Possible anomalous couplings of the Higgs boson to vector bosons and fermions are studied using Higgs boson candidates decaying to a pair of photons. The study is based on proton-proton collision data at $\sqrt{s}$ = 13 TeV collected by the CMS experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb$^{-1}$. Events with Higgs boson candidates produced via gluon fusion, electroweak vector boson fusion and in association with a vector boson, are categorized using matrix element techniques and multivariate discriminants. The $CP$ properties of the Higgs boson couplings to gluons through loops of heavy particles, as well as the tensor structure of its interactions with two electroweak bosons, are investigated. The results are interpreted in terms of the fractional contributions of anomalous Higgs boson couplings to the total production cross section of each process and are found to be consistent with the standard model expectations.
Dark matter experiments are rare event search experiments that require zero background environment over very long exposures. To achieve this condition, a detailed simulation of detector geometry and experimental setup is required before the experiment is executed. Simulation plays a significant role in detector design and also provides a cost-effective and risk-free approach for predicting outcomes before real world experimentation. The present simulation work is focused on neutron background reduction for a dark matter direct detection experiment in India, the Indian Dark matter search Experiment (InDEx). The FLUKA and FLAIR simulation tools have been used throughout the simulation process. The experimental and simulation results available in the literature are being reproduced using FLUKA for validation purposes. The calibration and InDEx experiment are simulated, and the results are compared against the experimental results. For neutron background reduction in future experiments, the use of high density polyethylene (HDPE) is suggested and a shielding design using HDPE is presented. The results show that shielding reduces detector event rates by two orders of magnitude compared to the prior InDEx experiment without shielding.
A search for new physics in the production of three massive gauge bosons (VVV, where V is a W or Z boson) is presented. The event selection is most effective in the Lorentz-boosted regime in which all three bosons have a transverse momentum ($p_\mathrm{T}$) above 200 GeV. Standard model (SM) processes contribute few events in this regime. When a boosted W or Z boson decays hadronically, the decay products tend to form a large-radius jet with substructure that reflects the presence of two quarks from the decay; such jets are called V-tagged jets. Special techniques to reconstruct and select V-tagged jets are applied. Events are categorized according to the number and kinematic features of charged leptons and V-tagged jets. Event yields are obtained in bins of a suitable kinematic variable such as the scalar $p_\mathrm{T}$ sum of the reconstructed objects in the event. No excess over SM expectations is observed. Bounds are placed on Wilson coefficients for a set of mass dimension-6 and -8 operators in the framework of SM effective field theory. The two most stringent bounds placed by this analysis are $-$0.13 $\lt$ $c_\mathrm{W}/\Lambda^2$ $\lt$ 0.12 TeV$^{-2}$ and $-$0.24 $\lt$ $c_\mathrm{Hq3}/\Lambda^2$ $\lt$ 0.21 TeV$^{-2}$ at 95% CL, where $c_\mathrm{W}$ and $c_\mathrm{Hq3}$ are dimension-6 Wilson coefficients in the Warsaw basis and $\Lambda$ is the mass scale of new physics.
The gravitational field of two-body system, a high energetic particle and a massive particle at rest, is studied in the linearized Einstein gravity. The ultrarelativistic particle yields a plane-fronted gravitational shockwave which perturbes gravitational field of the particle at rest. The problem can be also considered as a fixed-target high energy collision. We show that this collision is accompanied by the gravitational radiation, as is expected from the earlier results on the high-energy scattering. The new effect is a secondary spherical gravitational shockwave when the initial shockwave hits the massive particle. In the considered approximation the flux of gravitational radiation and the amplitude of the spherical shockwave are found in an analytic form. The suggested approach is also applicable when the null particle is replaced by plane null shells of a general profile. Implications of these effects for astrophysics are shortly discussed.
