New result from the ATLAS experiment at CERN reaches the unprecedented precision of 0.09%

In the 11 years since its discovery at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the Higgs boson has become a central avenue for shedding light on the fundamental structure of the universe. Precise measurements of the properties of this special particle are among the most powerful tools physicists have to test the Standard Model, currently the theory that best describes the world of particles and their interactions. At the Lepton PH๏τon Conference this week, the ATLAS collaboration reported how it has measured the mᴀss of the Higgs boson more precisely than ever before.

The mᴀss of the Higgs boson is not predicted by the Standard Model and must therefore be determined by experimental measurement. Its value governs the strengths of the interactions of the Higgs boson with the other elementary particles as well as with itself. A precise knowledge of this fundamental parameter is key to accurate theoretical calculations which, in turn, allow physicists to confront their measurements of the Higgs boson’s properties with predictions from the Standard Model. Deviations from these predictions would signal the presence of new or unaccounted-for phenomena. The Higgs boson’s mᴀss is also a crucial parameter driving the evolution and the stability of the universe’s vacuum.

The ATLAS and CMS collaborations have been making ever more precise measurements of the Higgs boson’s mᴀss since the particle’s discovery. The new ATLAS measurement combines two results: a new Higgs boson mᴀss measurement based on an analysis of the particle’s decay into two high-energy pH๏τons (the “dipH๏τon channel”) and an earlier mᴀss measurement based on a study of its decay into four leptons (the “four-lepton channel”).

The new measurement in the dipH๏τon channel, which combines analyses of the full ATLAS data sets from Runs 1 and 2 of the LHC, resulted in a mᴀss of 125.22 billion electronvolts (GeV) with an uncertainty of only 0.14 GeV. With a precision of 0.11%, this dipH๏τon-channel result is the most precise measurement to date of the Higgs boson’s mᴀss from a single decay channel.

Compared to the previous ATLAS measurement in this channel, the new result benefits both from the full ATLAS Run 2 data set, which reduced the statistical uncertainty by a factor of two, and from dramatic improvements to the calibration of pH๏τon energy measurements, which decreased the systematic uncertainty by almost a factor of four to 0.09 GeV.

“The advanced and rigorous calibration techniques used in this analysis were critical for pushing the precision to such an unprecedented level,” says Stefano Manzoni, convener of the ATLAS electron-pH๏τon calibration subgroup. “Their development took several years and required a deep understanding of the ATLAS detector. They will also greatly benefit future analyses.”

When the ATLAS researchers combined this new mᴀss measurement in the dipH๏τon channel with the earlier mᴀss measurement in the four-lepton channel, they obtained a Higgs boson mᴀss of 125.11 GeV with an uncertainty of 0.11 GeV. With a precision of 0.09%, this is the most precise measurement yet of this fundamental parameter.

“This very precise measurement is the result of the relentless investment of the ATLAS collaboration in improving the understanding of our data,” says ATLAS spokesperson Andreas Hoecker. “Powerful reconstruction algorithms paired with precise calibrations are the determining ingredients of precision measurements. The new measurement of the Higgs boson’s mᴀss adds to the increasingly detailed mapping of this critical new sector of particle physics.”

Source: CERN

Related Posts

Astronomers discover a highly habitable alien planet with a probability of 84% – Highest EVER

The Kepler mission discovered a planet orbiting the star KOI-3010 using the transit method. Researchers are drawn to this world because it has traits that are similar…

Quantum Experiment Breaks Reality By Seeing Two Versions Of Reality Existing At The Same Time

We are aware of how skewed our perception of reality is. How we see the world is shaped by our senses, our societies, and our knowledge. And…

Astronomers just discovered first direct evidence of black hole spinning

In a groundbreaking discovery, astronomers have obtained the first direct evidence confirming that black holes do indeed spin. This monumental finding focuses on the supermᴀssive black hole…

BREAKING🚨: AI Built To Find Aliens Just Picked Up EIGHT Aliens Radio Signals From Outer Space

Up until recently, astronomers have had difficulty separating probable alien signals from those created by humans. Thanks to a new artificial intelligence-trained system, eight unexplained radio signals…

Scientists Watched a Star Explode in Real Time for The First Time Ever

Astronomers have watched a giant star blow up in a fiery supernova for the first time ever — and the spectacle was even more explosive than the…

NASA’s $10 billion Telescope has just captured its first direct unbelievable image of a Planet outside our Solar system

The James Webb Space Telescope has captured the first direct image of a distant exoplanet, a world beyond our Solar System. Webb has returned several pictures of…