Beyond the Standard Model Lectures
Abstract
We cover some current topics in Beyond the Standard Model phenomenology, with an emphasis on collider (particularly Large Hadron Collider) phenomenology. We begin with a review of the Standard Model and some unresolved mysteries that it leaves. Then, we shall heuristically introduce supersymmetry, grand unified theories and extra dimensions as paradigms for expanding the Standard Model. The collider phenomenology of such models is too rich and complex to review, but we give some key examples of how the new states associated with the models might be inferred in Large Hadron Collider events. Before concluding, we finish with a brief description of a quantum field theory approximation that can be used in some cases to reduce model dependence: effective field theory. We show how this can be employed to explain recent measurements of decays of mesons, which disagree with Standard Model predictions.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1609.02015,
title = {Beyond the Standard Model Lectures},
author = {B. C. Allanach},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1609.02015},
year = {2019}
}
Comments
These notes are BSM lectures given at the 2016 European School of High-Energy Physics, in Skeikampen, Norway and in 2018 at Maratea Italy (v3), to over 100 experimental PhD students. A large portion of these notes is based on Prof F Quevedo's excellent Cambridge Part III "Supersymmetry and extra dimensions" course arXiv:1011.1491. Submitted for publication in a CERN Yellow Report (YR)