scholarly journals Precision electroweak measurements with the CMS detector

2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (34n35) ◽  
pp. 2044010
Author(s):  
V. Ciulli

Recent results by the CMS experiment on Drell–Yan, W and multiboson events are presented, including in particular the measurement of the electroweak mixing angle, the differential distributions in Drell–Yan events, and the electroweak production of one and two vector bosons in association with two jets. No deviations from the Standard Model predictions are found and stringent bounds are set on anomalous triple and quartic gauge couplings.

1998 ◽  
Vol 13 (38) ◽  
pp. 3099-3107 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. MALTONI ◽  
M. I. VYSOTSKY

It happens that s2 and ŝ2 are equal with 0.1% accuracy, though they are split by radiative corrections and a natural estimate for their difference is 1%. This degeneracy occurs only for mt value close to 170 GeV, so no deep physical reason can be attributed to it. However, another puzzle of the standard model, the degeneracy of [Formula: see text] and s2, is not independent of the previous one since a good physical reason exists for [Formula: see text] and ŝ2 degeneracy. We present explicit formulas which relate these three angles.


1992 ◽  
Vol 07 (22) ◽  
pp. 5537-5548
Author(s):  
A.A. LIKHODED ◽  
A.A. PANKOV ◽  
O.P. YUSHCHENKO

The phenomenological manifestation of the additional Y(YL) boson arising in models with the composite structure of electroweak interactions is studied for the process [Formula: see text] at the TRISTAN energies [Formula: see text]. It is shown that the experimentally observed deviation of Rμ from the Standard Model predictions can be explained by the presence of the additional isoscalar Y boson in the region of a small mixing paramenter. The increase of statistics for the above processes at TRISTAN will permit one to set an additional limit on the model parameters.


Author(s):  
Noam Why

A grand unification of electroweak and strong forces is presented based on a new idea called Unified Charged Vectors. Using this new concept, it is shown that: The electroweak and strong forces can be unified into a single electro-weak-strong force. The various charges and coupling constants of fermions (like the electroweak mixing angle) can be predicted, rather than presupposed. The Lagrangian symmetries can be predicted rather than presupposed. The standard model Lagrangian can be cast into a simple unified form.


1992 ◽  
Vol 07 (09) ◽  
pp. 1853-1873 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. BANERJEE ◽  
S.N. GANGULI ◽  
A. GURTU

The four detectors ALEPH, DELPHI, L3 and OPAL have collected ≈550,000 Z0 decays during the LEP run in 1990. We have made model-independent simultaneous fits to the LEP data to determine the Z0 parameters. The mass and widths of Z0 are Mz=91.177± 0.006±0.02 (LEP) GeV , Γz=2.481±0.010 GeV , Γ had =1.734±0.010 GeV and Γ lept =83.0 ± 0.4 MeV . The number of ν families is determined to be Nν=3.01±0.05. Simultaneous fits are performed within the Standard Model framework to the LEP data and constraining the value of sin 2 θw from the [Formula: see text] colliders we get the following values for top mass, electroweak mixing angle sin 2 θw and the radiative correction [Formula: see text], sin 2 θw=0.230±0.004 and ∆r=0.056±0.011.


1989 ◽  
Vol 04 (05) ◽  
pp. 1065-1110 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. CASALBUONI ◽  
S. DE CURTIS ◽  
D. DOMINICI ◽  
F. FERUGLIO ◽  
R. GATTO

The possibility that both vector and axial-vector bound states could originate from a strong interacting sector of the electroweak theory is considered. A simple Lagrangian parametrization is presented where the bound states are described as gauge vector bosons of a local, nonlinearly realized, SU (2) ⊗ SU (2) symmetry. At present the model is mostly constrained from data on W and Z masses and on neutrino-nucleon deep inelastic scattering. High energy e+e− tests are suggested where visible deviations from the standard model predictions could take place. These deviations exhibit a certain pattern which allows to distinguish the model from other theoretical frameworks. We find that precise measurements of W and Z masses and asymmetries in e+e− collisions could put strong restrictions on the parameters of the model if no appreciable deviations are found from the standard model, except for a case with the vector and axial-vector bosons degenerate in mass and coupling. General differences with respect to technicolor are pointed out.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Henning Bahl ◽  
Philip Bechtle ◽  
Sven Heinemeyer ◽  
Judith Katzy ◽  
Tobias Klingl ◽  
...  

