Supersymmetric Large Extra Dimensions Are Small and/or Numerous
Abstract
Recently, a scenario has been proposed in which the gravitational scale could
be as low as the TeV scale, and extra dimensions could be large and detectable
at the electroweak scale. Although supersymmetry is not a requirement of this
scenario, it is nevertheless true that its best-motivated realizations arise in
supersymmetric theories (like M theory). We argue here that supersymmetry can
have robust, and in some instances fatal, implications for the expected
experimental signature for TeV-scale gravity. The signature of the
supersymmetric version of the scenario differs most dramatically from what has
been considered in the literature because mass splittings within the gravity
supermultiplet in these models are extremely small, implying in particular the
existence of a very light spin-one superpartner for the graviton. We compute
the implications of this graviphoton, and show that it can acquire
dimension-four couplings to ordinary matter which can strongly conflict with
supernova bounds.
Authors
Atwood D; Burgess CP; Filotas E; Leblond F; London D; Maksymyk I