Gaugino

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In supersymmetry theories of particle physics, a gaugino is the hypothetical fermionic supersymmetric field quantum (superpartner) of a gauge field, as predicted by gauge theory combined with supersymmetry. All gauginos have a spin of 1/2, except for the gravitino, which has a spin of 3/2.

Contents

In the minimal supersymmetric extension of the standard model the following gauginos exist:

Sometimes the term "electroweakinos" is used to refer to winos and binos and on occasion also higgsinos. [1] Note that in other SUSY models the zino (
Z͂
) is the superpartner of the Z boson.

Mixing

Gauginos mix[ clarification needed ] with higgsinos, the superpartners of the Higgs field's degrees of freedom, to form mass eigenstates called neutralinos, which are electrically neutral, and charginos, which are electrically charged.

In many supersymmetric models[ clarification needed ], the lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP), often a neutralino such as the photino, is stable. In that case it is a weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) and a candidate for dark matter.[ further explanation needed ]

See also

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In supersymmetry, the neutralino is a hypothetical particle. In the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM), a popular model of realization of supersymmetry at a low energy, there are four neutralinos that are fermions and are electrically neutral, the lightest of which is stable in an R-parity conserved scenario of MSSM. They are typically labeled
0
1
,
0
2
,
0
3
and
0
4
although sometimes is also used when is used to refer to charginos.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chargino</span>

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±
1
and
±
2
, although sometimes and are also used to refer to charginos, when is used to refer to neutralinos. The heavier chargino can decay through the neutral Z boson to the lighter chargino. Both can decay through a charged W boson to a neutralino:

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, is the superpartner of the Higgs field. A higgsino is a Dirac fermionic field with spin 12 and it refers to a weak isodoublet with hypercharge half under the Standard Model gauge symmetries. After electroweak symmetry breaking higgsino fields linearly mix with U(1) and SU(2) gauginos leading to four neutralinos and two charginos that refer to physical particles. While the two charginos are charged Dirac fermions, the neutralinos are electrically neutral Majorana fermions. In an R-parity-conserving version of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, the lightest neutralino typically becomes the lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP). The LSP is a particle physics candidate for the dark matter of the universe since it cannot decay to particles with lighter mass. A neutralino LSP, depending on its composition can be bino, wino or higgsino dominated in nature and can have different zones of mass values in order to satisfy the estimated dark matter relic density. Commonly, a higgsino dominated LSP is often referred as a higgsino, in spite of the fact that a higgsino is not a physical state in the true sense.

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References

  1. Gori, Stefania; Jung, Sunghoon; Wang, Lian-Tao; Wells, James D. (2014). "Prospects for electroweakino discovery at a 100 TeV hadron collider". Journal of High Energy Physics. 2014 (12): 108. arXiv: 1410.6287 . Bibcode:2014JHEP...12..108G. doi:10.1007/JHEP12(2014)108. S2CID   118439454.