HHH workshop

Europe/Zurich
Dubrovnik

Dubrovnik

Description

This workshop aims at gathering both theorists and experimentalists to discuss all aspects of HHH production at the (HL-)LHC, in terms of Standard Model and beyond the Standard Model physics as well as the dominant backgrounds important for the measurement of the Higgs self-coupling (HH and HHH).

 

We plan to cover advances in theoretical calculations, BSM phenomenology, EFT interpretations as well as analysis techniques at the LHC, including treatment of important Standard Model backgrounds, and machine learning developments.

 

The main program will consist of several days dedicated to specific topics with invited talks, but we also allow for submitted talk contributions. 

Participants
  • Andreas Papaefstathiou
  • Benjamin Fuks
  • Bhakti Kanulal Chitroda
  • Brian Moser
  • Chen Zhou
  • Dinko Ferencek
  • Gilberto Tetlalmatzi-Xolocotzi
  • Giulia Zanderighi
  • Greg Landsberg
  • Hannah Arnold
  • Holly Pacey
  • Jacobo Konigsberg
  • Kazuki Sakurai
  • Maggie Chen
  • Marina Kolosova
  • Marko Stamenkovic
  • Osama Karkout
  • Panagiotis Stylianou
  • Roman Pasechnik
  • Suzanne Rosenzweig
  • Tania Natalie Robens
  • Tatjana Susa
  • Todd Brian Huffman
  • Tristan du Pree
  • William Balunas
  • Zhijie Zhao
  • +3
    • 09:30 10:15
      Registration + welcome coffee break 45m
    • 10:15 10:30
      Welcome talk + logistics 15m
      Speaker: Vuko Brigljevic (Rudjer Boskovic Institute (HR))
    • 10:30 12:30
      Morning session
      Convener: Tristan Arnoldus Du Pree (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))
      • 10:30
        Introduction to HHH: SM and BSM phenomenology 30m
        Speaker: Benjamin Fuks
      • 11:00
        QCD overview 30m
        Speaker: Giulia Zanderighi (Max Planck Society (DE))
      • 11:30
        Overview of HH experimental results from CMS 30m

        Lessons learned from HH: from analyses strategy to background modelling

        Speaker: Marko Stamenkovic (Brown University (US))
      • 12:00
        Experimental perspectives on HHH production 30m

        There has recently been increased theoretical interest in tri-Higgs production, but no experimental search or measurement has yet been performed. Several significant challenges would be faced, including signal identification and discrimination against background, modelling of complex background processes, and interpretation of the data. This talk will present an experimentalist's view of these challenges, together with lessons learned from past studies targeting di-Higgs production, particularly at ATLAS, and an overview of techniques which may potentially be useful to address them.

        Speaker: William Balunas (University of Cambridge (GB))
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch 1h 30m
    • 14:00 16:00
      Afternoon session
      Convener: Marina Kolosova (University of Florida (US))
      • 14:00
        Reconstruction of boosted and resolved multi-Higgs-boson final states with symmetry-preserving attention 30m

        The production of multiple Higgs bosons at the CERN LHC provides a direct way to measure the trilinear and quartic Higgs self-interaction strengths as well as potential access to beyond the standard model effects that can enhance production at large transverse momentum 𝑝T. The largest event fraction arises from the fully hadronic final state in which every Higgs boson decays to a bottom quark-antiquark pair (𝑏𝑏¯), which introduces a combinatorial challenge known as the \emph{jet assignment problem}: assigning jets to sets representing Higgs boson candidates. Symmetry-preserving attention networks (SPA-Nets) have been been introduced to address this challenge for a given event topology. However, the complexity of this challenge increases when simultaneously considering both 𝐻→𝑏𝑏¯ reconstruction possibilities, i.e., two "resolved" small-radius jets each containing a cascade initiated by a 𝑏 quark or one "boosted" large-radius jet containing a merged cascade initiated by a 𝑏𝑏¯ pair. The latter improves reconstruction efficiency at large 𝑝T. In this work, we introduce a generalization to the SPA-Net approach to simultaneously consider both boosted and resolved reconstruction possibilities and unambiguously interpret an event as "fully resolved," "fully boosted," or in between. We report the performance of baseline methods, the original SPA-Net approach, and our generalized version on nonresonant 𝐻𝐻𝐻 production at the LHC.

