88 research outputs found

    Search for the Z boson decay to ττμμ\tau\tau\mu\mu in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

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    International audienceThe first search for the Z boson decay to ττμμ\tau\tau\mu\mu at the CERN LHC is presented, based on data collected by the CMS experiment at the LHC in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV and corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb1^{-1}. The data are compatible with the predicted background. For the first time, an upper limit at the 95% confidence level of 6.9 times the standard model expectation is placed on the ratio of the Z \to ττμμ\tau\tau\mu\mu to Z \to 4μ\mu branching fractions. Limits are also placed on the six flavor-conserving four-lepton effective-field-theory operators involving two muons and two tau leptons, for the first time testing all such operators

    Searches for Higgs boson production through decays of heavy resonances

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    The discovery of the Higgs boson has led to new possible signatures for heavy resonance searches at the LHC. Since then, search channels including at least one Higgs boson plus another particle have formed an important part of the program of new physics searches. In this report, the status of these searches by the CMS Collaboration is reviewed. Searches are discussed for resonances decaying to two Higgs bosons, a Higgs and a vector boson, or a Higgs boson and another new resonance, with proton-proton collision data collected at s= \sqrt{s}= 13 TeV in the years 2016-2018. A combination of the results of these searches is presented together with constraints on different beyond-the-standard model scenarios, including scenarios with extended Higgs sectors, heavy vector bosons and extra dimensions. Studies are shown for the first time by CMS on the validity of the narrow-width approximation in searches for the resonant production of a pair of Higgs bosons. The potential for a discovery at the High Luminosity LHC is also discussed.The discovery of the Higgs boson has led to new possible signatures for heavy resonance searches at the LHC. Since then, search channels including at least one Higgs boson plus another particle have formed an important part of the program of new physics searches. In this report, the status of these searches by the CMS Collaboration is reviewed. Searches are discussed for resonances decaying to two Higgs bosons, a Higgs and a vector boson, or a Higgs boson and another new resonance, with proton-proton collision data collected at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV in the years 2016-2018. A combination of the results of these searches is presented together with constraints on different beyond-the-standard model scenarios, including scenarios with extended Higgs sectors, heavy vector bosons and extra dimensions. Studies are shown for the first time by CMS on the validity of the narrow-width approximation in searches for the resonant production of a pair of Higgs bosons. The potential for a discovery at the High Luminosity LHC is also discussed

    The CMS Statistical Analysis and Combination Tool: COMBINE

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    International audienceThis paper describes the COMBINE software package used for statistical analyses by the CMS Collaboration. The package, originally designed to perform searches for a Higgs boson and the combined analysis of those searches, has evolved to become the statistical analysis tool presently used in the majority of measurements and searches performed by the CMS Collaboration. It is not specific to the CMS experiment, and this paper is intended to serve as a reference for users outside of the CMS Collaboration, providing an outline of the most salient features and capabilities. Readers are provided with the possibility to run COMBINE and reproduce examples provided in this paper using a publicly available container image. Since the package is constantly evolving to meet the demands of ever-increasing data sets and analysis sophistication, this paper cannot cover all details of COMBINE. However, the online documentation referenced within this paper provides an up-to-date and complete user guide

    Dark sector searches with the CMS experiment

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    Astrophysical observations provide compelling evidence for gravitationally interacting dark matter in the universe that cannot be explained by the standard model of particle physics. The extraordinary amount of data from the CERN LHC presents a unique opportunity to shed light on the nature of dark matter at unprecedented collision energies. This Report comprehensively reviews the most recent searches with the CMS experiment for particles and interactions belonging to a dark sector and for dark-sector mediators. Models with invisible massive particles are probed by searches for signatures of missing transverse momentum recoiling against visible standard model particles. Searches for mediators are also conducted via fully visible final states. The results of these searches are compared with those obtained from direct-detection experiments. Searches for alternative scenarios predicting more complex dark sectors with multiple new particles and new forces are also presented. Many of these models include long-lived particles, which could manifest themselves with striking unconventional signatures with relatively small amounts of background. Searches for such particles are discussed and their impact on dark-sector scenarios is evaluated. Many results and interpretations have been newly obtained for this Report.Astrophysical observations provide compelling evidence for gravitationally interacting dark matter in the universe that cannot be explained by the standard model of particle physics. The extraordinary amount of data from the CERN LHC presents a unique opportunity to shed light on the nature of dark matter at unprecedented collision energies. This Report comprehensively reviews the most recent searches with the CMS experiment for particles and interactions belonging to a dark sector and for dark-sector mediators. Models with invisible massive particles are probed by searches for signatures of missing transverse momentum recoiling against visible standard model particles. Searches for mediators are also conducted via fully visible final states. The results of these searches are compared with those obtained from direct-detection experiments. Searches for alternative scenarios predicting more complex dark sectors with multiple new particles and new forces are also presented. Many of these models include long-lived particles, which could manifest themselves with striking unconventional signatures with relatively small amounts of background. Searches for such particles are discussed and their impact on dark-sector scenarios is evaluated. Many results and interpretations have been newly obtained for this Report

