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Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

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Page 1: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Broken Symmetry:W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0

The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Page 2: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Outline

• Physics introduction• W mass measurement• Higgs boson searches• Our group• What do grad students do?

– Atlas or D0. Which is right for you?

Page 3: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

What’s the Physics Motivation?The goal of particle physics is to understand the universe at the smallest distances and, equivalently, the highest energies.

And now a (partial) picture, the standard model… including an H (not shown)

Page 4: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

What’s the Physics Motivation?Many talks begin with “The standard model is extremely successful”, and it is. Interestingly,

the SM is a gauge theory and therefore has matter particles (fermions) interacting via force carrier particles (gauge bosons: , W, Z).

and minimal gauge theories require the bosons to be massless, e.g. m = MW = MZ = 0.

but we know from experiment, m = 0 MW = 80.399 +- 0.025 GeV, MZ = 91.1876 +- 0.0021 GeV

electroweak symmetry is broken (EWSB)

Page 5: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

How is this dealt with?Introduce a new scalar field (particle) into the theory. When put in properly, gauge invariance is maintained, and (some) bosons must get mass.

This is the Higgs mechanism

nice theory, but the Higgs boson has not been found! Is it right?

We are working on two areas directly related to understanding this symmetry breaking and the Higgs mechanism:

1. Measuring the W boson mass, 2. Searching for the Higgs

Page 6: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

W mass measurements• In the absence of Higgs discovery

– Use internal consistency of the S.M. to constrain mH. Biggest uncertainty from Mt, MW…

W Wt

b

W WH

W

In SM, MW/MZ = cosW

sinW = f(GF,aEM,MZ,R) R = c1(Mt/MZ)2 + c2ln(MH/MW)

Page 7: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

And these constraints give

Page 8: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

• Experimental issues: W-> ev

– It’s true that, M2 = (Ee+Ev)2 – (pe+pv)2, but..

Electron

MET

Measuring the W mass

Page 9: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Measuring the W mass

– We cannot measure neutrino. Infer from momentum conservation, but

– We cannot constrain pv along beamProtons are bags of quarks, not

fundamental…Instead measure pT

e, pTv, mT and infer MW

– We cannot analytically predict these distributions, need a simulation

Much of the work goes into developing simulation

Use data control samples to calibrate“T” subscript means perp. to beam

Page 10: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Luckily, there’s the Z boson

• Z->ee, so can measure mass directly– Use this to calibrate our simulation

Page 11: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

But many other effects

• Trigger…• e identification

• What happens with W pT? (“recoil”)

• Beam luminosity increasing…• W (and Z) production details…• Bremstrahlung…• …

This is a measurement at roughly 1 part in 5000. Everything must be done extremely thoroughly

Page 12: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Does the W pT matter?

g

The recoil resolution and model affects the pT

v and mT variables!

Page 13: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

We can test our simulation using Z’s…

The Z pT is very well measured from the ee pair. For W, we cannot do this and must use “rest” of the detector. This plot compares the “rest” in Z events to the well measured ee pair in Z events…

Page 14: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Measuring the W mass • Having tuned up the simulation, what

do we see?

http://www-d0.fnal.gov/Run2Physics/ WWW/results/prelim/EW/E27/

Page 15: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Measuring the Mass

• Our brand new result:

• Uncertainties:

MW = 80.401 +- 0.044 GeV

Limited by stats in control samples!

The world’s best measurement

Page 16: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Measuring the Mass

• Where to now?– Beginning next round with 4x the data.

Finish in <1 yr if all goes well.

– Then on to the final version with full data, at least another 2x improvementFinish in 2012/13?

• Expect to share the world’s best measurement for 10 years (or forever?)– Room for a student to work on this. A

great thesis topic!

Page 17: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

But, really, just Find the Higgs!

• or whatever is responsible for EWSB– This is a major component of the current

D0 research program– Many people, but still many

opportunities

• Unlike W mass, Higgs is very low S/B– The whole issue is needles in haystacks– Better look in all the possible haystacks

• What is already known?

Page 18: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

What do we know?

