* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download LHC Physics - UCL HEP Group
Relativistic quantum mechanics wikipedia , lookup
Quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup
Canonical quantization wikipedia , lookup
Electron scattering wikipedia , lookup
Peter Kalmus wikipedia , lookup
Kaluza–Klein theory wikipedia , lookup
Identical particles wikipedia , lookup
Gauge fixing wikipedia , lookup
Strangeness production wikipedia , lookup
Theory of everything wikipedia , lookup
ALICE experiment wikipedia , lookup
An Exceptionally Simple Theory of Everything wikipedia , lookup
Renormalization wikipedia , lookup
Renormalization group wikipedia , lookup
History of quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup
Weakly-interacting massive particles wikipedia , lookup
Introduction to gauge theory wikipedia , lookup
Quantum chromodynamics wikipedia , lookup
Scalar field theory wikipedia , lookup
Large Hadron Collider wikipedia , lookup
ATLAS experiment wikipedia , lookup
Compact Muon Solenoid wikipedia , lookup
Higgs boson wikipedia , lookup
Supersymmetry wikipedia , lookup
Future Circular Collider wikipedia , lookup
Technicolor (physics) wikipedia , lookup
Elementary particle wikipedia , lookup
Mathematical formulation of the Standard Model wikipedia , lookup
Grand Unified Theory wikipedia , lookup
Search for the Higgs boson wikipedia , lookup
Higgs mechanism wikipedia , lookup
LHC Physics Alan Barr UCL This morning’s stuff… Higgs – why we expect it, how to look for it, … Supersymmetry – similar questions! Smorgasbord of other LHC physics Physics at TeV-scale • Dominated by the physics of Electroweak Symmetry Breaking • Answering the question: – “Why do the W and Z bosons have mass?” • Standard Model suggests: Higgs mechanism – However Higgs boson predicted by SM not yet observed Higgs mechanism - history • 1964 Demonstration that a scalar field with appropriate interactions can give mass to gauge bosons – Peter Higgs (Edinburgh, previously UCL) – Independently discovered by Francois Englert and Robert Brout (Brussels) • Not until 1979 that Salam, Weinberg and Glashow use this in a theory of electroweak symmetry breaking – For a biographic article on P. Higgs see http://physicsweb.org/articles/world/17/7/6 Higgs mechanism: why needed? • Example of P. Higgs – give mass to a U(1) boson (heavy “photon” in a QED-like theory) Start with QED Lagrangian: where Which is invariant under the local U(1) gauge transformation (*) Adding a gauge boson mass term could be attempted with a term like: But this isn’t invariant under gauge transformation (*) so is not allowed Instead add a complex scalar field which couples to the gauge boson Pictorial representation Quartic term selfcoupling positive Excitations in this direction produce physical Higgs boson Excitations in this direction = gauge transformation - Global transformations unobserved - Local transformations give mass to gauge bosons Quadratic Degenerate minimum coupling term Vacuum (field strength≠0) negative If you don’t understand this, Scalar field strength = 0 study Phys.Lett.12:132-133,1964 Higgs field “eats Goldstone boson” • Flat direction in potential usually represents zero-mass particle φ – “Goldstone boson” φ' • But in Higgs theory this direction is coupled to the gauge boson – No massless Goldstone boson – Instead mass term generated for gauge boson φ Gauge boson Example of a Feynman diagram showing a contribution to the gauge boson mass term N.B. Our example here was for a single complex scalar and for a U(1) field. In the Standard Model the Higgs is an electroweak SU(2) doublet field, with 4 degrees of freedom. 3 of these are ‘eaten’ by W±, Z0, mass terms leaving a single scalar for the physical Higgs boson. For full SU(2) treatment see e.g. Halzen & Martin section 14.9 Constraints on the Higgs mass • Higgs boson mass is the remaining unpredicted parameter in Standard Model: • • • Higgs self-couplings not predicted So Higgs mass not predicted by Electroweak theory However there are: 1. Bounds from theory: • 2. Perterbative unitarity of boson-boson scattering Indirect bounds • 3. Loop effects on gauge boson masses Direct bounds • Searches Perturbative limit Vector Boson scattering Without other new physics the Higgs boson must exist & have mass < 1 TeV Phys.Rev.D16:1519,1977 Halzen & Martin section 15.6 Indirect Higgs bounds: LEP Electroweak data Measurements • W (and Z) mass depends on mHiggs – Logarithmic loop corrections to masses – Also depends on top mass Prediction as a function of mH http://lepewwg.web.cern.ch/LEPEWWG/ Direct bounds: Higgs searches @ LEP Higgsstrahlung – dominant production • No discovery • Direct lower bound at 114.4 GeV Phys.Lett. B565 (2003) 61-75 ALEPH: Candidate vertex: Higgs-Hunter Situation Report • Something very much like the Higgs must exist with: ~100 GeV < m < ~1 TeV • No discovery as yet • If it is a Standard Model Higgs the constraints are tighter: 114.4 GeV < mSM Higgs < 199 GeV The Large Hadron Collider Proton on Proton at √s = 14 TeV Design luminsoity ~ ~100 fb-1 / expt / year • Large – 27 km circumference – Built in LEP tunnel • Hadron – Mostly protons – Can also collide ions • Collider – ~ 7 x higher collision energy – ~ 100 x increase in luminosity – Compared to Tevatron General Purpose Detectors Similarities: 1. Tracker 2. Calorimeter 3. Muon chambers ATLAS Differences: Size : CMS “compact” Magnetic-field configuration ATLAS has muon toroids Electromagnetic-Calorimeter: CMS crystals. ATLAS Liquid Argon Outer tracker technology CMS all-silicon. ATLAS straw tubes y Definitions φ Particle η = -1 η=0 η = +1 η = -2 η = -3 x η = +2 η = +3 θ Beam pipe proton proton Endcap “Forward” Rapidity: Pseudorapidity: “Transverse” y 12 log z Barrel “Central” E pz E pz Endcap “Forward” Differences in rapidity are conserved under Lorentz boosts in the z-direction* ln[tan( / 2)] pT = (px, py) Good approximation to rapidity if E>>m |pT| = √(px2, py2) * *prove these! Making particles in hadron colliders proton proton • Hadron-Hadron collisions complicated – See lectures by Mark Lancaster (“Hadron Collider Physics”) – QCD Lots of background events with jets – QCD Lots of hadronic “rubbish” in signal events – Hard scatters are largely from q-qbar or glue-glue • Proton structure is important – See lectures by Robert Thorne • But they provide the highest energies available • Often these are the discovery machines LHCb • Asymmetric detector for B-meson physics For more information see Lazzeroni talk at: http://indico.cern.ch/conferenceDisplay.py?confId=5426 LHCb Physics Quark flavour e-states are not the same as mass e-states: mixing: • VCKM must be unitary: V.V† = V †.V = 1 • Multiply out rows & columns: Do this! LHCb Physics • Measurements of decay rates and kinematics tell us about squark mixings • Over-constraining triangles gives sensitivity to new physics through loop effects ALICE • Designed to examine collisions of heavy ions (e.g. lead-lead or goldgold) • Theorised to produce a new state of matter – a quark-gluon plasma • Quarks no longer confined inside colourless baryons • Signals for QGP: – Jet quenching QGP Jet No Jet – Quarkonim (e.g. J/ψ) suppression (“melt bound states”) c J/ψ _ c Couplings of the SM Higgs • Couplings proportional to mass • What does this mean for the Higgshunter? Producing a Higgs • Higgs couplings mass – u-ubar H has very small cross-section – Dominant production via vertices coupling Higgs to heavy quarks or W/Z bosons Production cross-sections Decay of the SM Higgs • Width becomes large as WW mode opens • Branching ratios change rapidly as new channels become kinematically accessible Needle in a haystack… QCD jet production at high energy Higgs production Need to use signatures with small backgrounds: - Leptons - High-mass resonances - Heavy quarks to avoid being overwhelmed Example 1 : H ZZ • Only works when mHiggs >~ 2.MZ • When the Z decays to leptons there are small backgrounds e+ q _ q Z e- Z e+ H e- H ZZ CMS H ZZ e+e- e+eElectrons have track (green ) & energy deposit (pink) H ZZ e+e- e+ee+ q _ q e- Z mH=150 background H e+ Z mH=130 mH=170 e- 1. Find events consistent with above topology (four electrons) 2. Add together the four electron 4-vectors 3. Find the mass of the resultant 4-vector ( mass of the Higgs) Plot shows simulated distributions of [invariant mass of four electrons] for 3 different values of mHiggs (We wouldn’t see all of these together!) Example (2): H γγ • No direct coupling of H to photon • However allowed at loop level • Branching ratio: ~ 10 -3 (at low mHiggs) • Important at low mass • Actually a very clean way of looking for Higgs – Small backgrounds Production and decay of Higgs through ‘forbidden’ direct couplings γ γ H γγ CMS simulation. Physics TDR, 2006 H γγ Higgs signal scaled up by factor 10! Invariant mass of the pair of photons • Simulation by CMS for different Higgs masses for early LHC data (1 fb-1) H γγ … backgrounds “Irreducible” 2 real photons “Born” “Box” “Reducible” e.g. fake photons γ q _ q gluon π0 γ γ Need v. good calorimeter segmentation to separate these Significance H->ZZ Significance is a measure of the answer to the question “What is the probability that a background fluctuation would produce what I am seeing” 5- means “probability that background fluctuation does this is less than 2.85·10-7 ” 5- is usually taken as benchmark for “discovery” After discovery of Higgs? • Measure Higgs mass – The remaining