15 research outputs found
Exclusive Production of Higgs Bosons in Hadron Colliders
We study the exclusive, double--diffractive production of the Standard Model
Higgs particle in hadronic collisions at LHC and FNAL (upgraded) energies. Such
a mechanism would provide an exceptionally clean signal for experimental
detection in which the usual penalty for triggering on the rare decays of the
Higgs could be avoided. In addition, because of the color singlet nature of the
hard interaction, factorization is expected to be preserved, allowing the
cross--section to be related to similar hard--diffractive events at HERA.
Starting from a Fock state expansion in perturbative QCD, we obtain an estimate
for the cross section in terms of the gluon structure functions squared of the
colliding hadrons. Unfortunately, our estimates yield a production rate well
below what is likely to be experimentally feasible.Comment: 17 pages, RevTeX file, four uufiled PostScript figures. UMPP #94-177.
(Revised version. Some mistakenly missing Feynman diagrams are now added.
Results do not change qualitatively. Paper reorganized.
Photon-Photon Physics in Very Peripheral Collisions of Relativistic Heavy Ions
In central collisions at relativistic heavy ion colliders like the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider RHIC/Brookhaven and the Large Hadron Collider
LHC (in its heavy ion mode) at CERN/Geneva, one aims at detecting a new form of
hadronic matter - the Quark Gluon Plasma. It is the purpose of this review to
discuss a complementary aspect of these collisions, the very peripheral ones.
Due to coherence, there are strong electromagnetic fields of short duration in
such collisions. They give rise to photon-photon and photon-nucleus collisions
with high flux up to an invariant mass region hitherto unexplored
experimentally. After a general survey photon-photon luminosities in
relativistic heavy ion collisions are discussed. Special care is taken to
include the effects of strong interactions and nuclear size. Then photon-photon
physics at various gamma-gamma-invariant mass scales is discussed. The region
of several GeV, relevant for RHIC is dominated by QCD phenomena (meson and
vector meson pair production). Invariant masses of up to about 100 GeV can be
reached at LHC, and the potential for new physics is discussed. Photonuclear
reactions and other important background effects, especially diffractive
processes are also discussed. A special chapter is devoted to lepton-pair
production, especially electron-positron pair production; due to the strong
fields new phenomena, especially multiple e+-e- pair production, will occur
there.Comment: 40 pages, 19 figures, Topical Review, to appear in Journal of Physics
G, revised text, updated text/references, one figure replace