In SUSY models, you can have the case that sparticles and their decay products have near-degenerate masses. For example
$$ m(\tilde \chi^\pm_1) - m(\tilde \chi^0_1) < 1\,\mathrm{GeV}$$
Then in the leptonic decay mode
$$ \tilde \chi^\pm_1 \rightarrow \tilde \chi^0_1 + \bar\nu + e^-$$
you'd have the electrons basically produced at rest, or their momentum will be at least well below what you can comfortably detect at a hadron collider. How would you detect SUSY in such a scenario?
(Assume that you can't just search for other SUSY particles or decay chains, since you are either doing a model-independent search and don't know how heavy gluinos etc. are, or your other particles are out of range, or also degenerate in masses. Nature can be nasty.)
- You certainly can't just look for a drop in total cross section (disappearing events), since the SUSY cross sections are way too low.
- I was wondering if you could use associated production to find these kind of decays, for example if you produce a Z along with your SUSY particles, you'd see a boosted Z decay balanced by nothing to the other side. Would that work?
- I heard these scenarios would be easier to study with the ILC. Is that just because of the cleaner events, and that you'd be able to see those displaced decays easier?