize sensitivity for the heavy flavor search, a region of low or high mass for the underlying resonance mass has been developed, respectively.

This overview of CMS RPV analyses is completed with Tables 3 and 4. Using these tables, the signatures and main variables for signal selections per analysis are indicated and also the information which analyses are used to constrain which RPV SUSY models is presented. As can be noted from Table 4, most of these analyses from CMS have also investigated at least two different RPV-based models.

4. Bilinear -Parity Violation

In the model, the terms with coefficients () lead to lepton-number violating interactions between lepton and Higgs superfields. An overview of phenomenology can be found, for example, in [124, 125]. Note that also for the soft SUSY breaking terms additional terms and [126] arise, leading to extra parameters. In general, there is no basis where both sets of bilinear RPV terms and can be eliminated at the same time. Taking into account the mixing of sneutrinos and scalar neutral Higgs fields, the electroweak symmetry is broken when these scalar fields acquire vacuum expectation values. Another characteristic consequence of is the generation of neutrino masses via neutralino-neutrino mixing; see, for example, [127].

Requiring both that electroweak symmetry breaking is consistent with Higgs results and at the same time that predictions agree with data from neutrino oscillations effectively constrains the parameter space of . A corresponding fitting routine is implemented in the SPheno code [128] fulfilling these experimental constraints in determining couplings, spectra, and decays. Note also that in general all the resulting parameters are nonvanishing and are not related in a trivial way. As discussed, for example, in [129], one expects strong correlations between neutralino decay properties measurable at high-energy collider experiments and neutrino mixing angles determined in low-energy neutrino oscillation experiments, such as Due to the small size of the couplings, the production processes and the SUSY cascade decays are usually the same as in corresponding RPC scenarios. The fundamental difference in high-energy collision processes arises from decays of the LSP. Focusing on prompt LSP decays can lead to two-body decays of a neutralino LSP into gauge boson plus lepton, as described below.

4.1. mSUGRA Model

The analyses of [130] and subsequently [129, 131] have investigated the corresponding phenomenology and expected sensitivities at the LHC. Assuming a neutralino LSP is sufficiently heavy, its most relevant two-body decay modes have been discussed:(i).(ii).(iii).(iv).(v).

Notably, for a large part of the parameter space, the decays to and (see also (10)) tend to be dominant, requiring consistency with neutrino oscillations. The exact magnitude of the individual LSP branching ratios also depend on its couplings, that is, if it corresponds mainly to a bino-, wino-, or higgsino-like state. Ideally, the searches for SUSY signatures could utilize the subsequent decay products of gauge or Higgs bosons; see, for example, [129]. Reconstructing such bosons accompanying the leptonic partner from LSP decays would allow reconstructing LSP masses and also indicate its two-body decays to possibly reveal RPV of bilinear type. Depending on the number of charged leptons in the LSP decays, the phenomenology of final states can be classified as leptonic, semileptonic, or invisible decays [130]. The latter decay mode would mimic RPC SUSY signal with large . Moreover it has been emphasized in [129] that reducing the LSP mass can lead to significantly late LSP decays. In the context of mSUGRA the LSP mass is mainly driven by the input parameter , leading to an approximate displacement of decays of 1 mm (in the rest frame of the LSP) for  GeV.

Similar to RPC mSUGRA models, the most relevant production processes are given by(i) production is most relevant in the region of low ;(ii)squark- processes are most significant for low and ;(iii)contributions from squark-(anti)-squark are most relevant for low and relatively high ;(iv)electroweak gaugino-gaugino-based production tends to be dominant for highest input mass scales of and ;

In the minimal supergravity model [105110], the SUSY breaking sector at the high scale of unification connects to the MSSM at the electroweak scale dominantly through gravitational-strength interactions. In a minimal form, one common mass scale appears for the three gauginos, one mass scale for all scalars, and one coupling for all scalar three-field interactions , so that all gauginos are degenerated and also all squark, sleptons, and Higgs-related mass values become degenerate at the unification mass scale. In addition to these three input parameters, also the ratio of the vevs of the two neutral Higgses, , and the sign of the Higgs mass term, sign, are necessary to define the mSUGRA model. After fixing this set of 5 parameters as boundary conditions for mSUGRA, the renormalization group evolution for SUSY-breaking masses and trilinear parameters will finally determine the SUSY mass spectrum at LHC energies.

