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cern: First evidence for the decay Bs → μ+μ− |
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| Nov12-12, 12:42 PM | #1 |
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cern: First evidence for the decay Bs → μ+μ−
BBC News reported this
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20300100 https://cdsweb.cern.ch/record/149330...R-2012-043.pdf |
| Nov12-12, 01:14 PM | #2 |
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Tommaso Dorigo commented the result here:
http://www.science20.com/quantum_dia..._dimuons-96311 |
| Nov12-12, 06:25 PM | #3 |
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I notice the following:
- Dorrigo makes no claim re. supersymmetry - Matt Strassler , in his blog, also makes no such claim; only that SM survives another test. - The actual paper does not mention Susy Gordon Kane, comments below that that the result is not unexpected for SUSY/string. http://motls.blogspot.com/2012/11/su...ions.html#more Is there any source for the 'contradictions' besides BBC? |
| Nov12-12, 10:16 PM | #4 |
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cern: First evidence for the decay Bs → μ+μ−
As always, SUSY can evade these things just by having the superpartners be heavy enough to not to contribute much to these processes. These flavour constraints eat up various chunks of parameter space that are different to direct searches and dark matter constraints etc. though, so they are still important.
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| Nov13-12, 01:10 AM | #5 |
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@kurros, then how can you test supersymmetry if there's no strict prediction on the sizes of the masses?
(even a range of the predicted masses). |
| Nov13-12, 01:20 AM | #6 |
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But none of these things tell you as much as actually observing superpartners and measuring their masses directly. |
| Nov13-12, 01:27 AM | #7 |
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And what will make people abandon supersymmetry? Or nobody thinks of this option?
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| Nov13-12, 01:46 AM | #8 |
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As long as we continue to see everything compatible with the standard model, SUSY cannot be killed. SUSY predictions can always be made to be exactly the same as the SM predictions for sufficiently decoupled superpartners. It is basically an Occams razor thing. In general, the community will assume everything is going according to the Standard Model plan until forced to concede otherwise. Next SUSY is the simplest (arguably) choice, so they will try to cram any observations into that framework. Only once SUSY really definitely cannot explain something will they turn to other ideas (although of course there are people working on other ideas all the time, I just mean those will not become mainstream until the previous mainstream ideas are really unworkable). |
| Nov13-12, 07:33 AM | #9 |
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| Nov13-12, 10:36 AM | #10 |
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| Nov13-12, 11:08 AM | #11 |
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Recognitions:
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That's not true at all. Supersymmetry is widely used in cosmological model building, for applications in Baryogenesis and Leptogenesis, as well as the theory of inflation. It serves many purposes as well in GUT model building.
It also seems vital for quantum gravity for any number of theoretical reasons, many of which are general arguments involving black holes etc The reason it is still so popular in electroweak model building is precisely because there is a distinct lack of credible alternatives for so many pressing questions that really must be answered. So I agree with the poster above. It won't disappear as a credible idea unless some other new physics is observed or invented, that explains away all those problems in a simpler more elegant and natural fashion. Until that time, all that the LHC is doing is eating up parameter space. |
| Nov13-12, 08:11 PM | #12 |
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Blog Entries: 5
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SUSY is not going anywhere as a theory in general. But if it is ruled out as a solution to the hierarchy problem then it loses the motivation for it to be at the EW scale.
SUSY is very popular for many reasons. One of the major reasons is that it is within many physicists confort zones. I think it would be better for physics if the LHC finds something non-perturbative to push the community to understand strongly coupled theories. |
| Nov14-12, 10:03 AM | #13 |
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So it has no agreed on effect on supersymmetry, but it does strengthen the standard model?
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| Nov14-12, 10:34 AM | #14 |
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