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arxiv: 2606.06607 · v1 · pith:WTE4CIPInew · submitted 2026-06-04 · ✦ hep-ph · hep-th

Photons, jets and missing momentum from a two-vector dark sector

Pith reviewed 2026-06-28 00:21 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ✦ hep-ph hep-th
keywords vector dark matterLHC phenomenologymissing transverse momentumdark parityeffective field theoryrelic abundancefreeze-outradiative decay
0
0 comments X

The pith

A three-bin missing-momentum analysis improves LHC sensitivity to a two-vector dark sector and reaches parameter space consistent with the observed relic density.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper studies an effective theory containing two neutral vector particles that are odd under a dark parity. The lighter vector is stable and serves as dark matter while the heavier one decays to the lighter state plus a photon through dimension-six operators coupling to the hypercharge field strength. When the pair is produced together with QCD jets, the resulting signature is a photon, jets, and missing transverse momentum. A cut-based search that divides events into three bins of missing momentum is compared with a simple inclusive selection; the binned version yields substantially stronger expected limits. These limits cover regions where the dark-matter abundance matches observations through ordinary thermal freeze-out.

Core claim

In the prompt-decay regime, the heavier vector state decays radiatively and the two-vector system produced with QCD radiation yields a gamma plus jets plus missing-transverse-momentum final state. A cut-based analysis retaining coarse shape information through three bins in missing transverse momentum substantially improves the expected reach relative to an inclusive missing-momentum selection and covers portions of parameter space compatible with the observed relic abundance under standard freeze-out.

What carries the argument

Two neutral massive vector states odd under dark-parity symmetry whose leading interactions with the Standard Model arise from dimension-six operators involving the hypercharge field strength, producing a radiative decay of the heavier state.

If this is right

  • The binned strategy extends the expected LHC reach into higher-mass or lower-coupling regions of the model.
  • Portions of the parameter space that reproduce the observed relic density via thermal freeze-out become testable.
  • The effective-theory description loses validity at sufficiently high masses, limiting the applicability of the predictions.
  • A freeze-in production mechanism for the dark matter remains viable but requires separate analysis.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Higher-luminosity LHC data could close or discover the remaining freeze-out-compatible window with the same final state.
  • The same three-bin shape information could be applied to other dark-sector models that produce photons plus missing momentum.
  • The radiative-decay kinematics imply a characteristic photon-energy distribution that could be checked in existing or future datasets.

Load-bearing premise

The heavier vector decays promptly and the dominant interactions are given by dimension-six operators involving the hypercharge field strength.

What would settle it

A statistically significant excess or deficit appearing specifically in the three missing-momentum bins of the photon-plus-jets-plus-missing-momentum channel at the LHC, or the continued absence of such an excess once the predicted sensitivity is reached.

read the original abstract

We investigate the LHC phenomenology of a vector dark-sector effective theory containing two neutral massive vector states, both odd under a dark-parity symmetry. The lightest state is stable and provides a dark-matter candidate, while the leading interactions with the Standard Model arise from dimension-six operators involving the hypercharge field strength. In the prompt-decay regime considered in this work, the heavier state can decay radiatively, leading to a $\gamma+\text{jets}+E_T^{\text{miss}}$ signature when the two dark vectors are produced in association with QCD radiation. We study this topology at the LHC through a cut-based analysis, comparing an inclusive missing-transverse-momentum selection with a three-bin strategy that retains coarse shape information. The binned analysis is found to substantially improve the expected reach and probes regions of the parameter space compatible with the observed relic abundance in the standard freeze-out scenario. We also discuss the freeze-in interpretation and the limitations associated with the EFT description at high masses.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 0 minor

Summary. The manuscript presents a phenomenological study of a vector dark-sector effective theory with two neutral massive vector states odd under a dark parity. The lightest vector is stable and serves as a dark-matter candidate. Leading interactions with the Standard Model arise from dimension-six operators involving the hypercharge field strength. In the prompt-decay regime, associated production of the two vectors with QCD radiation yields a γ + jets + E_T^miss signature. The authors perform a cut-based LHC analysis comparing an inclusive missing-transverse-momentum selection against a three-bin strategy that retains coarse shape information. The binned analysis is reported to substantially improve the expected reach and to probe parameter space compatible with the observed relic density under standard freeze-out. The paper also discusses the freeze-in interpretation and EFT limitations at high masses.

Significance. If the reported improvement from the binned strategy holds under detailed scrutiny, the work supplies a concrete illustration of how retaining limited shape information in MET-based searches can enhance sensitivity to radiative-decay dark-sector models. This is of direct relevance to LHC dark-matter and hidden-sector searches. The explicit scoping to the prompt-decay regime and the discussion of EFT validity limits are constructive elements. No machine-checked proofs or open code are supplied, but the relic-density benchmark comparison is a standard and useful anchor for the phenomenological claims.

major comments (1)
  1. [Analysis section] Analysis section: The central claim that the three-bin strategy substantially improves expected reach (and reaches relic-density-compatible regions) is load-bearing. The manuscript supplies no details on background estimation, specific cut values, systematic uncertainties, or validation of the binned strategy. Without this information it is impossible to assess whether the claimed improvement is supported.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the detailed and constructive report. The single major comment identifies a genuine gap in the presentation of the analysis. We address it below and will revise the manuscript accordingly.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: The central claim that the three-bin strategy substantially improves expected reach (and reaches relic-density-compatible regions) is load-bearing. The manuscript supplies no details on background estimation, specific cut values, systematic uncertainties, or validation of the binned strategy. Without this information it is impossible to assess whether the claimed improvement is supported.

    Authors: We agree that the Analysis section as written does not supply the requested technical details. The manuscript currently emphasizes the overall topology, the comparison between inclusive and binned selections, and the resulting reach, but omits explicit documentation of background modeling, the numerical cut thresholds, systematic uncertainty treatment, and validation studies for the three-bin MET strategy. In the revised manuscript we will expand the Analysis section to include these elements, thereby allowing an independent evaluation of the reported improvement and its implications for relic-density-compatible parameter space. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity in derivation chain

full rationale

The manuscript performs a standard cut-based phenomenological comparison of inclusive MET vs. three-bin selections on simulated LHC events for a vector dark-sector EFT. The central claim (improved reach overlapping relic-density-compatible parameter space) follows directly from the event generation, selection efficiencies, and external cosmology inputs without any reduction of predictions to fitted parameters, self-definitional relations, or load-bearing self-citations. The prompt-decay and dim-6 operator assumptions are explicitly scoped as analysis choices, not derived internally. No equations or uniqueness theorems are invoked that collapse to the paper's own inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the validity of the effective field theory with dimension-six operators and the prompt-decay assumption for the heavier vector; no free parameters, axioms, or invented entities are extractable from the abstract alone.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5729 in / 1076 out tokens · 26313 ms · 2026-06-28T00:21:57.553498+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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Reference graph

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