Searching for leptoquarks with the ATLAS detector
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 18:39 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
ATLAS excludes first- and second-generation leptoquarks below 1400 and 1560 GeV in the minimal BRW model.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Results from the latest searches for pair-produced scalar leptoquarks using 36.1 fb^{-1} of pp-collision data recorded by the ATLAS detector at √s = 13 TeV were presented. No statistically significant excess of data over Standard Model prediction is observed. The observed limits on first- (second-) generation leptoquark masses are excluded up to 1400 (1560) GeV in the minimal Buchmüller-Rückl-Wyler model, assuming a leptoquark decay branching ratio of 100% into a charged lepton and a quark. Third generation leptoquark masses are excluded up to 1000 GeV at the highest and lowest decay branching ratios for both up-type and down-type leptoquarks.
What carries the argument
Search for pair-produced scalar leptoquarks in ATLAS detector data, interpreted within the minimal Buchmüller-Rückl-Wyler model with assumed 100% branching ratio to charged lepton plus quark.
If this is right
- First-generation leptoquarks must be heavier than 1400 GeV if they decay exclusively to a charged lepton and a quark.
- Second-generation leptoquarks must be heavier than 1560 GeV under the same decay assumption.
- Third-generation leptoquarks are excluded below 1000 GeV for both the highest and lowest allowed branching ratios in up-type and down-type scenarios.
- Models that introduce leptoquarks at lower masses are ruled out by the null result in this dataset.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Future runs with higher integrated luminosity could raise these mass limits further if no signal appears.
- Leptoquarks that decay through non-standard channels or with intermediate branching ratios would require separate dedicated searches.
- The limits constrain the parameter space of models proposed to explain certain flavor anomalies or other beyond-Standard-Model phenomena.
- Absence of signals at these masses pushes any new physics involving leptoquarks to higher energy scales accessible only with more data or higher collision energies.
Load-bearing premise
The analysis assumes a 100% branching ratio into a charged lepton plus quark and the validity of the minimal Buchmüller-Rückl-Wyler model for interpreting the absence of excess events.
What would settle it
Observation of a statistically significant excess of events whose kinematic distributions match the expected signature of leptoquark pair production.
Figures
read the original abstract
Results from the latest searches for pair-produced scalar leptoquarks using 36.1 $\text{fb}^{-1}$ of $pp$-collision data recorded by the ATLAS detector at $\sqrt{s}$ = 13 TeV were presented. No statistically significant excess of data over Standard Model prediction is observed. The observed limits on first- (second-) generation leptoquark masses are excluded up to 1400 (1560) GeV in the minimal Buchm\"uller-R\"uckl-Wyler model, assuming a leptoquark decay branching ratio of 100% into a charged lepton and a quark. Third generation leptoquark masses are excluded up to 1000 GeV at the highest and lowest decay branching ratios for both up-type and down-type leptoquarks.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript reports results from searches for pair-produced scalar leptoquarks in 36.1 fb^{-1} of 13 TeV pp collision data recorded with the ATLAS detector. No statistically significant excess over Standard Model predictions is observed. Observed 95% CL mass exclusion limits are presented: 1400 GeV (first generation) and 1560 GeV (second generation) assuming 100% branching ratio to charged lepton plus quark in the minimal Buchmüller-Rückl-Wyler model; third-generation limits reach 1000 GeV at the highest and lowest branching ratios for both up-type and down-type leptoquarks.
Significance. If the background modeling, systematic uncertainties, and statistical procedures are robust, the work supplies updated, model-conditional constraints on leptoquark masses that tighten the allowed parameter space for BSM scenarios. The explicit statement of the 100% (or extremal) branching-ratio assumptions and the minimal BRW model makes the scope of the limits transparent.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract states the luminosity and energy but does not repeat the center-of-mass energy when quoting the third-generation limits; a single consistent phrasing would improve readability.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the manuscript and their recommendation to accept it.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity in experimental limit-setting
full rationale
This is an ATLAS experimental search paper reporting 95% CL mass exclusion limits from a null result (no excess over SM background) in 36.1 fb^{-1} of 13 TeV pp data. The limits are derived by comparing observed data to Standard Model Monte Carlo predictions under explicitly declared assumptions (100% branching ratio to lepton+quark for first/second generation; extremal branching ratios for third generation) within the minimal BRW model. No equations, parameters, or derivations are present that reduce by construction to fitted inputs, self-definitions, or self-citation chains. The result is conditional on the stated model assumptions rather than claiming model-independent coverage, and the derivation chain is self-contained against external data benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Standard Model background predictions accurately describe the data in the signal regions
- domain assumption Detector simulation and reconstruction efficiencies are correctly modeled
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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