316 research outputs found

    BSM Primary Effects: The complete set of predictions from the dimension-6 BSM Lagrangian

    Full text link
    We present a physical parameterization of the leading effects beyond the SM (BSM), that give us, at present, the best way to constrain heavy new-physics at low-energies. We call these effects that constrain all possible interactions at the dimension 6 level, BSM Primary effects; there are 8 primaries related to Higgs physics, 3 related to Triple Gauge Couplings and 7 related to Z- pole measurements at LEP. Starting from these experimentally measurable deformations (and not operators), we construct the dimension 6 Lagrangian in a bottom up way. We, thus, show that other BSM effects are not independent from the primary ones and we provide the explicit correlations. We also discuss the theoretical expectation for the size of these BSM primaries in some well-motivated BSM theories.Comment: Based on talk given at DIS 2014. This talk was completely based on arXiv:1405.0181, which was written in collaboration with A. Pomarol and F. Riv

    SUSY Faces its Higgs Couplings

    Full text link
    In supersymmetric models, a correlation exists between the structure of the Higgs sector quartic potential and the coupling of the lightest CP-even Higgs to fermions and gauge bosons. We exploit this connection to relate the observed value of the Higgs mass ~ 125 GeV to the magnitude of its couplings. We analyze different scenarios ranging from the MSSM with heavy stops to more natural models with additional non-decoupling D-term/F-term contributions. A comparison with the most recent LHC data, allows to extract bounds on the heavy Higgs boson masses, competitive with bounds from direct searches.Comment: 14 pages plus appendix; 9 figure

    Probing Quartic Neutral Gauge Boson Couplings using diffractive photon fusion at the LHC

    Full text link
    A complete list of operators contributing at the lowest order to Quartic Neutral Gauge Boson Couplings involving photons and Z-bosons, is presented. We show that, for the couplings we consider, the lowest order contribution is from dimension 8 operators in the case when a light Higgs is present and from dimension 6 operators in the higgsless case where electroweak symmetry is non-linearly realized. We also show that these operators are generated by exchange of the Kaluza-Klein partners of the graviton in extra-dimensional models. We then explore the possibility of probing these couplings in the diffractive photon fusion processes pp(\gamma\gamma \to \gamma\gamma)pp and pp(\gamma\gamma \to ZZ)pp at the 14 TeV LHC. We find that the \gamma \gamma \gamma \gamma-coupling can be probed most sensitively and values as small as 1/(1.8 TeV)^{4} can be measured. For the \gamma\gamma ZZ-coupling, values as small as 1/(850 GeV)^{4} and 1/(1.9 TeV)^2 can be probed in the light Higgs and higgsless cases respectively, which is an improvement by orders of magnitude over existing limits.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figure

    How well do we need to measure Higgs boson couplings?

    Full text link
    Most of the discussion regarding the Higgs boson couplings to Standard Model vector bosons and fermions is presented with respect to what present and future collider detectors will be able to measure. Here, we ask the more physics-based question of how well do we need to measure the Higgs boson couplings? We first present a reasonable definition of "need" and then investigate the answer in the context of various highly motivated new physics scenarios: supersymmetry, mixed-in hidden sector Higgs bosons, and a composite Higgs boson. We find the largest coupling deviations away from the SM Higgs couplings that are possible if no other state related to EWSB is directly accessible at the LHC. Depending on the physics scenario under consideration, we find targets that range from less than 1% to 10% for vector bosons, and from a few percent to tens of percent for couplings to fermions.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures; v3: minor corrections, to be published in Physical Review

    How well do we need to measure the Higgs boson mass and self-coupling?

    Full text link
    Much of the discussion regarding future measurements of the Higgs boson mass and self-coupling is focussed on how well various collider options can do. In this article we ask a physics-based question of how well do we need colliders to measure these quantities to have an impact on discovery of new physics or an impact in how we understand the role of the Higgs boson in nature. We address the question within the framework of the Standard Model and various beyond the Standard Model scenarios, including supersymmetry and theories of composite Higgs bosons. We conclude that the LHC's stated ability to measure the Higgs boson to better than 150 MeV will be as good as we will ever need to know the Higgs boson mass in the foreseeable future. On the other hand, we estimate that the self-coupling will likely need to be measured to better than 20 percent to see a deviation from the Standard Model expectation. This is a challenging target for future collider and upgrade scenarios.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figure

    Is the Relaxion an Axion?

    Full text link
    We consider the recently proposed cosmological relaxation mechanism where the hierarchy problem is ameliorated, and the electroweak scale is dynamically selected by a slowly rolling axion field. We argue that, in its simplest form, the construction breaks a gauge symmetry that always exists for pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone bosons (in particular the axion). The small parameter in the relaxion model is therefore not technically natural as it breaks a gauge symmetry rather than global symmetries only. The consistency of the theory generically implies that the cutoff must lie around the electroweak scale, but not qualitatively higher. We discuss several ways to evade the above conclusion. Some of them may be sufficient to increase the cutoff to the few-TeV range (and therefore may be relevant for the little-hierarchy problem). To demonstrate the ideas in a concrete setting we consider a model with a familon, the Nambu-Goldstone boson of a spontaneously broken chiral flavor symmetry. The model has some interesting collider-physics aspects and contains a viable weakly interacting dark matter candidate.Comment: some typos fixed, clarifications adde

    Higgs boson search significance deformations due to mixed-in scalars

    Full text link
    The existence of exotic scalars that mix with the Standard Model (SM) Higgs boson can affect Higgs boson phenomenology in a multitude of ways. We consider two light Higgs bosons with shared couplings to SM fields and with masses close to each other, in the range where the h \to WW \to l \nu l \nu is an important search channel. In this channel, we do not find the dilution of significance of the `SM-like' Higgs boson that is naively expected because of the mixing. This is because of leakage of events from the decay of the other scalar into its signal region. Nevertheless, we show that the broadening of the h\to WW \to l \nu l \nu significance plots of Standard Model Higgs boson searches could indicate the first evidence of the the extra scalar state.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures; v2: all plots now made with the lighter Higgs mass equal to 125 GeV and other minor corrections made, to be published in Physics Letters

    Scaling and tuning of EW and Higgs observables

    Get PDF
    We study deformations of the SM via higher dimensional operators. In particular, we explicitly calculate the one-loop anomalous dimension matrix for 13 bosonic dimension-6 operators relevant for electroweak and Higgs physics. These scaling equations allow us to derive RG-induced bounds, stronger than the direct constraints, on a universal shift of the Higgs couplings and some anomalous triple gauge couplings by assuming no tuning at the scale of new physics, i.e. by requiring that their individual contributions to the running of other severely constrained observables, like the electroweak oblique parameters or Γ(h→γγ)\Gamma(h \rightarrow \gamma\gamma), do not exceed their experimental direct bounds. We also study operators involving the Higgs and gluon fields.Comment: v2: 41 pages, 12 tables, 4 figures. Plots of the RG-induced bounds from S and T added, presentation of our approach in sections 2 and 4 improved, a few typos fixed, references added, conclusions and analysis unchanged. Version to appear in JHE
    • …
    corecore