CMS logoCMS event Hgg
Compact Muon Solenoid
LHC, CERN

CMS-PAS-HIG-16-034
Search for new diboson resonances in the dilepton+jets final state at $\sqrt{s} = $ 13 TeV with 2016 data
Abstract: We present a search for new resonances decaying to a pair of Z bosons where one boson decays hadronically and the other decays into two charged leptons. Results are based on proton-proton collision data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 12.9 fb$^{-1}$, collected by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. We use substructure techniques to identify hadronic jets that come from a single $\mathrm{Z\rightarrow q\bar{q}}$, and use kinematic and flavour information of reconstructed particles to achieve maximum separation between signal and background. Upper limits on resonance production cross-sections at 95% confidence level are set separately for spin-0 and spin-2 resonance hypotheses. The range of excluded cross-sections is 5.0 to 130 fb in the former hypothesis and 3.3 to 110 fb in the latter.
Figures & Tables Summary References CMS Publications
Figures

png pdf
Figure 1:
Simulated efficiency for the full set of selection requirements, as function of the generated resonance mass ${m_\mathrm {X}}$, summing over all three categories. Efficiencies are shown for the Higgs boson-like benchmark (left) and the bulk graviton benchmark (right). For the former we distinguish between vector boson fusion production (dotted line) and gluon fusion production (dashed line); for the latter only gluon fusion production is considered. Efficiencies are defined with respect to a $\mathrm{ Z } \mathrm{ Z } \rightarrow \ell \ell \mathrm{ q \bar{q} }$ decay mode, with $\ell = \mathrm{ e },\, \mu $.

png pdf
Figure 1-a:
Simulated efficiency for the full set of selection requirements, as function of the generated resonance mass ${m_\mathrm {X}}$, summing over all three categories. Efficiencies are shown for the Higgs boson-like benchmark. We distinguish between vector boson fusion production (dotted line) and gluon fusion production (dashed line). Efficiencies are defined with respect to a $\mathrm{ Z } \mathrm{ Z } \rightarrow \ell \ell \mathrm{ q \bar{q} }$ decay mode, with $\ell = \mathrm{ e },\, \mu $.

png pdf
Figure 1-b:
Simulated efficiency for the full set of selection requirements, as function of the generated resonance mass ${m_\mathrm {X}}$, summing over all three categories. Efficiencies are shown for the bulk graviton benchmark. Only gluon fusion production is considered. Efficiencies are defined with respect to a $\mathrm{ Z } \mathrm{ Z } \rightarrow \ell \ell \mathrm{ q \bar{q} }$ decay mode, with $\ell = \mathrm{ e },\, \mu $.

png pdf
Figure 2:
Resonance candidate mass ${M_\mathrm {ZZ}}$ in the signal region for the merged (left) and resolved (right) selections, for the untagged (top), b-tagged (middle) and VBF-tagged (bottom) categories. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 900 GeV). Events with $ {M_\mathrm {ZZ}}>$ 2.4 TeV are included in the last bin. The dotted lines are the standard model data-driven background estimation, discussed in Sec. 5. Bottom panels show the pulls, defined as the difference of the data and the background estimation in each bin, divided by the standard deviation of the data.

png pdf
Figure 2-a:
Resonance candidate mass ${M_\mathrm {ZZ}}$ in the signal region for the merged selections, for the untagged category. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 900 GeV). Events with $ {M_\mathrm {ZZ}}>$ 2.4 TeV are included in the last bin. The dotted lines are the standard model data-driven background estimation, discussed in Sec. 5. The bottom panel shows the pulls, defined as the difference of the data and the background estimation in each bin, divided by the standard deviation of the data.

png pdf
Figure 2-b:
Resonance candidate mass ${M_\mathrm {ZZ}}$ in the signal region for the resolved selections, for the untagged category. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 900 GeV). Events with $ {M_\mathrm {ZZ}}>$ 2.4 TeV are included in the last bin. The dotted lines are the standard model data-driven background estimation, discussed in Sec. 5. The bottom panel shows the pulls, defined as the difference of the data and the background estimation in each bin, divided by the standard deviation of the data.

