Supergravity with a gravitino lightest supersymmetric particle
- 25 October 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 70 (7)
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.70.075019
Abstract
We investigate supergravity models in which the lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) is a stable gravitino. We assume that the next-lightest supersymmetric particle (NLSP) freezes out with its thermal relic density before decaying to the gravitino at time t ~ 10^4 s - 10^8 s. In contrast to studies that assume a fixed gravitino relic density, the thermal relic density assumption implies upper, not lower, bounds on superpartner masses, with important implications for particle colliders. We consider slepton, sneutrino, and neutralino NLSPs, and determine what superpartner masses are viable in all of these cases, applying CMB and electromagnetic and hadronic BBN constraints to the leading two- and three-body NLSP decays. Hadronic constraints have been neglected previously, but we find that they provide the most stringent constraints in much of the natural parameter space. We then discuss the collider phenomenology of supergravity with a gravitino LSP. We find that colliders may provide important insights to clarify BBN and the thermal history of the Universe below temperatures around 10 GeV and may even provide precise measurements of the gravitino's mass and couplings.Comment: 24 pages, updated figures and minor changes, version to appear in Phys.Rev.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 72 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cosmological constraints on the light stable gravitinoPhysics Letters B, 1993
- Astrophysical constraints on massive unstable neutral relic particlesNuclear Physics B, 1992
- Constraints on cosmologically regenerated gravitinosPhysics Letters B, 1985
- The cosmology of decaying gravitinosNuclear Physics B, 1985
- Cosmological gravitino regeneration and decayPhysics Letters B, 1984
- Is it easy to save the gravitino?Physics Letters B, 1984
- New constraints on “INO” masses from cosmology (I). Supersymmetric “inos”Nuclear Physics B, 1983
- After primordial inflationPhysics Letters B, 1983
- Cosmological Constraints on the Scale of Supersymmetry BreakingPhysical Review Letters, 1982
- Supersymmetry, Cosmology, and New Physics at Teraelectronvolt EnergiesPhysical Review Letters, 1982