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Title: David Futyan


1
The Discovery Potential of the Higgs Boson at CMS
in the Four Lepton Final State
  • David Futyan
  • UC Riverside

2
Overview
  • Introduction
  • LHC and CMS
  • Motivation for Higgs boson searches
  • Decay channels observable at the LHC
  • Signal and background processes
  • Cross-sections and branching ratios
  • Event generation and simulation
  • Online selection
  • Offline reconstruction of electrons and muons
  • Offline event selection
  • Evaluation of background from data
  • Significance with background systematics
  • Potential for measurement of Higgs boson
    properties
  • Mass, width, cross-section
  • Experimental systematic uncertainties

3
The LHC (Large Hadron Collider)
  • Proton-proton collider
  • vs 14 TeV
  • Luminosity 1034 cm-2s-1
  • 17 miles in circumference
  • Due to begin operation summer 2007

4
The CMS Detector (Compact Muon Solenoid)
  • General purpose detector
  • Over 2000 people from
  • 160 institutes
  • 12500 tonnes

5
CMS Detector Slice
6
CMS Under Construction
7
The Higgs Boson
  • A key objective of the LHC is to elucidate the
    origin of mass.
  • Higgs mechanism
  • Provides an explanation for electroweak symmetry
    breaking in the Standard Model
  • Gives rise to the massive Z and W vector bosons
    and the massless photon.
  • gtLies at the core of the Standard Model -
    without the Higgs mechanism the SM is neither
    consistent nor complete.
  • Provides mechanism through which gauge bosons and
    fermions acquire mass.
  • Predicts the existence of one physical scalar,
    neutral Higgs boson.

8
Higgs Boson Mass Constraints
  • Higgs boson mass not predicted by the theory -
    free parameter of the standard Model
  • Must be determined experimentally.
  • Current limits
  • Combined lower limit from direct searches
  • at LEP mH gt 114.4 GeV/c2 (95 CL).
  • Higgs boson contributes to radiative
  • corrections to electroweak observables.
  • Consistency fits to electroweak
  • precision measurements from LEP, SLC,
  • Tevatron yield an indirect upper limit
  • mH lt 207 GeV/c2 (95 CL).

9
The Higgs Boson Production at the LHC
  • Dominant production mechanisms
  • Gluon-gluon fusion contributes around 80 of the
    total
  • Decay channels

10
LHC Search Channels for the Higgs Boson
  • Decay channels of SM Higgs boson which yield
    highest sensitivity for discovery at the LHC
  • H ? WW- ? 2l2?
  • H ? ZZ() ? 4l
  • H ? ??

l electron or muon
LEP Limit 114.4 GeV/c2
11
The H?ZZ?4l Channel
  • Most sensitive channel for the discovery of the
    Higgs boson at the LHC for a wide range of
    masses.
  • Exceptionally clean signature of 4 isolated high
    pT leptons, with relatively small backgrounds.
  • For mHgt2mZ Golden channel, with 2 real Z
    bosons
  • Mass of Higgs boson can be directly reconstructed
    from the invariant mass of the 4 leptons
  • Direct measurement of mass
  • Direct measurement of width for large mH (gt200
    GeV)

12
General Strategy
  • Detailed analyses have been developed largely
    independently for each of the three final states
  • 4e LLR (France), Split (Croatia), Rome/INFN
  • 4???Florida, FNAL, Cambridge,
  • 2e2? UC Riverside, Bari/INFN (Italy)
  • Common to all channels (allows coherent
    combination of results)
  • Event generation, detector simulation.
  • Signal and background production and decay
    processes considered and their NLO cross-sections
    and branching ratios.
  • Straight forward counting experiment approach -
    Cut based analyses
  • Look for local event excess over expected
    background.
  • Details of event selections developed differently
    in each of the 3 channels.
  • Analyses are designed as if real data were being
    analyzed
  • Full detailed simulation of CMS detector geometry
    and response.
  • Simulation of LHC conditions in first years of
    running at L 21033cm-2s-1.
  • Full treatment of systematic errors included in
    significance evaluation.
  • Techniques developed to measure the size of the
    residual background from LHC data.

13
Production Cross-Section and Branching Ratio
Sum of gg fusion, WW fusion, ZZ fusion
BR(H?ZZ()?4l), including BR(t ?e,m)
  • BR(H?ZZ()?4l) is the branching ratio to a final
    state containing only e and m, including t decay
    products.

