7–9 May 2012
University of Pittsburgh
US/Eastern timezone

Discovering the composite Higgs through the decay of a heavy fermion

8 May 2012, 14:30
15m
104 (Lawrence)

104

Lawrence

parallel talk Higgs Physics Higgs III

Speaker

natascia vignaroli (i)

Abstract:

A possible composite nature of the Higgs could be revealed at the early stage of the LHC, by analyzing the channels where the Higgs is produced from the decay of a heavy fermion. The Higgs production from a singly-produced heavy bottom, in particular, proves to be a promising channel. For a value $\lambda = 3$ of the Higgs coupling to a heavy bottom, for example, we find that, considering a 125 GeV Higgs which decays into a
pair of b-quarks, a discovery is possible at the 8 TeV LHC with 30 fb-1 if the heavy bottom is lighter than roughly 530 GeV (while an observation is possible for heavy bottom masses up to 650 GeV). Such a relatively light heavy bottom is realistic in
composite Higgs models of the type considered. At $\sqrt{s} = 14$ TeV the LHC sensitivity on the channel increases signicantly. With $\lambda= 3$ a discovery can occur, with 100 fb-1, for heavy bottom masses up to 1040 GeV. In the case the heavy bottom was
as light as 500 GeV, the 14 TeV LHC would be sensitive to the measure of the $\lambda$ coupling in basically the full range $\lambda > 1$ predicted by the theory.

Author

natascia vignaroli (i)

Presentation materials