English

Sequestering in String Compactifications

High Energy Physics - Theory 2015-05-20 v1 High Energy Physics - Phenomenology

Abstract

We study the mediation of supersymmetry breaking in string compactifications whose moduli are stabilized by nonperturbative effects. We begin with a critical review of arguments for sequestering in supergravity and in string theory. We then show that geometric isolation, even in a highly warped space, is insufficient to achieve sequestering: in type IIB compactifications, nonperturbative superpotentials involving the Kahler moduli introduce cross-couplings between well-separated visible and hidden sectors. The scale of the resulting soft terms depends on the moduli stabilization scenario. In the Large Volume Scenario, nonperturbative superpotential contributions to the soft trilinear AA terms can introduce significant flavor violation, while in KKLT compactifications their effects are negligible. In both cases, the contributions to the μ\mu and BμB\mu parameters cannot be ignored in general. We conclude that sequestered supersymmetry breaking is possible in nonperturbatively-stabilized compactifications only if a mechanism in addition to bulk locality suppresses superpotential cross-couplings.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1012.1858,
  title  = {Sequestering in String Compactifications},
  author = {Marcus Berg and David Marsh and Liam McAllister and Enrico Pajer},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1012.1858},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

47 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-21T16:55:37.556Z