Review on Higgs Hidden–Dark Sector Physics at High-Energy Colliders
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Physics of the Standard Model (SM)
1.2. BSM-New Physics (NP)
- “Neutrino masses and oscillations”: What causes neutrinos to vanish and then reappear in a new form? Why are neutrinos massless?
- “Baryon asymmetry of the Universe”: What mechanism generated the early Universe’s minor matter-antimatter imbalance?
- “Dark Matter”: what is the most common type of matter in our Universe?
- “Cosmological inflation”: What caused the Universe to expand at an accelerated rate in the early stages of its evolution?
- “Dark Energy (DE)”: What is driving the Universe’s current stage of evolution’s accelerated expansion?
1.2.1. BSM-New Physics Motivations
Neutrino Oscillations
Abundance of Matter, Absence of Anti-Matter
Cosmological Inflation and Dark Energy
Higgs Mass Fine Tuning
Strong CP Problem
Cosmological Constant and Dark Energy
New Physics at the TeV Scale and Beyond
Right-Handed Neutrinos
(WIMP) Dark Matter Models
Axion Dark Matter Models
1.2.2. Dark Matter and LHC
Dark Matter Theoretical Hypotheses
Strategies of Dark Matter Searches
Missing-Momentum Signal and Bump Hunting
Narrowing down the WIMP Territory
1.3. Energy and Intensity Frontiers
2. Hidden–Dark Sector
2.1. The Dark Photon Theory
2.2. Overview of Dark Photon Experiments (above 1 GeV)
2.3. Dark Photons at Low Energy (up to 10 GeV)
2.4. Dark Photon Search Strategies
2.5. Summary of Existing Constraints and Future Experiments
3. Hidden–Dark Sector at High-Energy Colliders
3.1. Dark Sector and Exotic Higgs Decays
3.1.1. General Motivation to Search for Exotic Higgs Decays
- (1)
- “The observed Higgs at 125 GeV” is principally responsible for breaking the electroweak symmetry.
- (2)
- “The observed Higgs at 125 GeV” decays to new particles beyond the SM.
3.1.2. SM + Vector
Theoretical Motivation H→ZZd→4l
Theoretical Motivation, H→ZdZd→4l
Decays H→ZdZd, ZZd
3.2. Higgs Hidden–Dark Sector and Theory Predictions for High-Energy Future Collider Searches
Summary of Dark Photon Future Collider Prospects
4. Selected Dark Photon Studies at LHC at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
4.1. Higgs Decays Dark Massive Photon (ATLAS, CMS)
4.1.1. Search for Higgs Decays to BSM Light Bosons in Four Leptons with ATLAS at = 13 TeV
- High-mass (HM): H→XX→4l (15 GeV < mX < 60 GeV).
- Low-mass (LM): H→XX→4µ (1 GeV< mX < 15 GeV).
- Single 𝑍 boson (ZX): H→𝑍X→4l (15 GeV< mX < 55 GeV).
Benchmark Models
- Analysis Event Selections
- ZX Analysis: H→XX→4l (15 GeV < mX < 55 GeV)
- HM Analysis: H→XX→4l (15 GeV< mX < 60 GeV)
- LM Analysis: H→XX→4μ (1 GeV< mX < 15 GeV)
Limits and Interpretations
Limits on Fiducial and Total Cross-Sections
Limits on Branching Ratios
Limits on Mixing Parameters
4.1.2. Search for a Low-Mass Di-Lepton Resonance in Higgs Decays to Four Leptons with CMS at = 13 TeV
Analysis Event Selection
- Background Estimation
Results
- Model-Independent Limit
- Limit on Dark Photon Model Parameters
4.2. Higgs Dacays Dark (Massless) Photon (ATLAS, CMS)
4.2.1. Dark (“Massless”) Photon in ZH Events with CMS at = 13 TeV
Analysis Event Selection
Results
4.2.2. Dark (Massless) Photon in VBF Higgs Events with CMS at = 13 TeV
Analysis Event Selection
Results
4.2.3. Dark Photon Search with CMS at = 13 TeV: Displaced Vertex
Analysis Event Selection
Results
4.3. Long Lived Particles (LLPs) Search with Leptons-Jets (Prompt and Displaced) (ATLAS)
4.3.1. Displaced Leptons-Jets ATLAS Search at = 13 TeV
Benchmark Models
Analysis Event Selection
Results
4.3.2. Prompt Lepton Jets Search with ATLAS at = 8 TeV
Benchmark Models
Analysis Event Selection
- Electron jet (eLJ): A lepton jet candidate is called an electron jet if at least one reconstructed electron with ET > 10 GeV is discovered within ΔR = 0.5 of the lepton jet but no muons (eLJ)
- Muon jet (muLJ): A muon jet candidate is one that has at least two muons with pT > 10 GeV but no electrons within ΔR = 0.5 of the lepton jet (muLJ).