Autonomous language-model agents are increasingly evaluated on long-horizon tool-use tasks, but existing benchmarks rarely capture the complexity and nuance of real scientific work. To address this gap, we introduce Collider-Bench, a benchmark for evaluating whether LLM agents can reproduce experimental analyses from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) using only public papers and open scientific software. Such analyses are often difficult to reproduce because the public toolchain only approximates the software used internally by the experimental collaborations, while the published papers inevitably omit implementation details needed for a faithful reconstruction. Agents must therefore rely on physical reasoning, domain knowledge, and trial-and-error to fill these gaps. Each task requires the agent to turn a published analysis into an executable simulation-and-selection pipeline and submit predicted collision event yields in specified signal regions. These predictions are evaluated with standard histogram metrics that provide continuous fidelity scores without a hand-written rubric. We also report the computational cost incurred by each agent per task. Finally, we evaluate the codebase and full session trace using an LLM judge to catch qualitative failure modes such as fabrications, hallucinations and duplications. We release an initial set of tasks drawn from LHC searches, together with a containerized sandbox and event simulation tools. We evaluate across a capability ladder of general purpose coding agents. Our results show that on average no agent reliably beats the physicist-in-the-loop solution.
Millicharged particles (mCPs) are a well-motivated target for far-forward searches at the Large Hadron Collider. We identify and quantify a significant new source of these particles: secondary production in hadronic and electromagnetic showers initiated by energetic neutral particles striking the TAXN absorber. By combining Monte Carlo simulations with \texttt{Geant4}-based modeling, we show that these secondary cascades yield a substantial mCP flux that complements the primary production from the interaction point. For the proposed FORMOSA detector, this contribution can enhance the expected signal yield by approximately $50\%$ for $m_\chi \lesssim 0.1~\textrm{GeV}$. Our results demonstrate that secondary production in downstream infrastructure is an essential ingredient for realistic sensitivity projections and new-physics searches at the High-Luminosity LHC. The simulated secondary spectra are made publicly available to facilitate future forward physics studies.
Graph construction is an essential step in the Graph Neural Network (GNN) based tracking pipelines. The goal of the graph construction is to construct a graph that contains only the defined true edge connections between nodes (detector hits). A promising approach for the graph construction is through the Metric Learning approach, where a node representation in an embedding space is learned, and nodes are connected according to their distance in the embedding space. The loss function for the metric learning in this case is a contrastive loss encouraging the true pairs of nodes to be close to each other, and pulling away the false pairs of nodes. This approach presents a conflict of the learning objective for the hopping connections when a true edge is defined as a chain connection in a particle track. To address the conflict for this case, we propose a ``Double Metric Learning'' approach, where two node representations are learned. A directed graph can then be constructed based on the distance between the two representations from two nodes respectively. We test this idea with the ATLAS ITk detector at the HL-LHC using the ATLAS ITk simulation and show better graph construction performance particularly for particles with high transverse momentum compared to the Simple Metric Learning approach. We also show that Double Metric Learning is able to accurately predict edge direction.
The NA61/SHINE experiment at the CERN SPS is a multipurpose fixed-target spectrometer for charged and neutral hadron measurements. Its research program includes studies of strong interactions as well as reference measurements for neutrino and cosmic-ray physics. One major goal of its strong interaction program is to determine the existence and pinpoint the location of the QCD critical point, an object of both experimental and theoretical studies. This contribution will summarize the current status of NA61/SHINE critical point searches in nucleus-nucleus collisions, in the collision energy range $\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 5-17$~GeV. The review includes studies of fluctuations of net-electric charge, femtoscopy analysis of $\pi-\pi$ pairs, as well as intermittency of protons and negatively charged hadrons. No clear indication of the critical point has been observed so far. Finally, we report on the development of novel methods aimed at solving the long-standing problem of bin-by-bin correlations in experimental intermittency analysis, and for a more accurate handling of systematics and uncertainties.