Taking into account the Higgs boson mass observed at 125 GeV, mSUGRA signal models have been analyzed. Similar to Higgs-aware signal models of RPC mSUGRA investigated, for example, in [132], the input parameters are chosen as , , and sign() = 1 with varying values of the mass scales and . Referring to the same input parameters with respect to RPC mSUGRA also implies the same masses and essentially the same cross sections in comparison to each RPC-based production process. Due to the smallness of couplings, other production processes are highly suppressed, so that RPC- and -based production processes are almost in one-to-one correspondence in mSUGRA.

4.2. Results for Searches

In the ATLAS SS/3 analysis [38] the parameter space of mSUGRA has been strongly constrained. Based on the limits from Figure 2, values of are excluded between 200 GeV and 490 GeV at 95% CL for values below 2.2 TeV. This limit corresponds to a lower bound of approximately 1.3 TeV for gluino masses in mSUGRA. Signal models with  GeV are not considered in this analysis because the lepton acceptance is significantly reduced due to the increased LSP lifetime in that region. The sensitivity is dominated by the signal region SR3b selecting same-sign or three leptons and requiring additionally  b-jets, and  GeV, respectively. High sensitivity in particular in signal region SR3b is also a result of the high number of leptons and also of -jets from LSP decays in conjunction with low requirements for missing transverse energy. It is interesting to note that, in SR3b, a 95% CL upper limit on the (observed) visible cross section at 0.19 fb has been obtained, establishing a model-independent limit.

The ATLAS analysis [39] has demonstrated that searching for hadronically decaying -leptons in addition to jets, , and light leptons has a high sensitivity for at low . In this part of the parameter space, the number of taus from RPC decays of relatively light staus is high. Adding also -leptons from LSP decays, the number of taus is even more pronounced in this case. Notably, several SRs, based on , , and , have been optimized particularly for . Performing a statistical combination of these SRs, the 95% CL limits on mSUGRA mass parameters in Figure 2 have been obtained. As a result from [39], values of up to 680 GeV are excluded for low , while the exclusion along the axis reaches a maximum of 920 GeV for = 360 GeV. For the results in SRs relevant for searches also limits on visible cross sections have been derived, corresponding to upper limits on the observed of 0.52 fb, 0.26 fb, and 0.20 fb in the , , and channels, respectively. Although the expected are the same for and , the higher number of events observed in the SR effectively leads to a weaker limit of 0.52 fb with respect to 0.26 fb in SR.

Moreover, the ATLAS search for leptons in SUSY strong production [133], optimized for RPC models, has also obtained exclusion limits for this mSUGRA model. Comparing the expected limits to the SS/3L analysis, they are comparable for both analyses in the range of low , whereas, for the highest values of , the SS/3L analysis reaches slightly stronger expected limits. In terms of observed limits, both analyses are actually comparable in the high regime, while [133] obtains a stronger limit in the case of low values of . In particular for  GeV an observed exclusion of  GeV corresponding to  TeV has been obtained. It is interesting to note that, within the SRs investigated in [133], the hard single-lepton channel has the highest sensitivity to the mSUGRA model.

5. LLE Models

5.1. LLE Simplified Models

In the RPV simplified models studied in [40], a bino-like is assumed to decay into two charged leptons and a neutrino via the term. Four event topologies are tested, resulting from different choices for the next-to-lightest SUSY particles (NLSPs): a chargino () NLSP; slepton NLSPs, referring to mass-degenerate charged sleptons; sneutrino NLSPs, referring to mass-degenerate sneutrinos; and a gluino NLSP. In the slepton case, both the left-handed and the right-handed sleptons (L-sleptons and R-sleptons, resp.) have been considered, as the different production cross sections for the two cases substantially affect the analysis sensitivity. The assumed decays of each NLSP choice are described in Table 5 and illustrated in Figure 3. The masses of the NLSP and LSP are varied, while other sparticles are assumed to be decoupled.

In the paper [41], couplings have been investigated in the context of stop-pair production: The corresponding simplified model assumes stop decays to a top quark and intermediate on- or off-shell bino, . The bino decays to two leptons and a neutrino through the leptonic RPV interactions, and , where the indices , , refer to those appearing in (1a). The stop is assumed to be right-handed and RPV couplings are large enough that all decays are prompt. Results for the corresponding simplified mass spectra and leptonic RPV couplings or are investigated in Section 5.3.

5.2. RPV Results with Electroweak or Production

The simplified models produce events with four leptons in the final state, and thus it is natural to constrain them with the ATLAS search for SUSY in events with four or more charged leptons [40]. Up to two of the leptons may be hadronically decaying taus, and the search was specifically optimised to give good sensitivity across the full range of -mediated decays.