png pdf
Figure 2-c:
Resonance candidate mass ${M_\mathrm {ZZ}}$ in the signal region for the merged selections, for the b-tagged category. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 900 GeV). Events with $ {M_\mathrm {ZZ}}>$ 2.4 TeV are included in the last bin. The dotted lines are the standard model data-driven background estimation, discussed in Sec. 5. The bottom panel shows the pulls, defined as the difference of the data and the background estimation in each bin, divided by the standard deviation of the data.

png pdf
Figure 2-d:
Resonance candidate mass ${M_\mathrm {ZZ}}$ in the signal region for the resolved selections, for the b-tagged category. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 900 GeV). Events with $ {M_\mathrm {ZZ}}>$ 2.4 TeV are included in the last bin. The dotted lines are the standard model data-driven background estimation, discussed in Sec. 5. The bottom panel shows the pulls, defined as the difference of the data and the background estimation in each bin, divided by the standard deviation of the data.

png pdf
Figure 2-e:
Resonance candidate mass ${M_\mathrm {ZZ}}$ in the signal region for the merged selections, for the VBF-tagged category. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 900 GeV). Events with $ {M_\mathrm {ZZ}}>$ 2.4 TeV are included in the last bin. The dotted lines are the standard model data-driven background estimation, discussed in Sec. 5. The bottom panel shows the pulls, defined as the difference of the data and the background estimation in each bin, divided by the standard deviation of the data.

png pdf
Figure 2-f:
Resonance candidate mass ${M_\mathrm {ZZ}}$ in the signal region for the resolved selections, for the VBF-tagged category. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}} = $ 900 GeV). Events with $ {M_\mathrm {ZZ}}>$ 2.4 TeV are included in the last bin. The dotted lines are the standard model data-driven background estimation, discussed in Sec. 5. The bottom panel shows the pulls, defined as the difference of the data and the background estimation in each bin, divided by the standard deviation of the data.

png pdf
Figure 3:
Top: the discriminant ${\mathcal {D}_\textrm {Zjj}}$ in the signal region for the spin-0 (left) and spin-2 (right) cases, all categories summed. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}}{} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}}{} = $ 900 GeV) in the left plot and a narrow bulk graviton ($ {m_\mathrm {X}}{} = $ 800 GeV) in the right plot. Bottom: the discriminant ${\mathcal {D}_\textrm {2jet}}$ in the signal region for the spin-0 case, all categories summed, using the same notations. The bin at $-1$ corresponds to events with less than 2 extra reconstructed jets, where ${\mathcal {D}_\textrm {2jet}}$ cannot be computed.

png pdf
Figure 3-a:
The discriminant ${\mathcal {D}_\textrm {Zjj}}$ in the signal region for the spin-0 spin-2 case, all categories summed. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to narrow spin-0 resonances produced in gluon fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}}{} = $ 750 GeV) or vector-boson fusion ($ {m_\mathrm {X}}{} = $ 900 GeV).

png pdf
Figure 3-b:
The discriminant ${\mathcal {D}_\textrm {Zjj}}$ in the signal region for the spin-0 spin-2 case, all categories summed. The points are the observed data, the stacked histograms are the standard model simulated background, and the open histograms are simulated signal samples, corresponding to a narrow bulk graviton ($ {m_\mathrm {X}}{} = $ 800 GeV) in the right plot.

png pdf
Figure 3-c:
The discriminant ${\mathcal {D}_\textrm {2jet}}$ in the signal region for the spin-0 case, all categories summed, using the same notations. The bin at $-1$ corresponds to events with less than 2 extra reconstructed jets, where ${\mathcal {D}_\textrm {2jet}}$ cannot be computed.

png pdf
Figure 4:
Expected limits (dashed black line) and observed limits (continuous black line) for the cross-section of the process ${\mathrm {X {\rightarrow } {\mathrm {Z}} {\mathrm {Z}}}}$, for a spin-0 resonance (left plot) and spin-2 resonance (right plot) with 550 $ < {m_\mathrm {X}}< $ 2000 GeV. For the spin-0 resonance, the ratio between production by gluon fusion and by vector boson fusion is treated as a nuisance parameter and profiled.

