Higgs-boson properties clarified through decay pattern analysis

Gaby Clark
scientific editor

Andrew Zinin
lead editor

The ATLAS collaboration finds evidence of Higgs-boson decays to muons and improves sensitivity to Higgs-boson decays to a Z boson and a photon.
Studies of the properties of the Higgs boson featured prominently in the program of the major annual physics conference, the (EPS-HEP), held this week in Marseille, France. Among the results by the ATLAS collaboration were two results narrowing in on two exceptionally rare Higgs-boson decays.
The was the Higgs-boson decay into a pair of muons (H鈫捨嘉). Despite its scarceness鈥攐ccurring in just 1 out of every 5000 Higgs decays鈥攖his process provides the best opportunity to study the Higgs interaction with second-generation fermions and shed light on the origin of mass across different generations. Up to now, the interactions of the Higgs boson with matter particles have only been observed for particles from the third, heaviest, generation: the tau lepton and the top and bottom quarks.
The was the Higgs-boson decay into a Z boson and a photon (H鈫抁纬), where the Z boson subsequently decays into electron or muon pairs. This rare decay is especially intriguing, as it proceeds via an intermediate "loop" of virtual particles. If new, unknown particles contribute to this loop, the process could offer hints of physics beyond the Standard Model.

Identifying these rare decays is quite the challenge. For H鈫捨嘉, researchers looked for a small excess of events clustering near a muon-pair mass of 125 GeV (the mass of the Higgs boson). This signal can be easily hidden behind the thousands of muon pairs produced through other processes ("background"). The H鈫抁纬 decay with the Z decaying into electrons or muons is even harder to isolate, due to the Z boson only decaying this way only about 6% of the time and photons being easily mimicked by particle jets.
To boost the sensitivity of their searches, ATLAS physicists combined the first three years of LHC Run 3 data with the full LHC Run 2 data. They also developed a sophisticated method to better model background processes, categorized recorded events by the specific Higgs-production modes and made further improvements to their event-selection techniques.
In for H鈫捨嘉 using the full Run 2 data set, the ATLAS collaboration saw its first hint of this process at the level of 2 standard deviations, while the reached a significance of 3 standard deviations with 2.5 standard deviations expected. Now, with the combined Run 2 and Run 3 data sets, the with an expected significance of 2.5 standard deviations and an observed significance of 3.4 standard deviations. This means that the chance that the result is a statistical fluctuation is less than 1 in 3000.
As for the H鈫抁纬 process, a previous ATLAS and CMS combined analysis used Run 2 data to find evidence of this decay mode. It reported an excess over the background-only hypothesis of 3.4 standard deviations with 1.6 standard deviations expected. The , combining Run 2 and Run 3 data, reported an excess of 2.5 standard deviations. The expected sensitivity of this analysis is 1.9 standard deviations, providing the most stringent expected sensitivity to date for measuring the decay probability ("branching fraction") of H鈫抁纬.
These achievements were made possible by the large, excellent data set provided by the LHC, the outstanding efficiency and performance of the ATLAS experiment and the use of novel analysis techniques. With more data on the horizon, the journey of exploration continues.
More information: Evidence for the dimuon decay of the Higgs boson in pp collisions with the ATLAS detector,
Search for the Higgs boson decay to a 饾憤 boson and a photon in 饾憹饾憹 collisions at 饾憼=13 TeV and 13.6 TeV with the ATLAS detector,
Read more on the .
Provided by CERN