Bounding the Higgs Boson Width through Interferometry

Lance J. Dixon and Ye Li
Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 111802 – Published 13 September 2013

Abstract

We study the change in the diphoton-invariant-mass distribution for Higgs boson decays to two photons, due to interference between the Higgs resonance in gluon fusion and the continuum background amplitude for ggγγ. Previously, the apparent Higgs mass was found to shift by around 100 MeV in the standard model in the leading-order approximation, which may potentially be experimentally observable. We compute the next-to-leading-order QCD corrections to the apparent mass shift, which reduce it by about 40%. The apparent mass shift may provide a way to measure, or at least bound, the Higgs boson width at the Large Hadron Collider through “interferometry.” We investigate how the shift depends on the Higgs width, in a model that maintains constant Higgs boson signal yields. At Higgs widths above 30 MeV, the mass shift is over 200 MeV and increases with the square root of the width. The apparent mass shift could be measured by comparing with the ZZ* channel, where the shift is much smaller. It might be possible to measure the shift more accurately by exploiting its strong dependence on the Higgs transverse momentum.

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  • Received 24 May 2013

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.111.111802

© 2013 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Lance J. Dixon and Ye Li

  • SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94309, USA

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Issue

Vol. 111, Iss. 11 — 13 September 2013

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