png pdf
Figure 4-a:
Expected limit (dashed black line) and observed limit (continuous black line) for the cross-section of the process ${\mathrm {X {\rightarrow } {\mathrm {Z}} {\mathrm {Z}}}}$, for a spin-0 resonance with 550 $ < {m_\mathrm {X}}< $ 2000 GeV. The ratio between production by gluon fusion and by vector boson fusion is treated as a nuisance parameter and profiled.

png pdf
Figure 4-b:
Expected limit (dashed black line) and observed limit (continuous black line) for the cross-section of the process ${\mathrm {X {\rightarrow } {\mathrm {Z}} {\mathrm {Z}}}}$, for a spin-2 resonance with 550 $ < {m_\mathrm {X}}< $ 2000 GeV.
Tables

png pdf
Table 1:
Summary of selection requirements and categorisation. Signal and sideband regions are defined by ranges in the hadronic Z boson candidate mass ${M( { {\mathrm {Z}}_\textrm {had}})}$, after all other selection criteria are applied. The three last lines describe the categorisation of all selected events. For the arbitration procedure amongst different hadronic Z boson candidates, see text.

png pdf
Table 2:
Summary of systematic uncertainties on the signal normalisation in the resolved and boosted analyses.

png pdf
Table 3:
Summary of systematic uncertainties on the background for each component.
Summary
A search for diboson resonances in the mass range 550 GeV to 2000 GeV in the semileptonic $ \mathrm{ X } \rightarrow\mathrm{ Z }\mathrm{ Z } \rightarrow \ell^+\ell^- \, \textrm{+ jets} $ final state, where one Z boson decays hadronically, appearing as either one or two jets in the detector, and the other Z decays to two leptons, has been presented. Data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 12.9 fb$^{-1}$ of proton-proton collisions at centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV have been analysed. A set of limits on production cross section times decay branching fraction of a scalar boson or spin-2 boson in the model with gravity propagating in the bulk of extra dimensions is obtained. The range of excluded cross-sections is 5.0 to 130 fb in the former hypothesis and 3.3 to 110 fb in the latter.
References
1 S. L. Glashow Partial Symmetries of Weak Interactions Nucl. Phys. 22 (1961) 579
2 S. Weinberg A Model of Leptons PRL 19 (1967) 1264
3 A. Salam Weak and electromagnetic interactions in Elementary particle physics: relativistic groups and analyticity, N. Svartholm, ed., p. 367 Almquvist \& Wiskell, 1968 Proceedings of the eighth Nobel symposium
4 CMS Collaboration Observation of a new boson at a mass of 125 GeV with the CMS experiment at the LHC PLB 716 (2012) 30--61 CMS-HIG-12-028
1207.7235
5 ATLAS Collaboration Observation of a new particle in the search for the Standard Model Higgs boson with the ATLAS detector at the LHC PLB 716 (2012) 1--29 1207.7214
6 G. C. Branco et al. Theory and phenomenology of two-Higgs-doublet models PR 516 (2012) 1 1106.0034
7 N. Craig and T. Scott Exclusive signals of an extended Higgs sector JHEP 11 (2012) 083 1207.4835
8 H. Haber and O. Stal New LHC benchmarks for the CP-conserving two-Higgs-doublet model EPJC 75 (2015) 491 1507.04281
9 S. Choi, S. Jung, and P. Ko Implications of LHC data on 125 GeV Higgs-like boson for the Standard Model and its various extensions JHEP 1310 (2013) 225 1307.3948
