1 / 16

What prospects for Black Holes at the Large Hadron Collider ?

What prospects for Black Holes at the Large Hadron Collider ?. How might black holes be produced at the LHC? Discussion of recent developments in their simulation. Comments on recent attempts to extract physics. Christopher.Lester @ cern.ch. Motivation. Ancient History

mimi
Télécharger la présentation

What prospects for Black Holes at the Large Hadron Collider ?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What prospects for Black Holes at the Large Hadron Collider ? How might black holes be produced at the LHC? Discussion of recent developments in their simulation. Comments on recent attempts to extract physics. Christopher.Lester @ cern.ch

  2. Motivation • Ancient History It is widely accepted that particle collisions above the fundamental scale of Gravitational Interactions should lead to Black Hole production. We observe (macroscopically) MP(4D)~1018 TeV • New ingredient Models with extra dimensions (“n”) now permit the extra-dimensional Planck Scale to be many orders of magnitude smaller than the above. We may have (fundamentally) MP((4+n)D)~1 TeV (n=1 and n=2 ruled out on astrophysical grounds) Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  3. Production at the LHC • Get more than ~ TeV of energy into a small enough region … and Black Hole forms spontaneously! • Characteristic size of maximal impact parameter is approx the Schwarzschild radius of the resulting Black Hole Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  4. hep-ph/0106295 Production cross section • Geometrical arguments: • This is consensus view, but not everyone agrees; e.g. hep-ph/0111099 promotes exponential suppression but is strongly contested by gr-qc/0201034. • rBH is itself a function of MBH: • MBH goes like √s, so cross section falls with increasing MBH due to rapidly falling PDFs.Plot, right, shows cross sections for n=4 extra dimensions at the LHC for a variety of fundamental Planck masses. • Total x-sec examples: • 0.5 nb (MP=2 TeV, n=7) • 120 fb (MP=6 TeV, n=3) Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  5. hep-ph/0106295 Production cross section(2) • If the BHs are produced at all, they are likely to be produced in large numbers. • Plot, right, shows SM background would be orders of magnitude lower than BH production. Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  6. Black Hole Decay at LHC Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  7. (image courtesy of flukestudio.com) Event generators … Two main generators* • TRUENOIR(Landsberg) • First on the scene! • BLACK{Soon to be renamed CHARYBDIS} (Harris & Richardson & HERWIG authors) • Time dependent evolution(BH can get hotter as it shrinks) • Parametrised Grey-Body Factors • “Remnant Handling” options • BH Recoil • Interfaces to HERWIG and PYTHIA via “Les Houches Accord” * To the best of my knowledge … Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  8. Grey-body Factors Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  9. spin-1 scalars fermions n=6 scalars n=2 fermions spin-1 n=0 Grey-body factors; Effects • Principally affect low part of emission spectrum • Particularly important for low values of “n” • (High part always looks like Planck Spectrum) • Depend on spin of emitted particle • In example (right) grey-body factors accentuate photon emission as “n” increases. • Could try to use to constrain “n”. • New result: Harris (in preparation) calculates grey-body factors numerically in “n” extra dimensions • Finds significant disagreement with earlier analytic attempts which only extracted “first few terms” in series Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  10. Relative Emission Probabilities Conclusion: (Harris) Grey-body factors should not be ignored when looking at small numbers of extra dimensions (“small”: n<6) . Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  11. Easy to reconstruct MBH ! Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  12. Approach of Dimopoulos and Landsberg (hep-ph/0106295). At high energies, γand e spectrum looks like black body, so try to reconstruct TH from Wien’s Law. Attempt also to reconstruct MBH in each event. Recover “n” from dependence of TH on MBH. hep-ph/0106295 Extract “n” from Wien’s Law? Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  13. Problems? A:Evaporation at fixed T • Fitted value of “n” depends strongly on how you model the BH decay • Example: Compare two models; • BH decays “suddenly” at fixed temperature, • BH temperature grows as BH shrinks Fit both models according to fixed temperature model. Recover wrong value of “n” for model B. Effect more pronounced as “n” increases. • Conclusion: Community needs to decide upon status of temperature evolution during Black Hole decays ! Fit: n=1.7±0.3 B: Evaporation at varying T Fit: n=3.8±1.0 Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  14. Event shape variables? • Two BHs of the same mass, but living in different numbers of dimensions: one is hotter, one cooler; • The Hot BH emits mostly energetic particles, with low mutliplicity. • The Cool BH emits mostly soft particles, with high multiplicity. • So look for changes in multiplicities and event shape variables …. Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  15. No easy answers … • Those attempting to measure “n” at Cambridge (Sabetfakhri & Harris) are not celebrating yet • While BH discovery easy, the hunt for observables that do not do not depend on • The temperature model, • The remnant decay model, & • Presence of BH recoil seems to be very hard. • May have to retain substantial model dependence in attempts to measure “n”. Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

  16. We can expect ATLAS and CMS to Discover extra-dimensions thorough Black Hole events provided fundamental Planck scale is accessible by the LHC, i.e. MP~few TeV. Expect discovery to be easy due to large predicted cross sections. Expect discovery to be largely model independent as the parts of the decay that are not well understood are at the end of the decays (remnants …) not in the cross sections. We can hope ATLAS and CMS might Tell us something about the number of extra dimensions “n” Answer may depend on model Make precise measurements ? In some scenarios, 107 BH eventsper year – comparable to Z bosons at LEP! Other areas of completed and ongoing research which there was not time to discuss: New physics (Higgs?) from BH events … Should we worry about spin-down? Does Quantum Gravity mess everything up ? What about production BELOW Planck scale? Would it dominate? Everything else which I have forgotten ... CMS Conclusions Prague2003 : Black Holes at the LHC : Christopher.Lester@cern.ch

More Related