- Mixed jet (emuLJ): A lepton jet candidate is called a mixed jet if at least one reconstructed electron with ET > 10 GeV and at least one muon with pT > 10 GeV is discovered inside ΔR = 0.5 of the lepton jet cone (emuLJ).
- eLJ variables: track isolation, percentage of high-threshold TRT hits, fHT, the energy of the strip with the greatest energy deposit, Es1max, fraction of energy deposited in the EM calorimeter’s third sampling layer, fs3, electromagnetic energy fraction, fEM
- muLJ variables: calorimeter isolation, track isolation
- emuLJ variables: track isolation, the energy of the strip with the highest energy deposit, Es1max, fraction of energy deposited in the EM calorimeter’s third sampling layer, fs3, Hadronic leakage, EThad
Results
4.4. Displaced Leptons and Long-Lived Particles (LLPs) (ATLAS, CMS)
4.4.1. Higgs Decay: Displaced Muons with ATLAS at = 13 TeV
Benchmark Models
Analysis Event Selection
Results
4.4.2. Higgs Decay: Displaced Leptons with CMS at = 8 TeV
Analysis Event Selection
Results
4.5. Low Mass Di-Muon Resonance Searches (CMS, LHCb)
4.5.1. Dimuon Resonances Search with CMS at = 13 TeV
Analysis Event Selection
Results
4.5.2. Dimuon Resonances Search with LHCb at = 13 TeV
Analysis Event Selection
Results
5. Summary of Dark Photon Studies at LHC
6. Conclusions and Future Prospects
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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H→ZX→4l (15 GeV < mX < 55 GeV) | H→XX→4l (15 GeV < mX < 60 GeV) | H→ZX→4µ (1 GeV < mX < 15 GeV) | |
---|---|---|---|
Quadruplet Selection |
| ||
| Leptons in the quadrupled tare responsible for firing at least one trigger. In the case of multi-lepton triggers, all leptons of the trigger must match to leptons in the quadruplet | ||
ΔR(l, l′) > 0.10 (0.20) for same-flavour (different-flavour) leptons in the quadruplet | — | ||
Quadruplet Ranking | Select first surviving quadruplet from channels, in the order: 4µ, 2e2µ, 2µ2e, 4e | Select quadruplet with smallest Δmll = │m12 − m34│ | |
Isolation & IP | Track & Calorimeter Isolation d0/σ(d0) < 5 for e, d0/σ(d0) < 3 for μ | ||
m4l | 115 GeV < m4l < 130 GeV | 120 GeV < m4l < 130 GeV | |
Z-Veto | — | 10 GeV < m12,34 < 64 GeV 4e and 4µ channels: 5 GeV < m14,32 < 75 GeV | — |
Heavy Flavor Veto | — | Reject event if: (mJ/Ψ − 0.25 GeV) < m12,34,14,32 < (mJ/Ψ − 0.30 GeV) or (mΥ(1S) − 0.70 GeV) < m12,34,14,32 < (mΥ(1S) − 0.75 GeV) | |
Signal Region | — | m34/m12 > 0.85 − 0.1125 f(m12) | 1.2 GeV < m12,34 < 20 GeV m34/m12 > 0.85 Reject event if m12,m34 in: 2 GeV–4.4 GeV or 8–12 GeV |
Process | Yield (±Stat. ±Syst.) | ||
---|---|---|---|
2l2μ | 2l2e | Total | |
H→ ZZ* → 4l | 127.9 ± 0.1 ± 3.6 | 76 ±0.1 ± 10 | 204 ± 0.2 ± 12 |
ZZ* → 4l | 70.2 ± 0.2 ± 1.9 | 33.0 ± 0.2 ± 3.6 | 103 ± 0.3 ± 4.6 |