Neutrino oscillation experiments present anomalous results across a vast range of baselines and energies. Here we show that a 3+1 scenario in which sterile neutrinos feel a novel matter potential $V_s$ proportional to background density of ordinary or (asymmetric) dark matter is able to explain several anomalies. At low-energies ($E\lesssim$ 1 TeV) the model behaves as an effective 3-flavor NSI-like scheme among active flavors and eliminates the tension between the two LBL experiments NOvA and T2K provided that the potential is negative and the two sterile mixing angles $\theta_{14}$ and $\theta_{24}$ are non-zero. A further indication in favor of a negative non-zero potential comes from the anomalous excess of $\nu_e$-like events observed in Super-Kamiokande atmospheric neutrinos, which, in the new scenario is explained by a modification of the 3-flavor resonance at few GeV. A high energies ($E\gtrsim $ 1 TeV) the new framework reveals its 4-flavor nature and produces a resonant behavior at $E \simeq$ 10 TeV as hinted at by IceCube. We identify an irreducible 3-level dynamics generating a new resonance in the $(\nu_e, \nu_\mu)$ sector intertwined with two conventional resonances in the $(\nu_e, \nu_s$) and $(\nu_\mu, \nu_s)$ systems. The novel amplification mechanism manifests with the emergence of effective mixing angles in matter ($\theta_{12}^m$ or $\theta_{13}^m$) involving active neutrinos. The scenario requires values of $f = V_s/|V_{NC}| \sim -20 $, $\Delta m^2_{41} \sim 60 $ eV$^2$, $|U_{e4}|^2\simeq \sin^2\theta_{14} \simeq 0.01-0.03$ and $|U_{\mu4}|^2 \simeq \sin^2\theta_{24}\simeq 10^{-4}-10^{-3}$. Such a very small size of $|U_{\mu4}|^2$ eliminates the tension between IceCube and the other $\nu_\mu$ disappearance searches. The model can be directly probed by KATRIN, which is very sensitive to the electron-sterile neutrino admixture in the region of high $\Delta m^2_{41}$.
The COMPASS Collaboration has recently published an article "Multiplicities of positive and negative pions, kaons, and unidentified hadrons from deep-inelastic scattering of muons off a liquid hydrogen target", Phys. Rev. D 112 (2025) 012002. In contrast to earlier COMPASS publications on similar topics, the aforementioned article features an enhanced treatment of QED radiative corrections, employing the DJANGOH Monte Carlo generator. This methodological improvement led to corrections that are up to 12% larger in the low-x, high-z region compared to the previously applied ones. To ensure consistent treatment of COMPASS data sets obtained using both isoscalar and proton targets, this paper presents an updated set of isoscalar multiplicities based on DJANGOH-derived radiative corrections. The present results supersede those published in Phys. Lett. B 764 (2017) 1 and Phys. Lett. B 767 (2017) 133.
Based on a novel method for producing antineutrons via $J/\psi$ decays, we report a study of $\bar{n}p$ inelastic scattering into final states containing kaons. The analysis uses $(10087\pm44)\times 10^6$ $J/\psi$ events collected at the BESIII detector operating at the BEPCII storage ring. Antineutrons are produced via $J/\psi \to p \pi^{-} \bar{n}$ decays and tagged by the detected protons and pions, resulting in antineutron momenta ranging from 0 to 1174~MeV/$c$, while target protons are provided by the hydrogen in the beam-pipe material. The flux-averaged cross sections of the reactions $\bar{n}p \rightarrow K^{+}K^{-}\pi^{+}$ and $\bar{n}p \rightarrow K^{+}K^{-}\pi^{+}\pi^{0}$ over this antineutron momentum spectrum are measured to be $0.53^{+0.15}_{-0.12} \pm 0.08$~mb and $1.09^{+0.36}_{-0.30} \pm 0.31$~mb, respectively, where the first uncertainties are statistical and the second are systematic. Due to limited statistics, the intermediate states in these processes are not quantitatively investigated. The observation of clean antineutron-proton scattering candidates indicates the potential of this approach for future investigations of antineutron-proton interactions.
