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Searching for the invisible at the Large Hadron Collider Alan Barr University of Oxford Wits, August 2012 Robert Hooke, 1665 Apparatus The truth is, the Science of Nature has been already too long made only a work of the Brain and the Fancy: It is now high time that it should return to the plainness and soundness of Observations on material and obvious things. Robert Hooke Micrographia, 1665 Our apparatus The microscopic world… x5 cells: 50 µm x 20 x 10000 cell nucleus: 10 µm x 50000 atom: 100 pm dna: 2 nm x5 atom nucleus: 2 fm proton A hundred billion atomic nuclei lined up in a row would be the width of a human hair The Matter Particles Quarks Charge +2/3 Charge -1/3 u d c s Leptons t b Feel the strong force e νe µ νµ τ ντ Charge -1 Charge -0 Don’t feel the strong force The Force Particles g W Z Gluon Strong Nuclear γ Photon Weak Nuclear (heavy) Electromagetism Interactions occur via exchange of particles Standard Model Maxwell Dirac Mass terms 9 Big scientific questions Where do the particles get their mass from? Where has all the anti-matter gone? What is dark matter made of? What else is out there? Heavy gauge bosons • 1964: Spontaneous symmetry breaking can give mass to gauge bosons – Predicts new scalar particle Higgs boson – Higgs mass not determined by the theory •1983: Heavy W and Z bosons discovered at CERN – masses ~80, 91 GeV •1989-2000: Precision measurements of W and Z at LEP support the “Standard Model” Implications of the theory: Invisible scalar field pervades all of space Excitations of that field are Higgs bosons Page 11 Where are the Higgs bosons? EW theory consistency MH < 144 GeV Searches at LEP: MH >114 GeV Scattering theory: MH < 1000 GeV No-loose theorem Unitarity of W-W scattering requires SOME new physics at mass scales below 1 TeV The Large Hadron Collider Proton-proton Controlled environment 7 14 TeV CM energy 26.659 km circumference 9300 magnets Lorentz factor ~7000 Commissioned: 2008 First physics run: 2010 ATLAS Segment of 4π detector 2004-2005: assembly of the semiconductor tracker 40 MHz sample rate 6M channels of electronics 20 um resolution 10 year remote operation in radiation environment 16 Observations [Page 18 Z boson decay to a pair of muons W and Z bosons Z e+ e- W υ µ- Phys. Rev. D85 (2012) 072004 Frequent 600 per sec Every 20s Rare (N)NLO calculations match precision measurements 21 Increased collision rate during 2011-2012 20-30 collisions per bunch crossing (every 25 ns) April 2012 22 Higgs boson decays H bb H ZZ* 4 leptons H WW* (l υ) (l υ) H γγ Mass reconstruction, sketch plot The SM Higgs Boson At mH=125 GeV expect to produce one Higgs Boson about every 10s Decays rapidly to a variety of different states arXiv:1207.7214 H Z Z (ll) (l’l’) arXiv:1207.7214 H W W (l υ) (l υ) Neutrinos are invisible plot best lower bound on mH: arXiv:1207.7214 H γγ arXiv:1207.7214 Combined statistical significance 5.9 σ m = 126.0 ± 0.4 (stat) ± 0.4 (sys) GeV Britain’s most popular paper: arXiv:1207.7214 Is it the Higgs boson? (or even a Higgs boson?) Consistent with Standard Model … within large uncertainties Looking beyond… A deeper theory? 1/α +SUSY Log10 (µ / GeV) (S)particles SM Spin-1/2 Spin-1 Spin-0 SUSY squarks (L&R) quarks (L&R) sleptons (L&R) leptons (L&R) neutrinos (L&?) sneutrinos (L&?) γ Z0 W± gluon h0 H0 A0 H± Extended higgs sector (2 doublets) B W0 Bino Wino0 Wino± gluino ~ H0 ~ H± Spin-0 After Mixing 4 x neutralino Spin-1/2 gluino 2 x chargino Producing exotics? standard exotic exotic Time standard • If exotics can be produced standard singly they can decay Time exotics exotics Time • If they can only be pairproduced they standard are stable Time Require an even number of exotic legs to/from blobs (Conserved multiplicative quantum number) – No good for Dark Matter candidate – Only disappear on collision (rare) Decays of exotics Production part Complete event standard 2 exotics Time Decay part heavy exotic Time lighter exotic standard • Events build from blobs with 2 “exotic legs” • A pair of cascade decays results • Complicated end result Time = exotic = standard An event with a large momentum imbalance Seeing the invisible From collisions Jets Jets PTmiss JETS From collisions Jets: Had. Calorimeter E.M. Calorimeter Tracks from vertex In-time b,c quark jets can decay to neutrinos JETS + MISSING MOMENTUM Measurements Jets: ∆φ cut Reduce: Had. Calorimeter E.M. Calorimeter Tracks from vertex Measure remainder at small ∆φ JETS + MISSING MOMENTUM From cosmics Reduce by: (a) requiring tracks with jets (b) look for muon hits Measure remainder: (a) no beam (b) timing JETS + MISSING MOMENTUM From beam halo Reduce by requiring tracks with jets Measure remainder with single beam / timing JETS + MISSING MOMENTUM Calorimeter noise Reduce by requiring tracks with jets Measure remainder (a) no beam (b) timing Neutrinos Z ( υυ) + jets (+ jets) W ( lυ) + jets Careful control of SM backgrounds required Final results depend largely on measurements from control regions Jets Jets Z υυ + jets Calculations checked with measurements from control regions Jets Jets Z μμ + jets JHEP07(2012)167 Boson + multi-jet backgrounds Leading order multi-leg calculations match data very well JHEP07(2012)167 ETmiss tail Expect SUSY signal in the tail Results of the multi-jet + ETmiss search • Agreement between Standard Model prediction and data • No evidence for supersymmetry in this search (yet) • Data constrain possible mass of new particles JHEP07(2012)167 Alan Barr [Page 49 Interpretations of results Stop mass Simplifed gluino/stop model Bound line Gluino mass Alan Barr [Page 50 Search for squarks and gluinos Simplifed gluino/stop model Excluded below this line ATLAS-CONF-2012-033 Alan Barr [Page 51 Gluinos Stop Squarks [Page 52 M(H) and direct searches constrain allowed SUSY space Example of a consistent pMSSM point Cahill-Rowley et. al. arXiv:1206.5800 Direct searches for stop squarks A long way to go… 14 TeV 3000 fb-1 Alan Barr [Page 55 [Page 56 Reach of a 33 TeV machine Conclusions ATLAS and CMS have found a (scalar?) boson consistent with the SM Higgs Detailed properties yet to be determined Fine tuning problem for m(H) very much alive Pressure on supersymmetry from all sides A lot of the micro-world still to be explored Alan Barr [Page 58 FIN Alan Barr [Page 59 Alan Barr Alan Barr Alan Barr