Abstract

New massive spin-2 particles are predicted in theoretical extensions to the Standard Model (SM) attempting to solve the hierarchy problem. Such theories postulate that gravity is diluted compared to the other fundamental forces because it can propagate in extra spatial dimensions. While such theoretical models are of high experimental interest because they predict massive spin-2 particles ($Y_{2}$) potentially detectable by collider experiments, searches at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) have thus far produced no significant evidence for their existence. This work considers a hypothetical physics scenario where low coupling strengths between the $Y_{2}$ and quarks/gluons is the underlying reason behind the null $Y_{2}$ search results at the LHC, which have mainly relied on Drell-Yan and gluon-gluon fusion production mechanisms. The focus of this paper is a feasibility study to search for $Y_{2}$ particles using vector boson fusion (VBF) processes at the LHC. In the context of an effective field theory approach with varying couplings $\kappa_{V}$ between $Y_{2}$ and the weak bosons of the SM, we consider the $Y_{2}\to\gamma\gamma$ decay mode to show that the requirement of a diphoton pair combined with two high $p_{T}$ forward jets with large dijet mass and with large separation in pseudorapidity can significantly reduce the SM backgrounds. Assuming proton-proton collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV, we present the total VBF production cross sections, $Y_{2}$ decay widths, and $Y_{2}\to\gamma\gamma$ branching ratios as a function of $m(Y_{2})$, considering universal and non-universal couplings to the SM particles. The unitarity-violating phase space is described. The proposed VBF $Y_{2}\to\gamma\gamma$ search is expected to achieve a discovery reach with signal significance greater than 5$\sigma$ for $Y_{2}$ masses up to 4.4 TeV and $\kappa_{V}$ couplings down to 0.5.

Highlights

  • The most important physics result at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) to date is undoubtedly the observation of a Higgs boson at mass around 125 GeV as reported by the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations [1,2]

  • While the discovery of new physics can be gleaned from precise measurements of interactions between standard model (SM) particles, the issues of the SM motivate searching for new heavy particles predicted by theoretical extensions addressing its incompleteness

  • We propose a search for a heavy spin-2 resonance produced through vector boson fusion (VBF)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The most important physics result at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) to date is undoubtedly the observation of a Higgs boson at mass around 125 GeV as reported by the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations [1,2]. Those results focused on Y2 production via gluongluon (gg) fusion or quark-antiquark (qq ) annihilation (Fig. 1), followed by the Y2 decay to a pair of photons (γγ), leptons (ll), jets (jj), or heavy vector bosons (WW, ZZ) Both collaborations reported the observation of a moderate excess of events compared to SM expectations near diphoton mass mγγ 1⁄4 750 GeV with the 8 TeV pp data [6,7], the 13 TeV results have shown no significant sign of new physics, resulting in exclusion bounds up to mðY2Þ < 4 TeV depending on the model [8,9,10]. This particular implementation allows for scenarios with nonuniversal couplings to be studied at NLO accuracy [22]

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