Differential cross section measurements in H→ WW and prospects of observing H→ bb in future LHC runs at the ATLAS detector
Item Status
Embargo End Date
Date
Abstract
The highly celebrated discovery of a new particle with a mass of 125 GeV in
proton-proton collisions by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at the CERN Large
Hadron Collider in 2012 has been shown to be compatible with the Standard
Model description of the Higgs boson. However, in order to fully verify the
Standard Model nature of the Higgs boson, most of its properties still remain to
be measured. Such measurements include differential cross section measurements,
which are shown here for the H→WW decay channel and the coupling of the Higgs
boson to bottom quarks, for which a study of future prospects is presented.
Differential fiducial cross section measurements of the Higgs boson were performed
in the H → WW*→lvlv channel at the ATLAS detector with 20 fb−1 of
√s = 8 TeV collision data. For Higgs bosons produced by gluon-gluon fusion,
the cross section is measured as a function of kinematic variables, including
transverse momentum and rapidity of the Higgs boson, as well as the number
of jets associated with the Higgs event. The obtained distributions are unfolded
to a fiducial volume using a two-dimensional iterative Bayesian algorithm. The
measured fiducial differential cross sections are compared to predictions from
Monte Carlo generators. The total cross section measured in the fiducial volume
defined by the charged lepton and neutrino kinematic properties is 36.0 ± 9.7 fb.
Additionally the jet-veto efficiency in the fiducial volume is extracted from the
differential cross sections.
An analysis is presented of Higgs boson production and decay into bottom quarks
in association with a vector boson at the ATLAS detector for the future high-luminosity
LHC with proton-proton collisions at √s = 14 TeV. The vector bosons
are reconstructed from Z→l+l− or W→lv final states, where l is an electron or
muon. The analysis uses generator-level Monte Carlo samples to which efficiency
and resolution smearing functions are applied. These reproduce the expected
resolution of the upgraded ATLAS detector for the foreseen amount of pile-up
due to multiple overlapping proton-proton collisions. The analysis of the ZH(→
l+l−b¯b) channel is presented and results are combined with the WH(→lvb¯b)
channel from a corresponding study. For an integrated luminosity of 300 fb−1
using an average pile-up of 60, the expected significance is 3.9 σ with an expected
error on the signal strength of 25%. Likewise, for 3000 fb−1 using an average pileup
of 140 the expected significance is 8.8 σ , and the error on the signal strength
is expected to be about 15%.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

