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Dive into the research topics where Marco O. P. Sampaio is active.

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Featured researches published by Marco O. P. Sampaio.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2015

Testing general relativity with present and future astrophysical observations

Emanuele Berti; Enrico Barausse; Vitor Cardoso; Leonardo Gualtieri; Paolo Pani; Ulrich Sperhake; Leo C. Stein; Norbert Wex; Kent Yagi; Tessa Baker; C. P. Burgess; Flávio S. Coelho; Daniela D. Doneva; Antonio De Felice; Pedro G. Ferreira; P. C. C. Freire; James Healy; Carlos Herdeiro; Michael Horbatsch; Burkhard Kleihaus; Antoine Klein; Kostas D. Kokkotas; Jutta Kunz; Pablo Laguna; Ryan N. Lang; Tjonnie G. F. Li; T. B. Littenberg; Andrew Matas; Saeed Mirshekari; Hirotada Okawa

One century after its formulation, Einsteins general relativity (GR) has made remarkable predictions and turned out to be compatible with all experimental tests. Most of these tests probe the theory in the weak-field regime, and there are theoretical and experimental reasons to believe that GR should be modified when gravitational fields are strong and spacetime curvature is large. The best astrophysical laboratories to probe strong-field gravity are black holes and neutron stars, whether isolated or in binary systems. We review the motivations to consider extensions of GR. We present a (necessarily incomplete) catalog of modified theories of gravity for which strong-field predictions have been computed and contrasted to Einsteins theory, and we summarize our current understanding of the structure and dynamics of compact objects in these theories. We discuss current bounds on modified gravity from binary pulsar and cosmological observations, and we highlight the potential of future gravitational wave measurements to inform us on the behavior of gravity in the strong-field regime.


Physical Review D | 2015

Two-loop stability of a complex singlet extended Standard Model

Raul Costa; Ant onio P. Morais; Marco O. P. Sampaio; Rui Santos

Motivated by the dark matter and the baryon asymmetry problems, we analyze a complex singlet extension of the Standard Model with a


European Physical Journal C | 2013

SCANNERS: constraining the phase diagram of a complex scalar singlet at the LHC

R. A. Coimbra; Marco O. P. Sampaio; Rui Santos

{\mathbb{Z}}_{2}


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2016

Singlet extensions of the standard model at LHC Run 2: benchmarks and comparison with the NMSSM

Raul Costa; Margarete Mühlleitner; Marco O. P. Sampaio; Rui Santos

symmetry (which provides a dark matter candidate). After a detailed two-loop calculation of the renormalization group equations for the new scalar sector, we study the radiative stability of the model up to a high energy scale (with the constraint that the 126 GeV Higgs boson found at the LHC is in the spectrum) and find it requires the existence of a new scalar state mixing with the Higgs with a mass larger than 140 GeV. This bound is not very sensitive to the cutoff scale as long as the latter is larger than


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2014

Wrong sign and symmetric limits and non-decoupling in 2HDMs

P. M. Ferreira; Renato Guedes; Marco O. P. Sampaio; Rui Santos

{10}^{10}\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{GeV}


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2006

Casimir energy and a cosmological bounce

Carlos Herdeiro; Marco O. P. Sampaio

. We then include all experimental and observational constraints/measurements from collider data, from dark matter direct detection experiments, and from the Planck satellite and in addition force stability at least up to the grand unified theory scale, to find that the lower bound is raised to about 170 GeV, while the dark matter particle must be heavier than about 50 GeV.


Physical Review D | 2014

Marginal scalar and Proca clouds around Reissner-Nordstr\"om black holes

Marco O. P. Sampaio; Carlos Herdeiro; Mengjie Wang

We present the first version of a new tool to scan the parameter space of generic scalar potentials, ScannerS (Coimbra et al., ScannerS project., 2013). The main goal of ScannerS is to help distinguish between different patterns of symmetry breaking for each scalar potential. In this work we use it to investigate the possibility of excluding regions of the phase diagram of several versions of a complex singlet extension of the Standard Model, with future LHC results. We find that if another scalar is found, one can exclude a phase with a dark matter candidate in definite regions of the parameter space, while predicting whether a third scalar to be found must be lighter or heavier. The first version of the code is publicly available and contains various generic core routines for tree level vacuum stability analysis, as well as implementations of collider bounds, dark matter constraints, electroweak precision constraints and tree level unitarity.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Radiation from a D-dimensional collision of shock waves: a remarkably simple fit formula.