14
Enhancement for 4e and 4? Final States
  • For 4e and 4? final states, enhancement of signal
    cross-section due to constructive final state
    interference between like-sign electrons or muons
    originating from different Z() bosons

Calculated using CompHEP
15
Signal Monte Carlo Event Generation
  • Signal samples generated with PYTHIA for 18 mass
    points between 115 and 600 GeV.
  • Higgs production mechanisms simulated
  • gg fusion, WW fusion, ZZ fusion.
  • Z bosons forced to decay to e,m,t, with t forced
    to decay to e,??
  • 10000 events generated per mass point, for each
    final state (4e, 4?, 2e2?)
  • Events re-weighted to correspond to

where
16
Background Processes
  • Reducible backgrounds
  • qq/gg ??tt ??WW-bb ??4l X (PYTHIA)
  • qq/gg ??(Z()/g) bb ? 4l X (CompHEP interfaced
    with PYTHIA)
  • Irreducible non-resonant continuum background
  • qq ???Z()/?)(Z()/g) ? 4l (PYTHIA)

Process ?LO(pb) NLO K-factor ?NLO(pb)
tt?WW-bb - - 840
ee-bb 115 2.4?0.3 276
????bb 116 2.4?0.3 279
?Z()/?)(Z()/g) 18.7 KNLO(m4l) 0.2 28.9

(Z()/g) bb
17
?Z()/?)(Z()/g) Background
  • LO cross-section 18.07pb (from MCFM generator)

l
q
Z()/?
l-
q u,d,s,c or b
l
Z()/?
q
l-
  • t-channel dominates
  • 90 m4llt2mZ, 100 m4lgt2mZ
  • s-channel simulated for 4? final state only
  • MCFM generator used to calculate an K-factor to
    account for all NLO processes
  • Function of 4 lepton invariant mass

18
?Z()/?)(Z()/g) Background
  • Significant NNLO box diagram process
  • not included in the simulation
  • TOPREX generator used to obtain ratio
    ?(gg?ZZ?4l)/?(qq?ZZ?4l) 20
  • Total NLO cross-section sLO (K(m4l) 0.2)
    29pb (for average K(m4l)1.35)
  • All events re-weighted at analysis level using
    this m4l dependent K-factor.

19
Other Potential Backgrounds
  • Zcc can also give 4 leptons in the final state
  • Investigated with full detector simulation -
    found to be negligible
  • Other potential sources of background
    investigated at generator level
  • Wbb
  • Wcc
  • Single top
  • bbbb
  • bbcc
  • cccc
  • All found to be negligible


One or more fake leptons

All leptons non-isolated
20
Detector Simulation
  • Generated Monte Carlo events for all generated
    samples are passed through a highly detailed
    simulation of the CMS detector, including
  • Precise simulation of the complete detector
    geometry all material in the detector including
    cables, services etc.
  • Detailed simulation of the 4T magnetic field.
  • Full simulation of detector response for all
    detector components information used as input
    to the analysis fully simulates real LHC data.
  • Generated events are mixed with pile-up events to
    simulate the LHC conditions at low luminosity
    (21033cm-2s-1)
  • Several inelastic pp collisions per bunch
    crossing
  • Corresponds to conditions during the initial
    phase of data taking.

21
Cross-Section Times Branching Ratio
  • Generator level kinematic preselection includes
    the final state lepton flavor requirement (4e, 2?
    or 2e2?), plus generator level cuts
  • Electrons pTgt5GeV, hlt2.5
  • Muons pTgt3GeV, hlt2.4
  • For 2e2? case

tt Zbb ZZ
s (fb) 840x103 555x103 28.9x103
s.BR.e (fb) 744 390 37.0
22
4-lepton Invariant Mass After Generator
Pre-selection
s-channel ZZ production
Same on linear scale
mH140 GeV signal
23
Online Selection
  • LHC bunch crossing rate is 40MHz. Multiple
    events per bunch crossing
  • CMS Trigger consists of a Level-1 trigger
    followed by a High Level Trigger. HLT is a
    software trigger involving full reconstruction of
    physics objects.
  • Triggers chosen for H?ZZ?4l channels
  • Single triggers were also considered for the 2e2?
    channel but were found not to benefit the final
    significance.