In all cases, the observed limit is determined mainly by the production cross section of the signal process, with stronger constraints on models where or dominate, and less stringent limits for tau-rich decays via or . Limits on models with different combinations of parameters can generically be expected to lie between these extremes. The limits are in many cases nearly insensitive to the mass, except where the is significantly less massive than the NLSP as inferred from Figure 4. Where the NLSPLSP cascade may also produce leptons, the observed limit may also become weaker as approaches the NLSP mass, and the cascade product momenta decrease considerably.

When the mass of the LSP is at least as large as 20% of the NLSP mass, and assuming tau-rich LSP decays, lower limits can be placed on sparticle masses, excluding gluinos with masses less than 950 GeV; wino-like charginos with masses less than 450 GeV; and L(R)-sleptons with masses less than 300 (240) GeV. If instead the LSP decays only to electrons and muons, the equivalent limits are approximately 1350 GeV for gluinos, 750 GeV for charginos, and 490 (410) GeV for L(R)-sleptons, and a lower limit of 400 GeV can also be placed on sneutrino masses. These results significantly improve upon previous searches at the LHC, where gluino masses of up to 1 TeV [134] and chargino masses of up to 540 GeV [135] were excluded.

The model-independent limits on for RPV-related SRs all lie below 0.5 fb: In signal regions requiring at least three light leptons, the observed 95% CL upper limits on the visible cross sections are below 0.2 fb. (It is interesting to note that the ATLAS search for multileptons based on 7 TeV data [135] has obtained limits of approximately 1 fb on considering also four-body decays of a stau LSP as motivated, e.g., by [136].)

5.3. RPV Results for Production

The limits obtained in [41] are mostly independent of the bino mass, leading to an exclusion of models with the stop mass below 1020 GeV when is nonzero, and below 820 GeV when is nonzero. These limits are shown in Figure 5. There is a change in kinematics at the line , below which the stop decay is two-body, while above it is a four-body decay. Near this line, the and top are produced almost at rest, which results in low-momentum leptons, corresponding to reduced acceptance. This loss of acceptance is more visible in the case and causes the loss of sensitivity near the line at  GeV. The analysis [41] has also explained that this effect is more pronounced in the observed limit because the data has a larger statistical uncertainty in the relevant signal regions than the simulated signal samples.

6. Models

6.1. Simplified Models for Production

In addition to the simplified model for stop pair production introduced in the previous Section 5.1, RPV decays via are also considered in the simplified model of  [41]. The same assumptions on stop decays to a top quark and intermediate on- or off-shell bino, , are made, only the -related decay of to one lepton and two quarks leads to different final states in comparison to LSP decays via as already discussed in the previous section. A possible signal process is illustrated in the Feynman diagram, Figure 6. Due to the high number of -bosons indicated in the final states of that process, also a relatively large number of charged (light) leptons can be expected, in conjunction with many -jets.

In another simplified model investigated in [42], two different decay channels of directly produced top squarks are considered. In the first case the two-body lepton number violating decay via the coupling constant is investigated; see also [22] for related phenomenological studies.

In the second part of the search the focus is on a scenario in which the dominant RPC decay of the top squark is . This requires the mass splitting between the top squark and the chargino to be less than the mass of the top quark, so it is chosen to be 100 GeV. The chargino is assumed to be a pure higgsino and to be nearly degenerate in mass with the neutralino. In particular, the decay via an intermediate -sneutrino is considered. This RPV decay of the sneutrino is possible via the -type coupling , where the cases are taken into account.

6.2. Results for Production

The analysis [41] has probed regions in the mass plane of neutralino versus stop masses assuming pair production of and nonvanishing . As discussed before, in that analysis several different kinematic regions in the mass plane are relevant also in the final results of Figure 7. The most significant effect is when the decay is suppressed, reducing the number of leptons in the final state. The different regions where this effect is pronounced primarily lead the shape of the exclusion for . As a result, stop masses up to approximately 800 GeV can be excluded in this model.

In the search for -jets and -leptons from CMS [42], constraints for the masses of pair-produced stops have been derived. An upper bound at 95% confidence level is set on , where is the cross section for pair production of top squarks and is the branching fraction for the top squark decay to a and a bottom quark, with a subsequent decay of the chargino via . Expected and observed upper limits on as a function of the stop mass are shown in Figure 8 for the top squark search from [42]. As a result, top squarks undergoing a chargino-mediated decay involving the coupling with masses in the range 200–580 GeV are excluded, in agreement with the expected exclusion limit in the range 200–590 GeV. In the derivation of these upper limits is assumed.

