On 9 July, at the 2018 International Conference on High Energy Physics (ICHEP) in Seoul (South Korea), the ATLAS experiment reported a preliminary result establishing the observation of the Higgs boson decaying into pairs of b quarks, furthermore at a rate consistent with the Standard Model prediction.
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| Event display for the H→bb decay analysis with the ATLAS detector [Credit: ATLAS Collaboration/CERN] |
Six years after its discovery, the ATLAS experiment at CERN observed about 30 percent of the Higgs boson decays predicted in the Standard Model. However, the favoured decay of the Higgs boson into a pair of b quarks (H→bb), which is expected to account for almost 60 percent of all possible decays, has remained elusive up to now. Observing this decay mode and measuring its rate is a mandatory step to confirm or disconfirm the mass generation for fermions via Yukawa interactions, as predicted in the Standard Model.
At the 2018 International Conference on High Energy Physics (ICHEP) in Seoul (South Korea), the ATLAS experiment reported a preliminary result establishing the observation of the Higgs boson decaying into pairs of b quarks at a rate consistent with the Standard Model prediction. It is necessary to exclude at a level of one in 3 million the probability that the decay detection arises from a fluctuation of the background that could mimic the process. When such a probability is at the level of only one in 1000, the detection is qualified as "evidence." Evidence of the H→bb decay was first provided at the Tevatron in 2012, and a year ago by the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations, independently.
Given the abundance of the H→bb decay, and how much rarer decay modes such as H→γγ had already been observed at the time of discovery, why did it take so long to achieve this observation?
However, the Higgs boson signal remains orders of magnitude smaller than the remaining backgrounds arising from top quark or vector boson production, which lead to similar signatures. For instance, a top quark pair can decay as tt→[(W→ℓν)b][(W→qq)b] with a final state containing an electron or a muon and two b quarks, exactly as the (W→ℓν)(H→bb) signal.
The main handle to discriminate the signal from such backgrounds is the invariant mass, mbb, of pairs of b-jets identified by sophisticated "b-tagging" algorithms. An example of such a mass distribution is shown in Figure 1, where the sum of the signal and background components is confronted to the data.
When all WH and ZH channels are combined and the backgrounds (apart from WZ and ZZ production) subtracted from the data, the distribution shown in Figure 2 exhibits a clear peak arising from Z boson decays to b-quark pairs, which validates the analysis procedure. The shoulder on the upper side is consistent in shape and rate with the expectation from Higgs boson production.
The analysis of 13 TeV data collected by ATLAS during Run 2 of the LHC in 2015, 2016 and 2017 leads to a significance of 4.9σ – almost sufficient to claim observation. This result was combined with those from a similar analysis of Run 1 data and from other searches by ATLAS for the H→bb decay mode, namely where the Higgs boson is produced in association with a top quark pair or via a process known as vector boson fusion (VBF). The significance achieved by this combination is 5.4σ.
Furthermore, combining the present analysis with others that target Higgs boson decays to pairs of photons and Z bosons measured at 13 TeV provides the observation at 5.3σ of associated VH (V = Z or W) production, in agreement with the Standard Model prediction. All four primary Higgs boson production modes at hadron colliders have now been observed, of which two only this year. In order of discovery: (1) fusion of gluons to a Higgs boson, (2) fusion of weak bosons to a Higgs boson, (3) associated production of a Higgs boson with two top quarks, and (4) associated production of a Higgs boson with a weak boson.
With these observations, a new era of detailed measurements in the Higgs sector opens up, through which the Standard Model will be further challenged.
More info: Observation of H → bb decays and VH production with the ATLAS detector: https://atlas.web.cern.ch/Atlas/GROUPS/PHYSICS/CONFNOTES/ATLAS-CONF-2018-036/
Source: ATLAS Experiment [July 10, 2018]









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