Abstract The $$ \mathcal{CP} $$ CP structure of the Higgs boson in its coupling to the particles of the Standard Model is amongst the most important Higgs boson properties which have not yet been constrained with high precision. In this study, all relevant inclusive and differential Higgs boson measurements from the ATLAS and CMS experiments are used to constrain the $$ \mathcal{CP} $$ CP -nature of the top-Yukawa interaction. The model dependence of the constraints is studied by successively allowing for new physics contributions to the couplings of the Higgs boson to massive vector bosons, to photons, and to gluons. In the most general case, we find that the current data still permits a significant $$ \mathcal{CP} $$ CP -odd component in the top-Yukawa coupling. Furthermore, we explore the prospects to further constrain the $$ \mathcal{CP} $$ CP properties of this coupling with future LHC data by determining tH production rates independently from possible accompanying variations of the $$ t\overline{t}H $$ t t ¯ H rate. This is achieved via a careful selection of discriminating observables. At the HL-LHC, we find that evidence for tH production at the Standard Model rate can be achieved in the Higgs to diphoton decay channel alone.


2000 ◽  
Vol 15 (26) ◽  
pp. 1605-1610 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. PASUPATHY

The assumption that the ratio of the Higgs self-coupling to the square of its Yukawa coupling to the top is (almost) independent of the renormalization scale fixes the Higgs mass within narrow limits at m H =160 GeV using only the values of gauge couplings and top mass.


2008 ◽  
Vol 23 (17n20) ◽  
pp. 1266-1277 ◽  
Author(s):  
WILLEM T. H. VAN OERS

Searches for parity violation in hadronic systems started soon after the evidence for parity violation in β-decay of 60 Co was presented by Madame Chien-Shiung Wu and in π and μ decay by Leon Lederman in 1957. The early searches for parity violation in hadronic systems did not reach the sensitivity required and only after technological advances in later years was parity violation unambiguously established. Within the meson-exchange description of the strong interaction, theory and experiment meet in a set of seven weak meson-nucleon coupling constants. Even today, after almost five decades, the determination of the seven weak meson-nucleon couplings is incomplete. Parity violation in nuclear systems is rather complex due to the intricacies of QCD. More straight forward in terms of interpretation are measurements of the proton-proton parity-violating analyzing power (normalized differences in scattering yields for positive and negative helicity incident beams), for which there exist three precision experiments (at 13.6, at 45, and 221 MeV). To-date, there are better possibilities for theoretical interpretation using effective field theory approaches. The situation with regard to the measurement of the parity-violating analyzing power or asymmetry in polarized electron scattering is quite different. Although the original measurements were intended to determine the electro-weak mixing angle, with the current knowledge of the electro-weak interaction and the great precision with which electro-weak radiative corrections can be calculated, the emphasis has been to study the structure of the nucleon, and in particular the strangeness content of the nucleon. A whole series of experiments (the SAMPLE experiment at MIT-Bates, the G0 experiment and HAPPEX experiments at Jefferson Laboratory (JLab), and the PVA4 experiment at MAMI) have indicated that the strange quark contributions to the charge and magnetization distributions of the nucleon are tiny. These measurements if extrapolated to zero degrees and zero momentum transfer have also provided a factor five improvement in the knowledge of the neutral weak couplings to the quarks. Choosing appropriate kinematics in parity-violating electron-proton scattering permits nucleon structure effects on the measured analyzing power to be precisely controlled. Consequently, a precise measurement of the ‘running’ of sin 2θw or the electro-weak mixing angle has become within reach. The [Formula: see text] experiment at Jefferson Laboratory is to measure this quantity to a precision of about 4%. This will either establish conformity with the Standard Model of quarks and leptons or point to New Physics as the Standard Model must be encompassed in a more general theory required, for instance, by a convergence of the three couplings (strong, electromagnetic, and weak) to a common value at the GUT scale. The upgrade of CEBAF at Jefferson Laboratory to 12 GeV, will allow a new measurement of sin 2θW in parity-violating electron-electron scattering with an improved precision to the current better measurement (the SLAC E158 experiment) of the ‘running’ of sin 2θW away from the Z0 pole. Preliminary design studies of such an experiment show that a precision comparable to the most precise individual measurements at the Z0 pole (to about ±0.00025) can be reached. The result of this experiment will be rather complementary to the [Formula: see text] experiment in terms of sensitivity to New Physics.


2018 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. 1860058
Author(s):  
Ye Chen

Latest results of searches for heavy Higgs bosons in fermionic final states are presented using the CMS detector at the LHC. Results are based on pp collision data collected at centre-of-mass energies of 8 and 13 TeV which have been interpreted according to different extensions of the Standard Model such as MSSM, 2HDM, and NMSSM. These searches look for evidence of other scalar or pseudoscalar bosons, in addition to the observed SM-like 125 GeV Higgs boson, and set 95% confidence level upper limits in fermionic final states and benchmark models explored. The talk reviews briefly the major results obtained by the CMS Collaboration during Run I, and presents the most recent searches performed during Run II.


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