Since the other simplified model investigated in [42] leads to direct decays of stops after pair-production, the underlying stop mass essentially determines the results. The limits corresponding to top squarks decaying directly through the coupling exclude masses of below 740 GeV, in agreement with the expected limit at 750 GeV.

7. Resonance Production and Decay

If couplings are present at hadron colliders, resonant production of sleptons is possible. The decay products from such a slepton resonance can also depend on additional RPV couplings. If also couplings occur, then leptonic final states can be investigated, whereas jets are expected if only terms are assumed. In order to allow for considerable production rates and also for significant decay rates into charged leptons, -sneutrinos emerge as candidates for resonance searches. (It is interesting to note that also a search for RPV resonances from second generation sleptons has been performed by CMS at 7 TeV [137]. Assuming the coupling , the search investigated two same-sign muons and at least two jets in the final state.) In the case of , the corresponding bounds for its coupling of type and also are relatively weak. Therefore the analysis [43] searching for resonances using leptonic final states has focused on -sneutrinos, as described in more detail below.

7.1. Resonance via Tau Sneutrino

As illustrated in Figure 9, a -sneutrino () may be produced in collisions by annihilation and subsequently decay to , , or . Although only is considered in [43] to facilitate comparisons with previous searches performed at the Tevatron, the results of this analysis in principle apply to any sneutrino flavor.

7.2. Resonance Searches

Expected and observed upper limits are set as a function of mass. The likelihood of observing the number of events in data as a function of the expected number of signal and background events is constructed from a Poisson distribution for each bin in the mass. Signal cross sections are calculated to next-to-leading order for .

Figure 10 shows the observed and expected cross section times branching ratio limits as a function of the mass. For a mass of 1 TeV, the observed limits on the production cross section times branching ratio are 0.5 fb, 2.7 fb, and 9.1 fb for the , , and channels, respectively. Theoretical predictions of cross section times branching ratio are also shown, assuming and () for the , consistent with benchmark couplings used in previous searches. For these benchmark couplings, the lower limits on the mass are 2.0 TeV, 1.7 TeV, and 1.7 TeV for the , , and channels, respectively.

These results considerably extend previous constraints from the Tevatron and LHC experiments. Based on the similar assumptions for RPV couplings, that is, and (), the CDF experiment [73] has obtained lower limits for -sneutrino masses at 558 GeV, 442 GeV, and 441 GeV for the , , and channels, respectively.

8. UDD Models

In this section results from searches for signatures from couplings are presented. Both ATLAS and CMS have investigated several different topologies as motivated by a number of simplified models.

8.1. Production with Multijets at ATLAS

Pair-produced massive new particles with decays to a total of six quarks, as well as cascade decays with at least ten quarks, are considered in the design of the analysis [44]. Three-body decays of the type shown in Figure 11 are given by effective RPV vertices allowed by the baryon-number-violating couplings with off-shell squark propagators. For both models, all squark masses are set to 5 TeV and thus gluinos decay directly to three quarks or to two quarks and a neutralino through standard RPC couplings. In the ten-quark cascade decay model, the neutralinos each decay to three quarks via an off-shell squark and the RPV decay vertex with coupling . In this model, the neutralino is the LSP.

All possible flavor combinations are allowed to proceed with equal probability. The analysis maintains approximately equal sensitivity to all flavor modes. All samples are produced assuming that the gluino and neutralino widths are narrow and that their decays are prompt.

It is interesting to compare limits based on different assumptions for the branching ratios into heavy flavor jets. Figure 12 illustrates the variation for the observed mass limit when the decays into -jets are absent or assumed at 100 percent, respectively.

More generally, excluded masses as a function of the branching ratios of the decays are presented in Figure 13 where each bin shows the maximum gluino mass that is excluded for the given decay mode. It is illustrative to recognize the observed mass limit from Figure 12(a) can also be found in the lower left corner of Figure 13.

The interpretations of the results of the jet-counting and total-jet-mass analyses are displayed together in Figure 14 for the ten-quark model. This figure allows for the direct comparison of the results of the various analyses. Without -tagging requirements, the jet-counting analysis sets slightly lower expected limits than the total-jet-mass analysis. With -tagging requirements, the limits are stronger for the jet-counting analysis. The observed limits from the total-jet-mass analysis and jet-counting analysis with -tagging requirements are also comparable.

