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Uncovering New Higgses in the LHC Analyses of Differential $t\bar t$ Cross Sections

Published 15 Aug 2023 in hep-ph and hep-ex | (2308.07953v2)

Abstract: Statistically significant tensions between the Standard Model (SM) predictions and the measured lepton distributions in differential top cross-sections emerged in LHC Run~1 data and became even more pronounced in Run~2 analyses. Due to the level of sophistication of the SM predictions and the performance of the ATLAS and CMS detectors, this is very remarkable. Therefore, one should seriously consider the possibility that these measurements are contaminated by beyond-the-SM contributions. In this article, we use differential lepton distributions from the latest ATLAS $t\bar t$ analysis to study a new physics benchmark model motivated by existing indications for new Higgses: a new scalar $H$ is produced via gluon fusion and decays to $S\prime$ ($95\,$GeV) and $S$ ($152\,$GeV), which subsequently decay to $b\bar b$ and $WW$, respectively. In this setup, the total $\chi2$ is reduced, compared to the SM, resulting in $\Delta\chi2=34$ to $\Delta\chi2=158$, depending on the SM simulation used. Notably, allowing $m_S$ to vary, the combination of the distributions points towards $m_S!\approx!150\,$GeV which is consistent with the existing $\gamma \gamma$ and $WW$ signals, rendering a mismodelling of the SM unlikely. Averaging the results of the different SM predictions, a non-vanishing cross-section for $pp\to H\to SS\prime\to b\bar b WW$ of $\approx!13$pb is preferred. If $S\prime$ is SM-like, this cross-section, at the same time explains the $95\,$GeV $\gamma\gamma$ excess, while the dominance of $S\to WW$ suggests that $S$ is the neutral component of the $SU(2)_L$ triplet with hypercharge~0.

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