        Speakers: Haoyang Li (Univ. of California San Diego (US)), Marko Stamenkovic (Brown University (US))
      • 14:30
        Complementing constraints of the Higgs potential shape with triple-Higgs searches at the LHC 30m

        The discovery of the Higgs boson in 2012 was a triumph for the Standard Model (SM) of particle physics and the mechanism of electroweak symmetry breaking. An essential ingredient to this mechanism is the Higgs field potential, which is introduced ad-hoc and assumed to be Mexican-hat shaped in the SM, but cannot be derived from first principles. It is therefore important to probe this shape experimentally. Current measurements of single Higgs boson production only probe the area around minimum of the potential. To determine its exact shape, measurements of processes involving self-couplings of N Higgs bosons (H^N) are needed. While there is an extensive existing research programme to extract the triple Higgs coupling (HHH) from di-Higgs production, little attention is currently given to the quartic Higgs coupling (HHHH) which can be extracted from searches for triple Higgs production. In this talk, we will demonstrate how experimental searches for triple Higgs production can complement the ongoing di-Higgs programme. Starting from the sensitivities of both search types to the HHH and HHHH coupling we estimate experimental precision for upcoming LHC runs to arrive at a first projection for LHC era measurements.

        Speakers: Brian Moser (CERN), Hannah Arnold (Nikhef), Marko Stamenkovic (Brown University (US))
      • 15:00
        Improving Multi-Higgs sensitivity in the hadronic final state using machine learning 30m

        One of the central goals of the physics program at the future colliders is to elucidate the origin of electroweak symmetry breaking, including precision measurements of the Higgs sector. This includes a detailed study of Higgs boson pair production, which can reveal the Higgs self-interaction strength through the gluon fusion mode as well as the coupling between Higgs and vector bosons through the vector boson fusion mode. Since the discovery of the Higgs boson, a large campaign of measurements of the properties of the Higgs boson has begun and many new ideas have emerged during the completion of this program. One such idea is the use of highly boosted and merged hadronic decays of the Higgs boson (H→bb, H→WW→qqqq ) with machine learning methods to improve the signal-to-background discrimination. In this project, we champion the use of these modes to boost the sensitivity of future collider physics programs to Higgs boson pair production and the Higgs self-coupling. In this presentation, we aim to demonstrate the advantages of graph neural networks over standard cut-based event selection methods to achieve better sensitivity.

        Speakers: Daniel Diaz (Univ. of California San Diego (US)), Javier Mauricio Duarte (Univ. of California San Diego (US)), Sanmay Ganguly (University of Tokyo (JP))
      • 15:30
        HHH, the Higgs potential and electroweak baryogenesis 30m

        The search for the HHH process at the LHC targets both the quartic and trilinear Higgs self-couplings, and thereby provides important information about the shape of the Higgs potential. Indirectly, it could also give insight in the matter-antimatter asymmetry observed in the universe. This presentation discusses the relation of the HHH process with the mechanism of electroweak symmetry breaking and the impact of the HHH study at the LHC on the understanding of electroweak baryogenesis.

        Speakers: Osama Karkout (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL)), Tristan Arnoldus Du Pree (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))
    • 16:00 16:30
      Coffee break 30m
    • 16:30 18:00
      Open discussion - experimentalists and theorists requests exchange 1h 30m

      Townhall discussion based on feedback received by participants - organised through slides

      What are experimentalists requests to theorists?

      What are theorists requests to experimentalists?

    • 18:00 19:30
      Welcome reception 1h 30m
    • 09:30 12:30
      Morning session
      Convener: Brian Moser (CERN)
      • 09:30
        General ATLAS flavour tagging 30m

        An introduction to the ATLAS Flavour Tagging, which covers the new Run 3 tagger development. In addition to the tagger itself, we will also cover the calibration programs and other statistical treatments.

        Speaker: Bingxuan Liu (Simon Fraser University (CA))
      • 10:00
        ATLAS b-jet trigger 30m

        Several new b-jet triggering strategies have been deployed for ATLAS Run 3. We will show the preliminary performance plots and discuss its impact on the Run 3 HHH program. In particular, we will initialize a discussion on what new triggers should be implemented for the rest of Run 3 and HL-LHC, in order to probe the full phase space.

        Speaker: Maggie Chen (University of Oxford (GB))
      • 10:30
        Boosted flavour tagging algorithms in ATLAS 30m

        There has been quite some advancements in the area of boosted flavour tagging in ATLAS. We will discuss the baseline tagger performance and in particular a dedicated low mass a->bb tagger.

        Speaker: Osama Karkout (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))
      • 11:00
        Coffee break - conference picture 30m
      • 11:30
        CMS heavy flavour tagging: novel HH and HHH trigger strategy for Run 3 30m

        Recent progress in heavy flavour tagging as well as boosted flavour tagging has enabled the CMS experiment to probe rare Higgs processes with more sensitivity than ever. In this talk, we will discuss the novel HH and HHH trigger strategy deployed for Run 3.