Channel Trigger
?? single electron double electron
?? Single muon double muon
???? double electron double muon
24
HLT Selection Efficiencies
2e2?
4e
tt 0.399 0.001 Zbb 0.661 0.001 ZZ 0.896
0.004
  • For 4? channel, HLT efficiency is close to 100
    for all samples

25
Muon Reconstruction and Selection
  • Muons are reconstructed with high efficiency with
    CMS
  • Require ? and ?- reconstructed with pTgt7 in the
    barrel and pTgt13 in the endcaps.
  • Require M(µµ-)gt12GeV for all permutations
    (excludes low mass resonances).
  • These cuts have little effect on signal
    efficiency.

26
Electron Reconstruction
  • Lowest pT electron in H?ZZ?4e events around
    10GeV
  • Electrons radiate on average half their energy
    before reaching the ECAL due to
  • Strong magnetic field (4 Tesla)
  • 1 X0 of material in the inner tracker
  • Energy is radiated as photons which may in turn
    convert to ee- before reaching the ECAL -
    significant spread of energy in ?.

27
Electron Reconstruction
  • Sophisticated algorithms developed, motivated by
    the H?ZZ?4e analysis, in order to achieve good
    reconstruction efficiency for low pT electrons
  • Use of Gaussian Sum Filter tracking - electron
    track is reconstructed right out to ECAL surface.
    Measure bremsstrahlung energy loss
  • Categorization of electrons according to amount
    of radiated energy, ECAL cluster shape,
    cluster-track matching.
  • Combine ECAL energy and tracker
  • momentum measurements based on
  • measurement uncertainties

28
Electron Selection
  • Electron reconstruction has a significant
    background from fakes (e.g. p/p0 overlap from
    underlying event).
  • Selection important to exclude potential
    backgrounds which can fake one or more electrons.
  • 4e analysis Cut based selection
  • Ecalo/pTrack lt 3.
  • Track cluster matching ?? lt0.02 and ??lt0.1
  • EHCAL/EECAL lt0.2
  • pTgt 5 GeV
  • Loose isolation ?pT/pT lt 0.5 (cone R0.2)
  • 2e2? analysis
  • Likelihood developed based on
  • similar variables.
  • Require likelihoodgt0.2.
  • Select electron and positron with
  • highest likelihoods.

29
Electron Reconstruction Efficiency (4e channel)
30
Offline Event Selection
  • For the signal, and for the irreducible ZZ
    background, all 4 leptons are isolated and
    originate from the primary vertex.
  • For the reducible tt and Zbb backgrounds, 2 of
    the leptons are associated with b-jets ?
    non-isolated and with displaced vertices.
  • For all three channels, offline selection
    consists of two set do cuts
  • Vertex/Impact parameter and Isolation cuts -
    reduce Zbb and tt only.
  • Kinematic cuts lepton pT and lepton invariant
    mass cuts - reduce all backgrounds.
  • The offline selection for the 2e2? channel is
    described on the following slides.

31
Vertex and Impact Parameter Cuts (2e2?)
  • 3 variables chosen High background rejection
    for 95 signal efficiency. Largely uncorrelated
  • (1) Transverse distance from mm- vertex to beam
    line lt 0.011 cm
  • (2) 3D Distance between mm- and ee- vertices lt
    0.06 cm
  • (3) Transverse impact parameter significance of
    lepton with highest IP significance lt 7

Combined Efficiency ()
Signal 89-91
tt 14.5 0.2
Zbb 13.0 0.1
32
Tracker Isolation (2e2?)
  • Cut on SpT of all reconstructed tracks in the
    event which satisfy
  • pTgt0.9 GeV
  • At least 5 hits
  • Within region defined as the sum of cones of size
    DRlt0.25 around each lepton, excluding veto cones
    of size DRgt0.015 around each lepton.
  • Consistent with originating from the
    reconstructed primary vertex to within
    Dzlt0.2cm

33
Kinematic Distributions for Reconstructed Leptons
  • Shown for events passing HLT and with ee-mm-
    reconstructed

34
Kinematic Cuts (2e2?)
  • Lepton pT cuts
  • pT1 gt thr1
  • pT2 gt thr2
  • pT3 gt thr3
  • pT4 gt thr4
  • mm- and ee- invariant mass cuts
  • mZ1 lt thr5
  • mZ2 gt thr6
  • Four lepton invariant mass cuts
  • thr7 lt mH lt thr8

leptons sorted in decreasing order of pT
mZ1 max(mmm-,mee- ), mZ2 min(mmm-,mee- )
35
Optimization of Selection Cuts (2e2?)
  • Kinematic cuts are optimized simultaneously
    together with the isolation SpT threshold.
  • Cut optimization performed using MINUIT by
    maximizing significance, defined by the
    Log-Likelihood ratio
  • Cuts optimized independently for each Higgs mass.
  • To exclude effects of limited MC statistics For
    each cut obtained from the automatic
    optimization
  • Plot ScL vs cut value with all other cuts fixed.
  • Assign final cut value by inspection, such that
    ScL is as close as possible to the maximum whilst
    retaining smooth variation of cut value as a
    function of mH.