Exclusion limits at the 95% CL are set extending up to  GeV in the case of pair-produced gluino decays to six light quarks and up to TeV in the case of cascade decays to ten quarks for moderate mass splittings.

It is interesting to note that strong model-independent limits have been obtained in [44]. Within the jet-counting method, the 95% CL upper limits obtained on the (observed) visible signal cross section vary from 0.2 fb to 2.6 fb, depending on the requirements on jet and number of -jets for different SRs. Notably the strongest limit of 0.2 fb has been derived in the SR requiring at least seven jets, with above 180 GeV and one -tagged jet.

8.2. Production with Leptonic Final States at ATLAS

In the gluino-mediated top squark (RPV) model investigated in [38], top squarks are assumed to decay with the coupling . The final state is therefore , characterized by the presence of four -quarks and only moderate missing transverse momentum.

Results are interpreted in the parameter space of the gluino and top squark masses (see Figure 15). Gluino masses below 850 GeV are excluded at 95% CL, almost independently of the stop mass. The sensitivity is dominated by SR3b. The SR3b signal region is sensitive to various models with same-sign or leptons and -quarks. This is also demonstrated in the gluino-mediated top squark (RPV) model, where  GeV is excluded by SR3b alone in the absence of a large signature.

It is important to mention that for the same simplified model, a similar bound of  GeV has been obtained in the ATLAS search for (7–10) jets and [138]. The latter exclusion limit tends to be extended for relatively light or heavy stops.

As a model-independent limit from SR3b, the limit on the visible cross section fb has been obtained at the 95% CL. It is interesting to note that SR3b is also the most sensitive signal region constraining mSUGRA.

8.3. Production with Multijets at CMS

The signal is modeled in [45] with pair-produced gluinos where each gluino decays to three quarks through -type couplings. Two different scenarios, an inclusive search and also a heavy-flavor search, are considered in that analysis. For the first case, the coupling is set to a non-zero value, giving a branching fraction of 100% for the gluino decay to three light-flavor quarks. The second case, represented by or , investigates gluino decays to one quark and two light-flavor quarks. In these simplified models, all superpartners except the gluino are taken to be decoupled, the natural width of the gluino resonance is assumed to be much smaller than the mass resolution of the detector, and no intermediate particles are produced in the gluino decay.

As is also illustrated in Figure 16, several constraints on -masses have been derived in [45]. The production of gluinos undergoing RPV decays into light-flavor jets is excluded at 95% CL for gluino masses below 650 GeV, with a less conservative exclusion of 670 GeV based upon the theory value at the central scale. The respective expected limits are 755 and 795 GeV. Gluinos whose decay includes a heavy-flavor jet are excluded for masses between 200 and 835 GeV, with the less conservative exclusion up to 855 GeV from the central theoretical value. The respective expected limits are 825 and 860 GeV. In the heavy-flavor search the limits extend to higher masses because of the reduction of the background.

8.4. Production with Same-Sign Leptons at CMS

In this analysis [46], a simplified model based on gluino pair production followed by the decay of each gluino to three quarks is considered. It is interesting to note that the analogous model is also taken into account in [38], as mentioned above. Moreover, -like decays can in principle be motivated also from the SUSY model with minimal flavor violation [52]. In [46], the focus is on the decay mode . Due to its Majorana nature, the corresponding antiparticles emerge with equal probability in the decay of . Such decays lead to same-sign -boson pairs in the final state in 50% of the cases.

The signal process is illustrated in Figure 17. In comparison to the decays , yielding also same-sign -boson pairs, the mode is investigated. Due to two extra quarks in the final state a higher signal selection efficiency can finally be obtained. The key parameter of the model is determining the production cross section and the final state kinematics. The dedicated search region RPV2 with the high-lepton selection is used to place an upper limit on the production cross section.

The result is shown in Figure 18. In this scenario, the gluino mass is probed up to approximately 900 GeV. A similar exclusion limit from the corresponding ATLAS search has been obtained, as discussed in Section 8.2.

8.5. Production with Jet Pairs at CMS

The analysis [47] has been optimized by studying two simplified models with stop pair production: first, the coupling is assumed leading to two light-flavor jets in the decay of each .

Considering nonzero in the second simplified model, one -jet and one light-flavor jet are generated per . In both of the above cases, the branching ratio of the top squark decay to two jets is set to 100% and all superpartners except the top squarks are taken to be decoupled, so that no intermediate particles are produced in the top squark decay.

