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Phys. Rev. D 82, 013003 (2010) [53 pages]

Higgs boson look-alikes at the LHC

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A. De Rújula1,2,3, Joseph Lykken4, Maurizio Pierini3, Christopher Rogan5, and Maria Spiropulu3,5
1Instituto de Física Teórica, Univ. Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid and CIEMAT, Madrid, Spain
2Physics Department, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA
3Physics Department, CERN, CH 1211 Geneva 23, Switzerland
4Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, P.O. Box 500, Batavia, Illinois 60510, USA
5Lauritsen Laboratory of Physics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA

Received 2 March 2010; published 14 July 2010

The discovery of a Higgs particle is possible in a variety of search channels at the LHC. However, the true identity of any putative Higgs boson will, at first, remain ambiguous until one has experimentally excluded other possible assignments of quantum numbers and couplings. We quantify the degree to which one can discriminate a standard model Higgs boson from “look-alikes” at, or close to, the moment of discovery at the LHC. We focus on the fully-reconstructible golden decay mode to a pair of Z bosons and a four-lepton final state. Considering both on-shell and off-shell Z’s, we show how to utilize the full decay information from the events, including the distributions and correlations of the five relevant angular variables. We demonstrate how the finite phase space acceptance of any LHC detector sculpts the decay distributions, a feature neglected in previous studies. We use likelihood ratios to discriminate a standard model Higgs from look-alikes with other spins or nonstandard parity, CP, or form factors. For a resonance mass of 200  GeV/c2, we achieve a median discrimination significance of 3σ with as few as 19 events, and even better discrimination for the off-shell decays of a 145  GeV/c2 resonance.

© 2010 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.82.013003
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.82.013003
PACS:
14.80.Bn