10 T. Robens and T. Stefaniak Status of the Higgs singlet extension of the standard model after LHC run 1 EPJC 75 (2015) 105 1501.02234
11 L. Randall and R. Sundrum Large Mass Hierarchy from a Small Extra Dimension Phys.Rev.Lett. 83 (1999) 3370--3373 hep-ph/9905221
12 L. Randall and R. Sundrum An Alternative to Compactification Phys.Rev.Lett. 83 (1999) 4690--4693 hep-th/9906064
13 K. Agashe, H. Davoudiasl, G. Perez, and A. Soni Warped Gravitons at the LHC and Beyond Phys.Rev. D76 (2007) 036006 hep-ph/0701186
14 A. L. Fitzpatrick, J. Kaplan, L. Randall, and L.-T. Wang Searching for the Kaluza-Klein Graviton in Bulk RS Models JHEP 0709 (2007) 013 hep-ph/0701150
15 O. Antipin, D. Atwood, and A. Soni Search for RS gravitons via W(L)W(L) decays Phys.Lett. B666 (2008) 155--161 0711.3175
16 CMS Collaboration Search for a Higgs boson in the decay channel $ H $ to ZZ(*) to $ q $ qbar $ \ell^- $ l+ in $ pp $ collisions at $ \sqrt{s}=7 $ TeV JHEP 04 (2012) 036 CMS-HIG-11-027
1202.1416
17 CMS Collaboration Search for exotic resonances decaying into $ WZ/ZZ $ in $ pp $ collisions at $ \sqrt{s}=7 $ TeV JHEP 02 (2013) 036 CMS-EXO-12-014
1211.5779
18 CMS Collaboration Search for a narrow spin-2 resonance decaying to a pair of Z vector bosons in the semileptonic final state PLB718 (2013) 1208--1228 CMS-EXO-11-102
1209.3807
19 CMS Collaboration Search for massive resonances decaying into pairs of boosted bosons in semi-leptonic final states at $ \sqrt{s} = $ 8 TeV JHEP 1408 (2014) 174 CMS-EXO-13-009
1405.3447
20 CMS Collaboration Search for a Higgs Boson in the Mass Range from 145 to 1000 GeV Decaying to a Pair of W or Z Bosons JHEP 10 (2015) 144 CMS-HIG-13-031
1504.00936
21 CMS Collaboration Search for diboson resonances in the semileptonic $ \mathrm{X}\rightarrow\mathrm{Z}\mathrm{V}\rightarrow\ell^+\ell^- \mathrm{q\bar{q}} $ final state at $ \sqrt{s} = $ 13 TeV with CMS CMS-PAS-B2G-16-010 CMS-PAS-B2G-16-010
22 J. R. W. Stephen D. Ellis, Christopher K. Vermilion Recombination Algorithms and Jet Substructure: Pruning as a Tool for Heavy Particle Searches Phys.Rev.D81:094023 81 (2010) 23 hep-ph/0912.0033
23 J. M. Butterworth, A. R. Davison, M. Rubin, and G. P. Salam Jet substructure as a new Higgs search channel at the LHC Phys.Rev.Lett. 100 (2008) 242001 hep-ph/0802.2470
24 Y. Gao et al. Spin determination of single-produced resonances at hadron colliders PRD 81 (2010) 075022, , [Erratum: \DOI10.1103/PhysRevD.81.079905] 1001.3396
25 S. Bolognesi et al. On the spin and parity of a single-produced resonance at the LHC PRD 86 (2012) 095031 1208.4018
26 CMS Collaboration Identification of b quark jets at the CMS Experiment in the LHC Run 2 CMS-PAS-BTV-15-001 CMS-PAS-BTV-15-001
27 CMS Collaboration Identification of double-b quark jets in boosted event topologies CMS-PAS-BTV-15-002 CMS-PAS-BTV-15-002
28 CMS Collaboration The CMS experiment at the CERN LHC JINST 3 (2008) S08004 CMS-00-001
29 P. Nason A new method for combining NLO QCD with shower Monte Carlo algorithms JHEP 11 (2004) 040 hep-ph/0409146
30 S. Frixione, P. Nason, and C. Oleari Matching NLO QCD computations with parton shower simulations: the POWHEG method JHEP 11 (2007) 070 0709.2092
31 S. Alioli, P. Nason, C. Oleari, and E. Re NLO vector-boson production matched with shower in POWHEG JHEP 07 (2008) 060 0805.4802