Figure 19 shows the observed and expected 95% CL upper limits obtained in [47] based on results from the low-mass and high-mass SRs, respectively. In that case the top squark mass corresponds to . The vertical dashed blue line at a top squark mass of 300 GeV indicates the transition from the low- to the high-mass limits, and at this mass point the limits are shown for both analyses. The production of top squarks decaying via into light-flavor jets is excluded at 95% CL for top squark masses from 200 to 350 GeV. Stops decaying via coupling, thus leading to a heavy-flavor jet, are excluded for masses between 200 and 385 GeV.

9. Conclusions

Results of searches for signatures of prompt -parity violation at 8 TeV at LHC experiments have probed RPV SUSY at the highest collider energies so far. No significant deviations have been found in the corresponding ATLAS and CMS analyses, implying strong constraints on superpartner masses and/or RPV couplings. A common assumption for many interpretations are LSPs with varying assumptions on dominant -parity-violating couplings and in particular NLSP types. Using simplified models with RPC production of NLSPs and subsequent decays via LSPs and interactions, the following approximate upper limits on superpartner masses have been obtained:(i)Gluino masses  GeV.(ii)Light stop masses  GeV.(iii)Wino-like chargino masses  GeV.(iv)Charged slepton masses  GeV.(v)Sneutrino masses  GeV.

Resonance searches have mainly focused on analyzing heavy narrow resonances of tau-sneutrinos, excluding masses up to 2.0 TeV, thus extending previous limits from Tevatron significantly. Limits based on dominant couplings have been investigated in models with stop-pair production, constraining stop masses up to 1 TeV. Relaxing the assumption of dominance of a single -parity-violating coupling has, for example, been investigated in the multijet analysis by ATLAS: Variation of corresponding branching ratios to different heavy quarks has led to upper limits of gluino masses within the range 666 GeV 929 GeV. In contrast to trilinear RPV models, searches for bilinear RPV have assumed mSUGRA boundary conditions, yielding the first collider-based observed limits for models: requiring mSUGRA parameters consistent with the observed mass of the Higgs boson, limits from searches exclude gluino masses in that model around 1.3 TeV.

The strongest model-independent limits for observed visible cross sections have been derived at approximately 0.2 fb. It is interesting to note that such a strong constraint has been obtained in the following searches:(i)Multileptons in SRs requiring at least three light leptons.(ii)Same-sign or three leptons in combination with at least three -jets.(iii)Two hadronically decaying taus in conjunction with jets and .(iv)Seven jets, with above 180 GeV and one -tagged jet.

Summarizing the relevant signal regions defined for these searches at the ATLAS and CMS experiments also facilitates identifying possible new targets for future analysis optimization. This should include improved reconstruction of highly collimated objects with low , relevant in scenarios predicting strongly boosted final states.

Obviously the whole parameter space of RPV SUSY has not been covered in LHC searches. Various options in particular for investigating couplings remain and should be subject of systematic studies. Indeed most of the limits for prompt RPV from Run I have been obtained assuming either or couplings in simplified models. Therefore it would be interesting not only to vary the types of RPV couplings, but also to consider approaches for studying complete SUSY mass spectra with different -parity-violating couplings. As an example, extending pMSSM models with RPV decays would lead to significantly different final states topologies in comparison to the RPC-based pMSSM models analyzed frequently. Also considering alternative options for the nature of both the NLSP and the LSP would modify some of the model-dependent results mentioned before. As an example, the assumption of a stau LSP has only been investigated in the analysis of 7 TeV data implying different final states with respect to LSPs. It would also be interesting to search for various types of heavy sparticle RPV resonances using the increased future energies at the LHC.

Since the largest cross sections are predicted for supersymmetric strong production processes for LHC Run II, signatures from gluino and/or squark production typically offer high potential for future RPV searches. Increasing the luminosity will also enhance the sensitivity for searches focusing on electroweak production processes. Ultimately, the results for RPV SUSY in Run II can become crucial for the question of supersymmetry at the weak scale.

Conflict of Interests

The author declares that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgments

The author is grateful to J. Boyd, M. Flowerdew, T. Lari, and V. Mitsou for their comments on this paper. This work was supported by the German BMBF within the research network FSP-101 “Physics on the TeV Scale with ATLAS at the LHC” and by the German Helmholtz Alliance “Physics at the Terascale.”