Higgs Boson Interacting with the World of New Physics

Category Physics

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At the Institute of Nuclear Physics of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Cracow, it has been shown that the Higgs boson can decay in a characteristic way, involving exotic particles which may be observable in successors to the LHC. Tests for potential detections of Higgs boson decays to exotic particles consist of retrieving the jets of particles the decaying particles create, and then reconstructing the track of the jets from the decay vertices.


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It may be that the famous Higgs boson, co-responsible for the existence of masses of elementary particles, also interacts with the world of the new physics that has been sought for decades. If this were indeed to be the case, the Higgs should decay in a characteristic way, involving exotic particles. At the Institute of Nuclear Physics of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Cracow, it has been shown that if such decays do indeed occur, they will be observable in successors to the LHC currently being designed.

The majority of proposed Hidden Valley models contain particles that interact weakly, or not at all, with the particles of our world as described by the Standard Model

When talking about the ‘hidden valley’, our first thoughts are of dragons rather than sound science. However, in high-energy physics, this picturesque name is given to certain models that extend the set of currently known elementary particles. In these so-called Hidden Valley models, the particles of our world as described by the Standard Model belong to the low-energy group, while exotic particles are hidden in the high-energy region. Theoretical considerations suggest then the exotic decay of the famous Higgs boson, something that has not been observed at the LHC accelerator despite many years of searching. However, scientists at the Institute of Nuclear Physics of the Polish Academy of Sciences (IFJ PAN) in Cracow argue that Higgs decays into exotic particles should already be perfectly observable in accelerators that are successors to the Large Hadron Collider – if the Hidden Valley models turn out to be consistent with reality.

In Hidden Valley models the two worlds are separated by an energy barrier which could be crossed by particles such as Higgs boson or hypothetical Z’ boson

"In Hidden Valley models we have two groups of particles separated by an energy barrier. The theory is that there could then be exotic massive particles that could cross this barrier under specific circumstances. The particles like Higgs boson or hypothetic Z’ boson would act as communicators between the particles of both worlds. The Higgs boson, one of the most massive particle of the Standard Model, is a very good candidate for such a communicator," explains Prof. Marcin Kucharczyk (IFJ PAN), lead author of an article in the Journal of High Energy Physics, which presents the latest analyses and simulations concerning the possibility of detecting Higgs boson decays in the future lepton accelerators.

The particles of the Hidden Valley would decay, generally into quark-antiquark beauty pairs which are visible in modern detectors as jets of particles

The communicator, after passing into the low energy region, would decay into two rather massive exotic particles. Each of these would, in picoseconds – that is, trillionths of a second – decay into another two particles, with even smaller masses, which would then be within the Standard Model. So what signs would be expected in the detectors of future accelerators? The Higgs itself would remain unnoticed, as would the two Hidden Valley particles. However, the exotic particles would gradually diverge and eventually decay, generally into quark-antiquark beauty pairs visible in modern detectors as jets of particles shifted from the axis of the lepton beam.

The team at IFJ PAN are utilizing simulations to accurately reconstruct the tracks of the expected jets of particles produced by quark-antiquark pairs

"Observations of Higgs boson decays would therefore consist of searching for the jets of particles produced by quark-antiquark pairs. Their tracks would then have to be retrospectively reconstructed to find the places where exotic particles are likely to have decayed. These places, professionally called decay vertices, should a priori look unusual. But simulations have taught us how to manage this task quite accurately," explains Dr. Anna Czerwińska (IFJ PAN), the main PhD student in the Institute's theoretical physics group.

Higgs boson would not be detected directly, and instead the decay vertices of the exotic particles should be searched for

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