where

36
Optimised Kinematic Cuts (2e2?)
37
?.BR.? After Each Cut
2e2?
x-axis categories Preselection, L1, HLT, 4
leptons, Vertex, Isolation, Lepton pT, Z
mass, Higgs mass
38
4 Lepton Invariant Mass Before/After Offline
Selection
mH130 GeV
mH200 GeV
Before offline selection
2e2?
After offline selection
39
Final Selected Events per fb-1 and NS/NB
2e2?
mH (GeV) 120 140 160 180 200 250 300 400 500
N signal for 10fb-1 1.9 11.7 7.8 8.7 36.4 29.1 19.4 18.0 9.6
N background for 10fb-1 1.5 2.0 2.0 4.0 16.2 13.6 4.1 3.7 2.6
40
Summary of Offline Selection for 4e Channel
  • Longitudinal impact parameter significance for
    all electrons lt 13
  • Transverse impact parameter significance of
    reconstructed Z() bosons
  • lt 30 for highest mee-
  • lt 15 for lowest mee-
  • Isolation, required separately for each electron,
    cone size ?Rlt0.2
  • Tracker isolation (?pTtracks)/pTe lt 0.1
  • Hadronic isolation (?ETHCAL)/pTe lt 0.2
  • Electron quality requirements
  • Further cuts on track-cluster matching, cluster
    shape, HCAL/ECAL
  • Kinematic cuts on lepton pT, mZ1, mZ2, m4e

41
Summary of Offline Selection for 4? Channel
  • Find that only the following cuts are critical
  • Isolation Tracker and calorimeter threshold
    applied to the least isolated muon
  • Single pT threshold for each mass applied to all
    but the lowest pT muon
  • Lowest pT muon already required to have pTgt7(13)
    in the barrel (endcaps)
  • Four lepton invariant mass cuts
  • Additional cuts (impact parameter, mm- inv.
    mass) do not significantly improve results.
  • Cut optimization procedure similar to 2e2?
    analysis, but uses a minimization program named
    GARCON recently developed by the H?ZZ?4? group.

Calorimeter Isolation for least isolated muon
42
Evaluation of the ?Z()/?)(Z()/g) Background
  • Systematic error on the no. on background events
    in the signal region enters into the significance
    calculation.
  • Direct simulation of ?Z()/?)(Z()/g)?4l
    subject to the following uncertainties
  • Theoretical uncertainties
  • PDFs and QCD scale variations
  • NLO and NNLO production cross-section
    uncertainties
  • Relies entirely on existing SM constraints and
    theoretical knowledge
  • Experimental uncertainties
  • LHC luminosity
  • MC modeling of detector response, material budget
    etc
  • Energy scales (ECAL calibration) and resolution
  • electron and muon reconstruction and kinematic
    selection efficiencies
  • Electron and muon islolation efficiencies
  • Such uncertainties are difficult to evaluate from
    first principles.
  • More robust approach is to evaluate the size of
    the background directly using the LHC data.

43
Evaluation of the ?Z()/?)(Z()/g) Background
from Data
  • 2 Approaches
  • 1) Use single Z boson production
  • Single Z bosons will be produced with a high rate
    at the LHC.
  • Production cross-section will rapidly be measured
    directly to a high precision
  • Can use ratio of production cross-sections for
    ?Z()/?)(Z()/g) and single Z production to
    evaluate the ?Z()/?)(Z()/g) background.
  • Cancellation of luminosity uncertainties.
  • Reduction of PDF and QCD scale uncertainties for
    low mH.
  • Partial cancellation of experimental
    uncertainties.
  • 2) Direct measurement through counting the number
    of events in the sidebands (i.e. excluding the
    signal peak) of the 4-lepton invariant mass
    distribution
  • Full cancellation of all uncertainties except PDF
    and QCD scale uncertainties (not fully cancelled
    because may affect the shape of the m(4l)
    distribution).
  • Disadvantage Limited by statistics of the
    background rate in the sidebands.
  • Approach 2 is used here as the most robust
    solution.

