APS April Meeting 2012
Volume 57, Number 3
Saturday–Tuesday, March 31–April 3 2012;
Atlanta, Georgia
Session J2: Invited Session: Standard Model Higgs Boson Searches
1:30 PM–3:18 PM,
Sunday, April 1, 2012
Room: Regency Ballroom V
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPF
Chair: Nikos Varelas, University of Illinois at Chicago
Abstract ID: BAPS.2012.APR.J2.1
Abstract: J2.00001 : Higgs Theory and Phenomenology in the Standard Model
1:30 PM–2:06 PM
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Abstract
Author:
Doreen Wackeroth
(University at Buffalo, The State University of New York)
Particle physics has entered an exciting era: The CERN Large Hadron
Collider (LHC) performed exceptionally well since its start of
operation at an energy of 3.5 TeV per beam in 2010 and is exploring the new energy regime where we
hope to find answers to some of the most fundamental questions in
particle physics and cosmology. Soon, the LHC may reveal the origin of
electroweak symmetry breaking, discover physics beyond the Standard
Model, and may even identify a candidate for dark matter.
The Standard Model (SM) has been immensely successful in describing
electroweak and strong interactions of fundamental particles,
surviving all experimental tests since its formulation in the
1970s. Nevertheless, it leaves many questions unanswered, not the
least of which concerns the origin of mass. The experimental fact that
weak gauge bosons, the $W^\pm$ and $Z^0$ bosons, are massive has been
accommodated within the SM by spontaneously breaking the electroweak
symmetry via the Higgs-Kibble mechanism. As a consequence of this
mechanism, the SM requires the existence of a spin-0,
neutral, massive particle, the Higgs boson. We know from comparing
very precise measurements of properties of SM particles, such as the
$W$ and $Z$ bosons, to their SM predictions (which depend on the Higgs
boson mass through quantum-loop effects), that the Higgs boson is
relatively light. So light, in fact, that it should not
escape detection at the LHC, if it exists.
The search for the Higgs boson and the measurement of its properties,
once discovered, requires excellent theoretical control of predictions
for its production and decay processes. Since the very rare Higgs
event has to be extracted from a much larger background of processes
that do not include a Higgs, these background processes have to
be very well understood, as well.
I will review recent theoretical advances in providing precise
predictions of observables of Higgs production and background
processes that are crucial in the search for the SM Higgs boson at the
LHC.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2012.APR.J2.1