unconstrained parameter of the Standard Model • Measure Higgs couplings to fermions and vector bosons – All predicted by Standard Model – Check Higgs mechanism • Couplings very important since there may be more than one Higgs boson – Theories beyond the Standard Model (such as Supersymmetry) predict multiple Higgs bosons. – In such models the couplings would be modified • Do direct searches for further Higgs bosons! If no Higgs found? • Arguably more exciting than finding Higgs • Look at WW scattering process – Look for whatever is “fixing” the cross-section – E.g. exotic resonances What is supersymmetry? • Nature permits only particular types of symmetry: – Space & time • Lorentz transforms • Rotations and translations – Gauge symmetry • Such as Standard Model force symmetries • SU(3)c x SU(2)L x U(1) – Supersymmetry • Anti-commuting (Fermionic) generators • Changes Fermions into Bosons and vice-versa Examples of Supersymmetric partner-states • Consequences? – Supersymmetric theory has a Boson for every Fermion and vice-versa • Doubles the particle content – Partners to Standard Model particles not yet observed (S)Particles Standard Model Spin-1/2 Spin-1 Spin-0 quarks (L&R) leptons (L&R) neutrinos (L&?) Z0 W± gluon h0 H0 A0 H± B W0 Supersymmetric partners squarks (L&R) sleptons (L&R) sneutrinos (L&?) Bino Wino0 Wino± gluino Spin-0 After Mixing 4 x neutralino Spin-1/2 ~ H0 ~ H± gluino 2 x chargino (Higgsinos) Extended higgs sector 2 cplx doublets 8-3 = 5 Higgs bosons! Why Supersymmetry? • Higgs mass – Quantum corrections to mH – Would make “natural” mass near cut-off (Unification or Planck scale) – But we know mH <~ 1 TeV – mH = mH bare + DmH – Severe fine tuning required between two very big numbers • Enter Supersymmetry (SUSY) – Scalar partner of quarks also provide quantum corrections – Factor of -1 from Feynman rules – Same coupling, λ – Quadratic corrections cancel – mH now natrually at electroweak scale top λ higgs λ higgs Δm2(h) Λ2cutoff Quantum correction to mHiggs λ higgs stop λ higgs Cancelling correction to mHiggs Further advantages • Lightest SUSY particle is: – – – – Big Bang relic abundance calculations are in good agreement with WMAP microwave background observations in regions of SUSY parameter space Light Weakly interacting Stable Massive • Good dark matter candidate 1/α • Predicts gauge unification – Extra particles modify running of couplings – Step towards “higher things” miss 1/α +SUSY Hit! SM Log10 (μ / GeV) Log10 (μ / GeV) R-parity • Multiplicative discrete quantum number • RP = (-1)2s+3B+L – S=spin, B=baryon number, L=lepton number • Standard Model particles have RP = +1 • SUSY Model particles have RP = -1 • If RP is conserved then SUSY particles must be pairproduced • If RP is conserved then the Lightest Supersymmetric Particle (LSP) is stable Example of a Feynman diagram for proton decay which is allowed if the RPviolating couplings (λ) are not zero How is SUSY broken? Weak coupling (mediation) • Direct breaking in visible sector not possible – Would require squarks/sleptons with mass < mSM – Not observed! • Must be strongly broken “elsewhere” and then mediated – Soft breaking terms enter in visible sector – (>100 parameters) Soft SUSYbreaking terms enter lagrangian in visible sector Strongly broken sector Various models offer different mediation e.g. Gauge “GMSB” Gravity “mSUGRA” (supergravity) Anomaly “AMSB” Sparticle Interactions • Interactions & couplings same as SM partners • 2 SUSY legs for RP conservation Largely partner of W0 boson Q: Does the gluino couple to: the quark? the slepton? the photino? Largely partner of W0 boson General features Mass/GeV Production dominated by squarks and gluinos • Complicated cascade decays – Many intermediates • Typical signal – Jets • Squarks and Gluinos – Leptons • Sleptons and weak gauginos – Missing energy “typical” susy spectrum (mSUGRA) • Undetected Lightest Susy Particle The “real thing” (a simulation of…) • Two high-energy jets of particles Invisible particles – Visible decay products • “Missing” momentum – From two invisible particles – these are the invisible Dark Matter guys Proton beams perpendicular to screen Standard Model backgrounds: measure from LHC DATA mμ μ m n n With SUSY Measure in Z -> μμ Use in Z -> νν R: Z > nn B: Estimated • Example: background to “4 jets + missing energy” – Measure background in control region – Extrapolate to signal region – Look for excess in signal region Missing PT / GeV Constraining SUSY masses • Mass constraints • Invariant masses in pairs – Missing energy – Kinematic edges Observable: Frequentlystudied decay chain Depends on: Limits depend on angles between sparticle decays Mass determination Measure edges Try various masses in