    Observation of the Ξb\Xi^-_\mathrm{b}\toψ\psi(2S)Ξ\Xi^- decay and studies of the Ξb0\Xi_\mathrm{b}^{\ast{}0} baryon in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

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    International audienceThe first observation of the decay Ξb\Xi^-_\mathrm{b}\toψ\psi(2S)Ξ\Xi^- and measurement of the branching ratio of Ξb\Xi^-_\mathrm{b}\toψ\psi(2S)Ξ\Xi^- to Ξb\Xi^-_\mathrm{b}\to J/ψ\psiΞ\Xi^- are presented. The J/ψ\psi and ψ\psi(2S) mesons are reconstructed using their dimuon decay modes. The results are based on proton-proton colliding beam data from the LHC collected by the CMS experiment at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV in 2016-2018, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 140 fb1^{-1}. The branching fraction ratio is measured to be B\mathcal{B}(Ξb\Xi^-_\mathrm{b}\toψ\psi(2S)Ξ\Xi^-)/B\mathcal{B}(Ξb\Xi^-_\mathrm{b}\to J/ψ\psiΞ\Xi^-) = 0.840.19+0.21^{+0.21}_{-0.19} (stat) ±\pm 0.10 (syst) ±\pm 0.02 (B\mathcal{B}), where the last uncertainty comes from the uncertainties in the branching fractions of the charmonium states. New measurements of the Ξb0\Xi_\mathrm{b}^{\ast{}0} baryon mass and natural width are also presented, using the Ξbπ+\Xi_\mathrm{b}^-\pi^+ final state, where the Ξb\Xi^-_\mathrm{b} baryon is reconstructed through the decays J/ψΞ\psi \Xi^-, ψ\psi(2S)Ξ\Xi^-, J/ψΛ\psi \LambdaK^-, and J/ψΣ0\psi \Sigma^0K^-. Finally, the fraction of the Ξb\Xi^-_\mathrm{b} baryons produced from Ξb0\Xi_\mathrm{b}^{\ast{}0} decays is determined

    Search for long-lived heavy neutrinos in the decays of B mesons produced in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

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    International audienceA search for long-lived heavy neutrinos (N) in the decays of \PB mesons produced in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV is presented. The data sample corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 41.6 fb1^{-1} collected in 2018 by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC, using a dedicated data stream that enhances the number of recorded events containing B mesons. The search probes heavy neutrinos with masses in the range 1 <\ltmNm_\mathrm{N}<\lt 3 GeV and decay lengths in the range 102^{-2}<\ltcτc\tau<\lt 104^{4} mm, where τN\tau_\mathrm{N} is the N proper mean lifetime. Signal events are defined by the signature B \toB\ell_\mathrm{B}NX; N \to±π\ell^{\pm} \pi^{\mp}, where the leptons B\ell_\mathrm{B} and \ell can be either a muon or an electron, provided that at least one of them is a muon. The hadronic recoil system, X, is treated inclusively and is not reconstructed. No significant excess of events over the standard model background is observed in any of the ±π\ell^{\pm}\pi^{\mp} invariant mass distributions. Limits at 95% confidence level on the sum of the squares of the mixing amplitudes between heavy and light neutrinos, VN2\vert V_\mathrm{N}\vert^2, and on cτc\tau are obtained in different mixing scenarios for both Majorana and Dirac-like N particles. The most stringent upper limit VN2\vert V_\mathrm{N}\vert^2 <\lt 2.0×\times105^{-5} is obtained at mNm_\mathrm{N} = 1.95 GeV for the Majorana case where N mixes exclusively with muon neutrinos. The limits on VN2\vert V_\mathrm{N}\vert^2 for masses 1 <\lt mNm_\mathrm{N} <\lt 1.7 GeV are the most stringent from a collider experiment to date

    Search for baryon number violation in top quark production and decay using proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