        Speaker: Marina Kolosova (University of Florida (US))
      • 12:00
        Dissecting multi-Higgs production in new physics models 30m

        In this talk I will explore the behaviour of multi-Higgs boson production, with a focus on triple Higgs boson production, in the context of various new physics models. I will discuss theories that incorporate higher-dimensional operators, and models with one or two additional singlet scalar fields.

        Speaker: Dr Andreas Papaefstathiou (Kennesaw State University, GA, USA)
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch 1h 30m
    • 14:00 15:30
      Afternoon session
      Convener: Tania Natalie Robens (Rudjer Boskovic Institute (HR))
      • 14:00
        Phenomenology of flavoured 3HDMs 30m

        I will overview our recent advances in studies of various phenomenological implications of multi-Higgs extensions of the Standard Model constrained by additional symmetries. A particular focus would be
        on 3HDMs, with some of their basic implications on Higgs and flavour physics.

        Speaker: Roman Pasechnik (Lund university)
      • 14:30
        Investigating the trilinear Higgs coupling through triple Higgs production 30m

        Triple Higgs production is of interest because it involves the quartic Higgs coupling 𝜅4, which however will be very difficult to constrain experimentally during the next decades, but also because of its significant dependence on the trilinear Higgs coupling 𝜅3. The latter dependence could be used to improve the experimental sensitivity on 𝜅3 in combination with the experimental information that can be obtained from di-Higgs production. The impact of triple Higgs production in this context is limited by the small signal cross section and the large QCD background rates that contribute. We explore the prospects for constraining 𝜅3 via triple Higgs production at the HL-LHC by considering different final state signatures under idealised conditions, and investigate signal-background discrimination through Neural Networks, which are necessitated in order to fully exploit the available information in the data.

        Speaker: Panagiotis Stylianou
      • 15:00
        HHH - (a few) experimental thoughts 30m
        Speaker: Greg Landsberg (Brown University (US))
    • 15:30 16:00
      Coffee break 30m
    • 16:00 17:30
      Open discussion - experimentalists and theorists requests exchange [part 2] or break-out rooms discussions 1h 30m

      Open session to continue the discussion between experimentalists and theorists

      Additional possibility for break-out rooms in smaller group if needed

    • 18:00 19:30
      Guided tour of Dubrovnik 1h 30m
    • 20:00 22:00
      Social dinner 2h
    • 10:00 10:30
      Coffee break 30m
    • 10:30 12:30
      Closing session
      Convener: Dr Andreas Papaefstathiou (Kennesaw State University, GA, USA)
      • 10:30
        Overview on BSM scenarios with enhancements in HH and HHH 30m

        I will give a short overview on models with extended scalar sectors that allow for triple scalar final states, including most recent theoretical and experimental constraints.

        Speaker: Tania Natalie Robens (Rudjer Boskovic Institute (HR))
      • 11:00
        Scrutinising the Higgs quartic coupling at a future 100 TeV proton-proton collider 30m

        The Higgs potential consists of an unexplored territory in which the electroweak symmetry breaking is triggered, and it is moreover directly related to the nature of the electroweak phase transition. Measuring the Higgs boson cubic and quartic couplings, or getting equivalently information on the exact shape of the Higgs potential, is therefore an essential task. We discuss options for related direct measurements at a future proton-proton collider operating at a centre-of-mass energy of 100 TeV, focusing on a final states with b-tagged jets and either tau leptons or photons.

        Speaker: Benjamin Fuks
      • 11:30
        Triple Higgs boson production at a 100 TeV proton-proton collider 30m

        We consider triple Higgs boson production at a future 100 TeV proton-proton collider.
        We perform a survey of viable final states and compare and contrast triple production to Higgs boson pair production.
        Focussing on the hhh -> (bb)(bb)(gamma,gamma) final state we construct a baseline analysis for the Standard Model scenario and simple deformations demonstrating that the process merits investigation in the high-luminosity phase of the future collider as a new probe of the self-coupling sector of the Higgs boson.

        Speaker: Kazuki Sakurai (University of Warsaw)
      • 12:00
        Highlights of HHH workshop 30m
        Speaker: Jacobo Konigsberg (University of Florida (US))
    • 12:30 14:30
      Final lunch conference 2h
    • 14:30 16:30
      Excursion in Dubrovnik 2h

      Optional excursion in Dubrovnik - TBD