44
Evaluation of ?Z()/?)(Z()/g) Background from
Sidebands
?L 9.2 fb-1
?L 5.8 fb-1
2e2?
2e2?
  • Points represent a simulation of LHC data for the
    relevant integrated luminosities
  • Total no. of events generated randomly from a
    Poisson distribution with mean total expected
    events from all processes (signal and
    background).
  • For each event, 4 lepton invariant mass generated
    randomly according to the histogram formed from
    the sum of the MC distributions for signal and
    background.

45
Background Systematic Errors
Statistical error on background measurement from
data
Theoretical uncertainty on the ratio a
High statistical error at high mH due to low
statistics in sidebands due to hard lepton pT
cuts and large signal width.
2e2?
46
Background Systematic Errors Theory
  • Systematic uncertainty from PDFs and QCD scale
    estimated using the MCFM event generator.
  • 20 eigenvectors of the CTEQ6M PDFs varied by ?1?.
  • QCD normalization and factorization scales varied
    independently up and down by factor 2 from
    nominal values ?R ?F 2mZ.

47
Significance Calculation
  • Counting experiment significance, ScP
  • Defined as no. of sigmas of a Gaussian
    distribution equivalent to Poisson probability of
    observing equal to or greater than NObs events,
    given ?B expected events
  • An extended form of the ScP estimator is used
    which takes into account the systematic
    uncertainty on ?B.

48
Significance for 2e2? Channel
mH (GeV) 120 140 160 180 200 250 300 400 500
N signal at ?L for 5s 28.0 10.7 13.4 19.6 21.2 21.7 13.1 14.6 17.8
N back at ?L for 5s 21.4 1.8 3.5 9.1 9.4 10.1 2.8 3.0 5.3
49
Combined Significance for 30 fb-1
where
Without systematic Uncertainties
50
Combined Significance for 30 fb-1
Systematic uncertainties included
51
Higgs Mass Measurement from Gaussian Fit
mH140 GeV
mH200 GeV
mH500 GeV
Shown as fraction of true mass
  • Statistical error on measurement of mH
  • Measured Higgs mass from Gaussian fit for high
    statistics

2e2?
2e2?
52
Higgs Width Measurement from Gaussian Fit
2e2?
Shown as fraction of true width
  • Direct measurement of width possible with
    ?statlt30 for mH?200 GeV

53
Higgs Cross Section Measurement Uncertainty
2e2?
Shown as fraction of expected no. of signal
events
54
Summary
  • Standard Model Higgs boson with mass in range
    130mH500 GeV observable in the channel
    H?ZZ()?4l with gt 5s significance with 10fb-1 of
    integrated luminosity, excluding a 15 GeV gap
    close to mH170 GeV (40fb-1).
  • If mass lies in the range 190mH400 GeV, 5s
    significance can be attained with 4fb-1.
  • Size of ZZ/g background determined from data in
    sidebands with systematic uncertainty included in
    ScP significance calculation.

55
Aknowledgements
  • H?ZZ?4e
  • S. Baffioni, C. Charlot, F. Ferri, R. Salerno, Y.
    Sirois (LLR, France)
  • N. Godinovic, I. Puljak (Split, Croatia)
  • P. Meridiani (Rome and INFN, Italy)
  • H?ZZ?4?
  • S. Abdullin (FNAL)
  • D. Acosta, P. Bartalini, R. Cavanaugh, A.
    Drozdetskiy, A. Korytov,
    G. Mitselmakher, Y. Pakhotin, B. Scurlock
    (Florida)
  • A. Sherstnev (Cambridge)
  • H?ZZ?2e2?
  • D. Futyan, D.Fortin (UC Riverside)
  • D. Giordano (Bari and INFN, Italy)

56
Backup Slides
57
Electron Experimental Systematic Uncertainties
  • Material budget Change in amount of material
    traversed by electron before reaching the ECAL
    affects
  • electron identification and selection
    efficiencies
  • energy scale and resolution
  • Material budget can be measured using single
    electron events, using the observed fraction of
    energy lost through bremsstrahlung, since energy
    radiated is proportional to material thickness
    traversed
  • where pin and pout are the measured momenta at
    the innermost and outermost point on the GSF
    electron track.

