Searches for the Rare Decay of the Higgs Boson to Two Muons and for New Physics in Dilepton Final States with the ATLAS Experiment
White, Aaron
2021
Abstract
This thesis presents two studies: a search for rare dimuon decay of the Higgs boson and a search for new physics with non-resonant phenomena at the TeV mass scale with dilepton final states. Both studies investigate an integrated luminosity of 139 fb^-1 of data recorded by the ATLAS from sqrt(s)=13 TeV proton-proton collisions from Run 2 of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. The first study is the search for the Standard Model Higgs boson decaying to two muons. This decay is used to study the Higgs boson Yukawa couplings to the second generation fermions as part of a field-wide effort to study the properties of the Higgs boson. Identifying events produced by this decay is complicated by the small Higgs boson branching fraction to muons and the large irreducible background from other Standard Model processes. % The major Higgs production modes at the LHC are gluon-gluon fusion (ggF), vector-boson fusion (VBF), a vector boson (W or Z) associated production (VH). Previous studies selected events using criteria that targets Higgs production through ggF and VBF mechanisms. To increase sensitivity to Higgs produced events, new selections are added targeting VH production with a leptonic decay from the vector boson. Multivariate analysis methods are used to identify events for different categories. The limits set on signal production in the new phase spaces explored in this analysis are the first of their kind. The strongest expected(observed) limit on leptonic VH production excludes signals down to 13.2(22.6) times the Standard Model prediction. The combination of VH with the other major production modes results in a signal significance of 2.0 sigma. The second study is a search for non-resonant phenomena in the dielectron and dimuon final states. One possible source for this is quark and lepton compositeness at energy scales beyond direct access at the LHC. These would lead to contact interactions that produce non-resonant enhancement in dilepton production at the TeV scale. This search introduces several novel methods including a background model derived from data and a formalism to parameterization of the associated uncertainties. % This is done in a low-mass control region where the signal is expected to be negligible, while the function is extrapolated to several high-mass signal regions where an enhancement of events is expected above the background processes. % This approach mitigates the statistical and theoretical uncertainty of simulated background predictions. In this search, no significant deviation in data is observed with respect to the expected background. Upper limits on the visible cross-section times branching ratio are set in this search. These, along with benchmark CI signal efficiencies, can be interpreted as limits in terms of a variety of signal models. The lower limits on the energy scale of CI, Lambda, reach 35.8 TeV, indicating the quarks and leptons are still point-like particles at 10^-20 m. These are the strongest limits on qq-ll contact-interactions to date.Deep Blue DOI
Subjects
Contact Interaction Higgs
Types
Thesis
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