equations C.G. Lester Variety of edges/variables • Narrow bands in ΔM • Wider in mass scale • Improve using crosssection information These measurements can tell us about SUSY breaking Other things to do with SUSY • Measure the sparticle spins – “prove” that it is really supersymmetric partners we are seeing • Measuring the couplings & mixings – Use to “predict” Dark Matter relic density • Find the extra Higgs bosons – Recall that SUSY predicts 5 Higgs bosons – Now we want to find H0, h0, A0, H± – Also measure their couplings, CP, … Standard Model Physics • The ATLAS and CMS experiments also potentially can measure: – – – – Top mass W mass Rare B-meson decay rates Jet physics • To much higher precision that is currently achievable – Large number of e.g. top quarks produced – Small statistical errors – Systematic errors (such as jet energy scale determination) limiting Mass of hadronic top Other things to look for… • Leptoquarks – Motivated by Grand Unified Theories – Carry lepton and baryon number – E.g. LQ bμ • New heavy quarks – Predicted by some non-SM Higgs theories • New heavy gauge bosons – Indications of new symmetry groups • Extra dimensions – Large variety of models on the market! Extra dimensions models • Motivated by need for ED in string theory and m-theory – Logical a possibility for a LHC discovery • Different models… – Which particles are localised where (bulk/brane) – Form of space-time metric (flat/warped) – Geometry and size of extra dimensions • …make different predictions – – – – – Kalazua-Klein resonances of SM particles Graviton states Stringy resonances Effects of strong gravity (micro Black Holes) Energy loss into extra dimensions More information: http://eps2003.physik.rwth-aachen.de/data/talks/parallel/09StringTheory/09Vacavant.ppt General sources • Higgs at the LHC: talk by Zeppenfeld http://whepp9.iopb.res.in/talks/zeppenfeld_WHEPP9.pdf • Physics at the LHC: Higgs talk by Harlander: http://newton.ftj.agh.edu.pl/physLHC/ • ATLAS physics Technical Design Report (TDR) http://atlas.web.cern.ch/Atlas/GROUPS/PHYSICS/TDR/a ccess.html (1999) • CMS physics Technical Design Report (TDR) http://cmsdoc.cern.ch/cms/cpt/tdr/ (2006) • Supersymmetry: http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/9709356 Constraints on mHiggs No perturbative unitarity Unstable vacuum Scale at which new physics enters Producing a Higgs @ LHC q g g H _ q W/Z g H H top g top • Higgs couplings mass – Direct e.g. u-ubar H very small cross-section • Dominant production via vertices coupling Higgs to heavy quarks or W/Z bosons q _ q H W/Z Higgs’ mechanism • Add a complex scalar field – In fact he adds 2 real scalar fields, (fermion part of L now ignored) This is gauge invariant when the scalars have covariant derivatives: Now if the potential, V, has a degenerate minimum at φ≠0 we get interesting consequences… N.B. scalar field must couple to gauge field like this for the Higgs mechanism to work mSUGRA – “super gravity” • A.K.A. cMSSM • Gravity mediated SUSY breaking 1016 GeV Unification of couplings – Flavour-blind (no FCNCs) Iterate using Renormalisation Group Equations • Strong expt. limits – Unification at high scales • Reduce SUSY parameter space – Common scalar mass M0 • squarks, sleptons – Common fermionic mass M½ • Gauginos – Common trilinear couplings A0 • Susy equivalent of Yukawas EW scale Correct MZ, MW, … Programs include e.g. ISASUSY, SOFTSUSY Other suggestions for SUSY breaking • Gauge mediation – Gauge (SM) fields in extra dimensions mediate SUSY breaking • Automatic diagonal couplings no EWSB – No direct gravitino mass until Mpl • Lightest SUSY particle is gravitino • Next-to-lightest can be long-lived (e.g. stau or neutralino) • Anomaly mediation – Sequestered sector (via extra dimension) • Loop diagram in scalar part of graviton mediates SUSY breaking • Dominates in absence of direct couplings – Leads to SUSY breaking RGE β-functions • Neutral Wino LSP • Charged Wino near-degenerate with LSP lifetime • Interesting track signatures Not exhaustive! Producing exotics? standard standard exotic exotic No RP Time standard Time exotics standard exotics With RP Time Time Require an even number of exotic legs to/from blobs (Conserved multiplicative quantum number) If we want a good dark matter candidate • If exotics can be produced singly they can decay – No good for Dark Matter candidate • If they can only be pairproduced they are stable – Only disappear on collision (rare) How do they then behave? Complete “event” Production part standard 2 exotics Time Decay part heavy exotic Time lighter exotic standard Time • • • Events build from blobs with 2 “exotic legs” A pair of cascade decays results Complicated end result = exotic = standard