where
58
Electron Experimental Systematic Uncertainties
  • With electron statistics from single Z production
    corresponding to 10fb-1, can measure tracker
    material thickness to a precision better than 2
  • 2 uncertainty shown to have almost no effect on
    electron reconstruction efficiency

59
Electron Experimental Systematic Uncertainties
  • Electron reconstruction efficiency and energy
    scale can be controlled using tagged electrons
    from Z?ee events
  • Select Z?ee events for which at least one leg is
    a golden electron (no bremsstrahlung), plus
    kinematic constraint on Z boson mass for second
    leg.
  • Use second leg to estimate uncertainties on
    reconstruction efficiencies and on the energy
    scale.
  • Systematic uncertainty on electron reconstruction
    efficiency and energy scale taken to be lt1

60
Muon Experimental Systematic Uncertainties
  • Measure muon reconstruction efficiency from data
    to better than 1 precision
  • Use sample of muon HLT triggers with pTgt19 GeV.
  • Count no. of Z?2? events in the resonance of the
    inv. mass distributions built from
  • HLT muon reconstructed muons
  • HLT muon all tracks
  • Ratio gives the efficiency.
  • Can measure to better than 1.
  • Efficiency of isolation cut measured by
    evaluating energy flow in isolation cones around
    random directions in Z?2? events.
  • Can measure to better than 2.
  • Uncertainty on pT resolution and pT scale
    evaluated using resonance peaks from Z?2? and
    J/??2? events to high precision.

61
Monte Carlo Event Generation Details
  • In all samples, Z and W bosons forced to decay to
    e,m,t, with t forced to decay to e,??
  • No forcing of b decays in Zbb and tt background
    events.
  • In ?Z()/?)(Z()/g) and ?Z()/?)bb
    backgrounds, require m?Z()/?) gt 5 GeV
  • Non-perturbative PDFs in the proton taken from
    CTEQ6 distributions
  • Global QCD analysis combining all existing
    relevant deep inelastic and jet cross-section
    measurement results.
  • QED final state radiation (internal
    bremsstrahlung) simulated by interfacing the
    event generators with dedicated software package
    PHOTOS.

62
True Significance of Local Event Excess
  • Search for new phenomena in a wide range of
    parameter space - in this case narrow resonance
    in very broad range of invariant masses
  • Problem of overestimating significance of a
    local discovery
  • Need to reduce the significance according to the
    number of chances of getting it

63
Reconstructed Invariant Masses of ee- and mm-
mH 130 GeV
Electron pair
Muon pair
64
CP Nature of Higgs Shape of MZ Distribution
  • Shape of MZ distribution depends on CP nature of
    Higgs
  • Compare theoretical MZ distributions with result
    of convolution of reconstructed MZ distribution
    with efficiency of selection for MZ.
  • Similar approach possible using cosq distribution
    of the angle between the planes containing the
    lepton pairs - important for MHgt2MZ

65
Choice of Trigger
  • Natural choice from physics viewpoint is to
    trigger on Z
  • (i) Take OR of 2e and 2m triggers
  • Another possible choice is
  • (ii) Take OR of 1e, 2e, 1m and 2m
  • Consider fraction of events passing (ii) which
    fail (i). i.e. pass single triggers only
  • For background, corresponds to close to half of
    events ? using 1e2e1m2m trigger results in
    almost twice as much background as 2e2m trigger
  • For signal, using 1e2e1m2m rather than
    2e2m increases final no. of events after all
    offline cuts by lt1 for mHgt160 and lt5 for
    mHlt160.
  • But this gain is offset by the fact that the no.
    of ZZ background events after offline cuts
    increases by a similar fraction.

Before offline cuts
After offline cuts
Conclusion use OR of double electron and double
muon triggers
66
Recovery of QCD Internal Bremsstrahlung
  • At least one IB photon present in 40-45 of
    H?ZZ()?2e2? events
  • At least one IB photon with pTgt5 GeV present for
    10-30 of events (increasing with mH)
  • 2/3 emitted by electrons, 1/3 by muons
  • Distinguish from other photons from the
    underlying
  • event using tendency to be collinear with parent
    lepton.
  • If gt1 reconstructed photons found within cone of
    size ?Rlt0.3 around any of the 4 reconstructed
    leptons, photon with smallest ?R is considered as
    an IB photon
  • 4-momentum added to Z boson invariant mass prior
    to Z mass window cuts.
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