Reminder from earlier mH > 114 GeV, butalso probably mH < 160 GeV (or so)

Page 19: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

At D0: Lots of stuff in the way…

BF

Rates for different processes

Page 20: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

And then the HiggsWH: e/ bb

bbqq’ e/ W(e/)W(e/)

ZH: ee/ bb bb bbqq

ttH: lb qq’b bb

gg→H: W(e/)W(e/)gg (+ 2 jets)

WW →H: (+ 2 jets)

Two regimes: mH < 135 GeV: H->bb, needs additional info mH > 135 GeV: H->WW/ZZ, stands alone

Page 21: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Low Higgs Mass, mH < 135 GeV

• Cannot get sufficient S/B with only Higgs, so add something else at a price in rate

EVENT DISPLAYq

q

W/Z

W/Z

H bb

l, l, , l,

time

Page 22: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Low Mass (con’t)

• Use the W or Z as a “tag” to reject background:– W->lv or Z->ll, vv– Look for lepton, or missing energy or

both,

• and then also for the Higgs decay– But don’t see bb quarks. – See “jets”, or streams, of particles– Reconstruct Higgs mass (limited res.)

Page 23: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Mass Reconstruction (con’t)

Do you see the Higgs? I don’t…

Page 24: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Low Mass• Use advanced computing techniques

– H matrix, neural nets, boosted decision trees, …

• As well as physics insight– Better resolution (Strauss…)

Page 25: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

High Mass, mH > 135 GeV

• Here, H->WW, then Wlv with l=e,– Very low backgrounds

primarily straight WW from SMDifferent spin structure, so use

angles, pT’s

– Very low rate, so need efficiency!

q

q

t

t

HtW

W

l

l’,

Page 26: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

High Mass (con’t)

But it’s still difficult!

Page 27: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

High Mass (con’t)

So, again, be smarter

Page 28: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

And where we stand now

Page 29: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

What next?

• Will continue to add data. 3x more?• And improve analysis techniques

We are doing much more than simply adding data. Getting smarter all the time

Page 30: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

An aside about Fermilab & D0

•Fermilab Tevatron–ppbar accelerator

– ECM = 1.96 TeV

– 60% through running– Near Chicago

•D0– detector at FNAL– broad purpose HEP program; 600 collabs.

Both Tevatron and D0 are running very well…

Page 31: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

1/5 of “official” D0

Page 32: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Our SBU D0 Group

• People– 3+ faculty

Grannis, Hobbs, McCarthy, Rijssenbeek

– 2+ post docs (long term)– 2-4 graduate students

Not shown: RM, MR

Page 33: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Students?

• Typically, reside at FNAL– After 2 years for classes– +3 years for thesis

• Technical work – shifts, computing, detector hardware

• Thesis analysis– Start with a small, self-contained study– and apply it to an analysis and

complete the full analysis on a given data set

Page 34: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Students?

• Analysis groups include collaborators at other institutions (e.g. W mass)

• so although D0 is big, really work with 4-10 people on a daily basis.

About eight of these folks are finishing working on this topic (graduating, new job, other exp.)

Page 35: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Recent History

• We’ve had or are about to have– 6 theses on Higgs (or related topics)

Zdrazil, Mutaf, Dong, Desai, Herner, Strauss

– 2 theses on W massGuo, Guo

• And both topics are going strong at D0 for another 3-4 yrs.

Page 36: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

SBU: Atlas or D0

• Both are very interesting, and faculty in both. Which one?– Personal choice

Why D0? long-term important science running very well! “guaranteed” timeline interested in detailed work at a mature exp. stay in U.S.

Why Atlas (see earlier talk)? the up-and-coming thing; brand new, so learn how detector really works highest energies ever, so good discovery potential. live in France/Switzerland

Page 37: Broken Symmetry: W, Z and Higgs Bosons at D0 The Collider Experiments High Energy Group

Summary

• The D0 experiment is doing fundamental work, and SBU towards EWSB study– W boson mass– Higgs search

• to illuminate basic issues at the interface of theory and experiment– Do gauge theories really work as we think?– What is the structure of matter and the

interactions that govern it?