Flávio S. Coelho; Carlos Herdeiro; Marco O. P. Sampaio

A bstractThe Complex singlet extension of the Standard Model (CxSM) is the simplest extension that provides scenarios for Higgs pair production with different masses. The model has two interesting phases: the dark matter phase, with a Standard Model-like Higgs boson, a new scalar and a dark matter candidate; and the broken phase, with all three neutral scalars mixing. In the latter phase Higgs decays into a pair of two different Higgs bosons are possible.In this study we analyse Higgs-to-Higgs decays in the framework of singlet extensions of the Standard Model (SM), with focus on the CxSM. After demonstrating that scenarios with large rates for such chain decays are possible we perform a comparison between the NMSSM and the CxSM. We find that, based on Higgs-to-Higgs decays, the only possibility to distinguish the two models at the LHC run 2 is through final states with two different scalars. This conclusion builds a strong case for searches for final states with two different scalars at the LHC run 2.Finally, we propose a set of benchmark points for the real and complex singlet extensions to be tested at the LHC run 2. They have been chosen such that the discovery prospects of the involved scalars are maximised and they fulfil the dark matter constraints. Furthermore, for some of the points the theory is stable up to high energy scales. For the computation of the decay widths and branching ratios we developed the Fortran code sHDECAY, which is based on the implementation of the real and complex singlet extensions of the SM in HDECAY.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2011

Radiation from a D-dimensional collision of shock waves: First order perturbation theory

Carlos Herdeiro; Marco O. P. Sampaio; Carmen Rebelo

A bstractWe analyse the possibility that, in two Higgs doublet models, one or more of the Higgs couplings to fermions or to gauge bosons change sign, relative to the respective Higgs Standard Model couplings. Possible sign changes in the coupling of a neutral scalar to charged ones are also discussed. These wrong signs can have important physical consequences, manifesting themselves in Higgs production via gluon fusion or Higgs decay into two gluons or into two photons. We consider all possible wrong sign scenarios, and also the symmetric limit, in all possible Yukawa implementations of the two Higgs doublet model, in two different possibilities: the observed Higgs boson is the lightest CP-even scalar, or the heaviest one. We also analyse thoroughly the impact of the currently available LHC data on such scenarios. With all 8 TeV data analysed, all wrong sign scenarios are allowed in all Yukawa types, even at the 1σ level. However, we will show that B-physics constraints are crucial in excluding the possibility of wrong sign scenarios in the case where tan β is below 1. We will also discuss the future prospects for probing the wrong sign scenarios at the next LHC run. Finally we will present a scenario where the alignment limit could be excluded due to non-decoupling in the case where the heavy CP-even Higgs is the one discovered at the LHC.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2017

Phenomenological comparison of models with extended Higgs sectors

Margarete Mühlleitner; Marco O. P. Sampaio; Rui Santos; Jonas Wittbrodt

We review different computation methods for the renormalized energy–momentum tensor of a quantized scalar field in an Einstein static universe. For the extensively studied conformally coupled case, we check their equivalence; for different couplings, we discuss violation of different energy conditions. In particular, there is a family of masses and couplings which violate the weak and strong energy conditions but do not lead to spacelike propagation. Amongst these cases is that of a minimally coupled massless scalar field with no potential. We also point out a particular coupling for which a massless scalar field has vanishing renormalized energy–momentum tensor. We discuss the backreaction problem and in particular the possibility that this Casimir energy could both source a short inflationary epoch and avoid the big bang singularity through a bounce.

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Rui Santos

Universidade Nova de Lisboa

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Margarete Mühlleitner

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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