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    International audienceA search is presented for baryon number violating interactions in top quark production and decay. The analysis uses data from proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV, collected with the CMS detector at the LHC with an integrated luminosity of 138 fb1^{-1}. Candidate events are selected by requiring two oppositely-charged leptons (electrons or muons) and exactly one jet identified as originating from a bottom quark. Multivariate discriminants are used to separate the signal from the background. No significant deviation from the standard model prediction is observed. Upper limits are placed on the strength of baryon number violating couplings. For the first time the production of single top quarks via baryon number violating interactions is studied. This allows the search to set the most stringent constraints to date on the branching fraction of the top quark decay to a lepton, an up-type quark (u or c), and a down-type quark (d, s, or b). The results improve the previous bounds by three to six orders of magnitude based on the fermion flavor combination of the baryon number violating interactions

    Elliptic anisotropy measurement of the f0_0(980) hadron in proton-lead collisions and evidence for its quark-antiquark composition

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    International audienceDespite the f0_0(980) hadron having been discovered half a century ago, the question about its quark content has not been settled: it might be an ordinary quark-antiquark (qqˉ\mathrm{q\bar{q}}) meson, a tetraquark (qqˉqqˉ\mathrm{q\bar{q}q\bar{q}}) exotic state, a kaon-antikaon (KKˉ\mathrm{K\bar{K}}) molecule, or a quark-antiquark-gluon (qqˉg\mathrm{q\bar{q}g}) hybrid. This paper reports strong evidence that the f0_0(980) state is an ordinary qqˉ\mathrm{q\bar{q}} meson, inferred from the scaling of elliptic anisotropies (v2v_2) with the number of constituent quarks (nqn_\mathrm{q}), as empirically established using conventional hadrons in relativistic heavy ion collisions. The f0_0(980) state is reconstructed via its dominant decay channel f0_0(980) \toπ+π\pi^+\pi^-, in proton-lead collisions recorded by the CMS experiment at the LHC, and its v2v_2 is measured as a function of transverse momentum (pTp_\mathrm{T}). It is found that the nqn_q = 2 (qqˉ\mathrm{q\bar{q}} state) hypothesis is favored over nqn_q = 4 (qqˉqqˉ\mathrm{q\bar{q}q\bar{q}} or KKˉ\mathrm{K\bar{K}} states) by 7.7, 6.3, or 3.1 standard deviations in the pTp_\mathrm{T}<\lt 10, 8, or 6 GeV/cc ranges, respectively, and over nqn_\mathrm{q} = 3 (qqˉg\mathrm{q\bar{q}g} hybrid state) by 3.5 standard deviations in the pTp_\mathrm{T}<\lt 8 GeV/cc range. This result represents the first determination of the quark content of the f0_0(980) state, made possible by using a novel approach, and paves the way for similar studies of other exotic hadron candidates

    Search for CPCP violation in D0^0\to KS0^0_\mathrm{S}KS0^0_\mathrm{S} decays in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

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    International audienceA search is reported for charge-parity D0^0\to KS0^0_\mathrm{S}KS0^0_\mathrm{S}CPCP violation in D0^0\to KS0^0_\mathrm{S}KS0^0_\mathrm{S} decays, using data collected in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 13 TeV recorded by the CMS experiment in 2018. The analysis uses a dedicated data set that corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 41.6 fb1^{-1}, which consists of about 10 billion events containing a pair of ẖadrons, nearly all of which decay to charm hadrons. The flavor of the neutral D meson is determined by the pion charge in the reconstructed decays D+^{*+}\to D0π+^0\pi^+ and D^{*-}\to D0π^0\pi^-. The D0^0\to KS0^0_\mathrm{S}KS0^0_\mathrm{S}CPCP asymmetry in D0^0\to KS0^0_\mathrm{S}KS0^0_\mathrm{S} is measured to be ACPA_{CP}( KS0^0_\mathrm{S}KS0^0_\mathrm{S}) = (6.2 ±\pm 3.0 ±\pm 0.2 ±\pm 0.8)%, where the three uncertainties represent the statistical uncertainty, the systematic uncertainty, and the uncertainty in the measurement of the D0^0 \to KS0^0_\mathrm{S}KS0^0_\mathrm{S} CPCP asymmetry in the D0^0 \to KS0π+π^0_\mathrm{S}\pi^+\pi^- decay. This is the first D0^0 \to KS0^0_\mathrm{S}KS0^0_\mathrm{S} CPCP asymmetry measurement by CMS in the charm sector as well as the first to utilize a fully hadronic final state
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