physics logo

Synopsis: Higgs-like Particle in a Mirror

Synopsis Image
APS/Alan Stonebraker

Study of the Mass and Spin-Parity of the Higgs Boson Candidate via Its Decays to Z Boson Pairs

S. Chatrchyan et al. (CMS Collaboration)

Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 081803 (2013)
Published February 21, 2013

Physicists have been searching for the Higgs boson for nearly 50 years. In July 2012, two collaborations at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN announced the discovery of a new particle that meets the general expectations for a Higgs boson. But is this particle the final piece of the standard model, or something more exotic?

One important test is the parity of the particle: how its mirror image behaves. In a mirror, even-parity particles look the same, whereas odd-parity particles appear reversed. The standard model Higgs boson is a scalar, a spin-0 even-parity particle. But there are many models that include a spin-0 odd-parity particle known as a pseudoscalar.

For the first time, the CMS Collaboration at the LHC has placed constraints on this possibility. They study decays of the new particle to a pair of Z bosons, each of which, in turn, decays to a pair of leptons. They analyze the angular distribution of the leptons under the assumption that the new particle is spin 0, and find that the odd-parity pseudoscalar scenario is disfavored, having an effective statistical p value of only 2.4%. So all the evidence thus far is consistent with the new particle being the standard model Higgs boson. – Robert Garisto

ISSN 1943-2879. Use of the American Physical Society websites and journals implies that the user has read and agrees to our Terms and Conditions and any applicable Subscription Agreement.