Sufficiently strong and long-lasting first-order phase transitions can produce primordial black holes (PBHs) that contribute substantially to the dark matter abundance of the Universe, and can produce large-scale primordial magnetic fields. We study these mechanisms in a generic class of conformal $\mathrm{U(1)}^\prime$ models that also explain active neutrino oscillation data via the type-I seesaw mechanism. We find that phase transitions that occur at seesaw scales between $10^4$ GeV and $10^{11}$ GeV produce gravitational wave signals (from the dynamics of the phase transition and from the decay of cosmic string loops) at LISA/ET that can be correlated with microlensing signals of PBHs at the Roman Space Telescope, while scales near $10^{11}$ GeV can be correlated with Hawking evaporation signals at future gamma-ray telescopes. LISA can probe the entire range of PBH masses between $1\times 10^{-16}M_\odot$ and $8\times 10^{-11}M_\odot$ if PBHs fully account for the dark matter abundance. For Z' masses between 5 TeV and 100 TeV, and $\sim 3$ TeV right-handed neutrinos, helical magnetic fields can be produced with magnitudes $\sim 10^{-16}$-$10^{-13}$ G and coherence lengths $\sim 10^{-4}$-$10^{-2}$ Mpc, above current blazar lower bounds.
A new scheme for detecting wave-like dark matter (DM) using Rydberg atoms is proposed. Recent advances in trapping and manipulating Rydberg atoms make it possible to use Rydberg atoms trapped in optical tweezer arrays for DM detection. We propose to prepare a large ensemble of Rydberg atoms and to observe the excitations between Rydberg states by the DM-induced effective electric field. A scan over DM mass is enabled with the use of the Zeeman and diamagnetic shifts of energy levels under an applied external magnetic field. Taking dark-photon DM as an example, we demonstrate that our proposed experiment can have high enough sensitivity to probe previously unexplored regions of the parameter space of dark-photon coupling strengths and masses.
We derive predictions for the hadronic matrix elements of radiative semileptonic decays of beautiful hadrons within Heavy Quark Effective Theory (HQET), relevant for future measurements at Belle II and LHCb. Our study considers Lambda(b) -> Lambda(c), Lambda(*)(c1) and B -> D(*), D** transitions. The symmetries of HQET highly constrain the number of structure-dependent form factors in all cases. In the soft and sub-leading soft regions, all the form factors are fully determined in terms of non-radiative Isgur-Wise functions and the magnetic dipole moments of the heavy hadrons. The structure of higher order corrections is also briefly discussed.
The Japan Proton Accelerator Research Complex (J-PARC) currently delivers a 1 MW, 3 GeV proton beam to the Materials and Life Science Experimental Facility (MLF). Power is expected to increase to 1.3 MW, driven by the needs of Hyper-Kamiokande. As a result, the MLF presently provides the highest neutron yield of any spallation source, while potentially holding the best current and foreseeable conditions for Coherent Elastic Neutrino-Nucleus Scattering (CE$\nu$NS) experimentation. We explore this potential, using as examples detector technologies presently funded for construction and under development. We quantify their sensitivity to a rich variety of particle physics scenarios, finding that very-high-statistics CE$\nu$NS measurements with significant sensitivity to relevant scenarios are feasible at this facility within the next few years.
We report results from a 13-liter purified liquid argon test stand at Wellesley College. The system includes a single-pass liquid-phase purification column, a double-gridded purity monitor to assess the electron lifetime, and a slow control and data acquisition system. Initial measurements demonstrate an O$_2$-equivalent impurity concentration of 0.25 ppb, corresponding to an electron lifetime of 1.5 ms at a drift field of 500 V/cm. This test stand supports ongoing detector R&D on charge and light readout technologies for future large-scale liquid argon time projection chambers, such as Q-Pix and other cold electronics systems, as part of a facility at Wellesley College for fundamental studies of LArTPC readouts.