32 J. Alwall et al. The automated computation of tree-level and next-to-leading order differential cross sections, and their matching to parton shower simulations 1405.0301
33 J. M. Campbell and R. K. Ellis MCFM for the Tevatron and the LHC NPPS 205 (2010) 10 1007.3492
34 S. Frixione and B. R. Webber Matching NLO QCD computations and parton shower simulations JHEP 06 (2002) 029 hep-ph/0204244
35 S. Frixione, P. Nason, and B. R. Webber Matching NLO QCD and parton showers in heavy flavor production JHEP 08 (2003) 007 hep-ph/0305252
36 M. Grazzini, S. Kallweit, D. Rathlev, and M. Wiesemann $ W^{\pm}Z $ production at hadron colliders in NNLO QCD PLB761 (2016) 179--183 1604.08576
37 T. Sj\"ostrand, S. Mrenna, and P. Z. Skands A Brief Introduction to PYTHIA 8.1 Comput.Phys.Commun 178 (2008) 852--867 hep-ph/0710.3820
38 CMS Collaboration Event generator tunes obtained from underlying event and multiparton scattering measurements EPJC 76 (2016) 155 hep-ph/1512.00815
39 J. Allison et al. Geant4 developments and applications IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 53 (2006) 270
40 CMS Collaboration Tracking and Primary Vertex Results in First 7 TeV Collisions CDS
41 CMS Collaboration Particle-Flow Event Reconstruction in CMS and Performance for Jets, Taus, and MET CDS
42 CMS Collaboration Commissioning of the Particle--Flow reconstruction in Minimum--Bias and Jet Events from $ pp $ Collisions at $ 7 $~TeV
43 CMS Collaboration Performance of electron reconstruction and selection with the CMS detector in proton-proton collisions at $ \sqrt{s} = 8 $$ TeV $ JINST 10 (2015) P06005 CMS-EGM-13-001
1502.02701
44 S. Baffioni et al. Electron reconstruction in CMS EPJC 49 (2007) 1099
45 CMS Collaboration Electron reconstruction and identification at $ \sqrt{s} = 7 $ TeV CDS
46 CMS Collaboration Performance of CMS muon reconstruction in pp collision events at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV JINST 7 (2012) P10002 CMS-MUO-10-004
1206.4071
47 M. Cacciari, G. P. Salam, and G. Soyez FastJet User Manual EPJC72 (2012) 1896 1111.6097
48 M. Cacciari, G. P. Salam Dispelling the $ N^{3} $ myth for the $ k_t $ jet-finder PLB 641 (2006) 57 hep-ph/0512210
49 M. Cacciari and G. P. Salam and G. Soyez The anti-$ k_t $ jet clustering algorithm JHEP 04 (2008) 063 0802.1189
50 CMS Collaboration Determination of Jet Energy Calibration and Transverse Momentum Resolution in CMS JINST 6 (2011) 11002
51 J. M. Butterworth, A. R. Davison, M. Rubin, and G. P. Salam Maximizing Boosted Top Identification by Minimizing N-subjettiness JHEP 02 (2012) 093 hep-ph/1108.2701
52 CMS Collaboration Observation of a new boson at a mass of 125 GeV with the CMS experiment at the LHC PLB 716 (2012) 30 CMS-HIG-12-028
1207.7235
53 I. Anderson et al. Constraining anomalous $ HVV $ interactions at proton and lepton colliders PRD 89 (2014) 035007 1309.4819
54 CMS Collaboration Limits on the Higgs boson lifetime and width from its decay to four charged leptons PRD92 (2015), no. 7, 072010 CMS-HIG-14-036
1507.06656
55 M. Bahr et al. Herwig++ Physics and Manual EPJC58 (2008) 639--707 0803.0883
56 T. Junk Confidence level computation for combining searches with small statistics NIMA434 (1999) 435--443 hep-ex/9902006
57 A. L. Read Presentation of search results: The CL(s) technique JPG28 (2002) 2693--2704
Compact Muon Solenoid
LHC, CERN