5 research outputs found
Report of the Topical Group on Electroweak Precision Physics and Constraining New Physics for Snowmass 2021
The precise measurement of physics observables and the test of their
consistency within the standard model (SM) are an invaluable approach,
complemented by direct searches for new particles, to determine the existence
of physics beyond the standard model (BSM). Studies of massive electroweak
gauge bosons (W and Z bosons) are a promising target for indirect BSM searches,
since the interactions of photons and gluons are strongly constrained by the
unbroken gauge symmetries. They can be divided into two categories: (a) Fermion
scattering processes mediated by s- or t-channel W/Z bosons, also known as
electroweak precision measurements; and (b) multi-boson processes, which
include production of two or more vector bosons in fermion-antifermion
annihilation, as well as vector boson scattering (VBS) processes. The latter
categories can test modifications of gauge-boson self-interactions, and the
sensitivity is typically improved with increased collision energy.
This report evaluates the achievable precision of a range of future
experiments, which depend on the statistics of the collected data sample, the
experimental and theoretical systematic uncertainties, and their correlations.
In addition it presents a combined interpretation of these results, together
with similar studies in the Higgs and top sector, in the Standard Model
effective field theory (SMEFT) framework. This framework provides a
model-independent prescription to put generic constraints on new physics and to
study and combine large sets of experimental observables, assuming that the new
physics scales are significantly higher than the EW scale.Comment: 55 pages; Report of the EF04 topical group for Snowmass 202
Anomalous quartic gauge couplings at a muon collider
Prospects for searches of anomalous quartic gauge couplings at a future
high-energy muon collider using the production of boson pairs are
reported. Muon-muon collision events are simulated at TeV
corresponding to an integrated luminosity of ab. The simulated
events are used to study the and
final states with the bosons decaying
hadronically. The events are analyzed to report expected constraints on the
structure of quartic vector boson interactions in the framework of dimension-8
effective field theory operators.Comment: contribution to Snowmass 202
Report of the Topical Group on Electroweak Precision Physics and Constraining New Physics for Snowmass 2021
International audienceThe precise measurement of physics observables and the test of their consistency within the standard model (SM) are an invaluable approach, complemented by direct searches for new particles, to determine the existence of physics beyond the standard model (BSM). Studies of massive electroweak gauge bosons (W and Z bosons) are a promising target for indirect BSM searches, since the interactions of photons and gluons are strongly constrained by the unbroken gauge symmetries. They can be divided into two categories: (a) Fermion scattering processes mediated by s- or t-channel W/Z bosons, also known as electroweak precision measurements; and (b) multi-boson processes, which include production of two or more vector bosons in fermion-antifermion annihilation, as well as vector boson scattering (VBS) processes. The latter categories can test modifications of gauge-boson self-interactions, and the sensitivity is typically improved with increased collision energy. This report evaluates the achievable precision of a range of future experiments, which depend on the statistics of the collected data sample, the experimental and theoretical systematic uncertainties, and their correlations. In addition it presents a combined interpretation of these results, together with similar studies in the Higgs and top sector, in the Standard Model effective field theory (SMEFT) framework. This framework provides a model-independent prescription to put generic constraints on new physics and to study and combine large sets of experimental observables, assuming that the new physics scales are significantly higher than the EW scale
Report of the Topical Group on Electroweak Precision Physics and Constraining New Physics for Snowmass 2021
The precise measurement of physics observables and the test of their consistency within the standard model (SM) are an invaluable approach, complemented by direct searches for new particles, to determine the existence of physics beyond the standard model (BSM). Studies of massive electroweak gauge bosons (W and Z bosons) are a promising target for indirect BSM searches, since the interactions of photons and gluons are strongly constrained by the unbroken gauge symmetries. They can be divided into two categories: (a) Fermion scattering processes mediated by s- or t-channel W/Z bosons, also known as electroweak precision measurements; and (b) multi-boson processes, which include production of two or more vector bosons in fermion-antifermion annihilation, as well as vector boson scattering (VBS) processes. The latter categories can test modifications of gauge-boson self-interactions, and the sensitivity is typically improved with increased collision energy. This report evaluates the achievable precision of a range of future experiments, which depend on the statistics of the collected data sample, the experimental and theoretical systematic uncertainties, and their correlations. In addition it presents a combined interpretation of these results, together with similar studies in the Higgs and top sector, in the Standard Model effective field theory (SMEFT) framework. This framework provides a model-independent prescription to put generic constraints on new physics and to study and combine large sets of experimental observables, assuming that the new physics scales are significantly higher than the EW scale
Report of the Topical Group on Electroweak Precision Physics and Constraining New Physics for Snowmass 2021
The precise measurement of physics observables and the test of their consistency within the standard model (SM) are an invaluable approach, complemented by direct searches for new particles, to determine the existence of physics beyond the standard model (BSM). Studies of massive electroweak gauge bosons (W and Z bosons) are a promising target for indirect BSM searches, since the interactions of photons and gluons are strongly constrained by the unbroken gauge symmetries. They can be divided into two categories: (a) Fermion scattering processes mediated by s- or t-channel W/Z bosons, also known as electroweak precision measurements; and (b) multi-boson processes, which include production of two or more vector bosons in fermion-antifermion annihilation, as well as vector boson scattering (VBS) processes. The latter categories can test modifications of gauge-boson self-interactions, and the sensitivity is typically improved with increased collision energy. This report evaluates the achievable precision of a range of future experiments, which depend on the statistics of the collected data sample, the experimental and theoretical systematic uncertainties, and their correlations. In addition it presents a combined interpretation of these results, together with similar studies in the Higgs and top sector, in the Standard Model effective field theory (SMEFT) framework. This framework provides a model-independent prescription to put generic constraints on new physics and to study and combine large sets of experimental observables, assuming that the new physics scales are significantly higher than the EW scale