TeV and Superheavy Mass-Scale Particles from Supersymmetric Topological Defects, the Extragalactic Gamma-ray Background, and the Highest Energy Cosmic Rays

  • 29 October 1997
Abstract
Cosmic topological defects in a wide class of supersymmetric theories can simultaneously be sources of higgs particles of mass comparable to the supersymmetry breaking scale $\sim$ TeV, as well as superheavy gauge bosons of mass $\sim\eta$, where $\eta$ (>> 1 TeV) denotes the associated gauge symmetry breaking scale. For cosmic strings with $\eta\sim 10^{14}$ GeV, the higgs decay can account for the extragalactic diffuse gamma ray background above $\sim$ 10 GeV, while the superheavy gauge boson decay may explain the highest energy cosmic ray flux above $\sim 10^{11}$ GeV, if particle production is the dominant energy loss mechanism for cosmic strings, as recent simulations suggest. By the same token, cosmic strings for $\eta$ much above $\sim 10^{14}$ GeV are ruled out.