Supersymmetry and Cosmology
arXiv:hep-ph/0405215 · doi:10.1016/j.aop.2004.09.014
Abstract
Cosmology now provides unambiguous, quantitative evidence for new particle physics. I discuss the implications of cosmology for supersymmetry and vice versa. Topics include: motivations for supersymmetry; supersymmetry breaking; dark energy; freeze out and WIMPs; neutralino dark matter; cosmologically preferred regions of minimal supergravity; direct and indirect detection of neutralinos; the DAMA and HEAT signals; inflation and reheating; gravitino dark matter; Big Bang nucleosynthesis; and the cosmic microwave background. I conclude with speculations about the prospects for a microscopic description of the dark universe, stressing the necessity of diverse experiments on both sides of the particle physics/cosmology interface.
66 pages, 28 figures, lectures given at the 2003 SLAC Summer Institute: Cosmic Connections to Particle Physics, in the Proceedings SLAC-R-702 and to appear in Annals of Physics; references added, published version