Reducible | 4.9 ± 0.1 ± 0.3 | 5.8 ± 0.3 ±.0.6 | 10.7 ± 0.3 ± 1.0 |
+ Z | 1.1 ± 0.1 ± 0.04 | 0.7 ± 0.1 ± 0.1 | 1.8 ± 0.1 ± 0.1 |
Total | 204.1 ± 0.3 ± 5.5 | 116 ± 0.5 ± 14 | 320 ± 0.5 ± 17 |
Data | 237 | 119 | 356 |
Process | Yield (±Stat. ±Syst.) |
---|---|
H→ZZ*→4l | 11.1 ± 0.1 ± 1.0 |
ZZ*→4l | 3.38 ± 0.05 ± 0.25 |
t | 0.47 ± 0.13 ± 0.09 |
Z + jets | 0.43 |
Z + t→4l | 0.09 ± 0.02 ± 0.02 |
WZ | 0.05 |
VVV/VBS | Negligible |
Heavy Flavor | Negligible |
Total | 15.6 ± 0.4 ± 1.2 |
Data | 20 |
Process | Yield (±Stat. ±Syst.) |
---|---|
H→ZZ*→4μ | 0.41 ± 0.01 ± 0.03 |
ZZ*→4μ | 0.22 ± 0.04 ± 0.04 |
VVV/VBS | Negligible |
Heavy Flavor | 0.26 ± 0.09 ± 0.10 |
Total | 0.89 ± 0.10 ± 0.11 |
Data | 0 |
Variable | Selection | Reject |
---|---|---|
Number of leptons | Exactly 2 leptons, pT > 25/20 GeV | WZ, ZZ, VVV |
Number of photons | ≥1 photon, pTγ > 25 GeV | All but Zγ |
|mll − mZ| | <15 GeV | WW, Top quark |
pTmiss | >110 GeV | Zγ |
pTll | >60 GeV | Zγ |
b jet veto | Applied | Top quark, VVV |
Jet counting | ≤2 | Top quark, VVV |
ΔΦ(ll, pTmiss +pTγ) | >2.5 rad | Zγ |
|pT(pTmiss +pTγ) − pTll | / pTll | <0.4 | Zγ |
ΔΦ(jet, pTmiss) | >0.5 rad | Zγ |
mllγ | >100 GeV | Zγ |
mT | < 350 GeV | WW, Top quark |
Data-taking year | 2016 | 2017/2018 | |
Trigger | VBF + γ | Single-photon | pTmiss |
Number of photons | ≥1 photon | ||
pTγ | >80 GeV | >230 GeV | >80 GeV |
Number of leptons | 0 | ||
pTj1/pTj2 | >50 GeV | ||
pTmiss | >100 GeV | >140 GeV | >140 GeV |
Jet counting | 2–5 | ||
mjj | >500 GeV | ||
|Δηjj| | >3.0 | ||
ηj1 ηj2 | <0 | ||
ΔΦ(jet, pTmiss) | >1.0 radians | ||
zγ* | <0.6 | ||
pTtot | <150 GeV |
VBF | ZH | VBF+ZH | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Obs. (%) | Exp. (%) | Obs. (%) | Exp. (%) | Obs. (%) | Exp. (%) |
3.4 | 4.6 | 2.9 |
Selection | Low Mass | High Mass |
---|---|---|
pTµ [GeV] | > 10 | >20 |
mµµ [GeV] | 15–60 | >60 |
Dimuon transverse boost | … | >20 |
SRlow | SRhigh | |
Muon candidates | Both MSonly | Both MSonly |
Muon candidate charge | Opposite charge | Opposite charge |
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Lagouri, T. Review on Higgs Hidden–Dark Sector Physics at High-Energy Colliders. Symmetry 2022, 14, 1299. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym14071299
Lagouri T. Review on Higgs Hidden–Dark Sector Physics at High-Energy Colliders. Symmetry. 2022; 14(7):1299. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym14071299
Chicago/Turabian StyleLagouri, Theodota. 2022. "Review on Higgs Hidden–Dark Sector Physics at High-Energy Colliders" Symmetry 14, no. 7: 1299. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym14071299
APA StyleLagouri, T. (2022). Review on Higgs Hidden–Dark Sector Physics at High-Energy Colliders. Symmetry, 14(7), 1299. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym14071299