2019
DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.122.231801
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Combination of Searches for Invisible Higgs Boson Decays with the ATLAS Experiment

Abstract: The ATLAS CollaborationDark matter particles, if sufficiently light, may be produced in decays of the Higgs boson. This Letter presents a statistical combination of searches for H → invisible decays where H is produced according to the Standard Model via vector boson fusion, Z( )H, and W/Z(had)H, all performed with the ATLAS detector using 36.1 fb −1 of pp collisions at a center-of-mass energy of √ s = 13 TeV at the LHC. In combination with the results at √ s = 7 and 8 TeV, an exclusion limit on the H → invisi… Show more

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Cited by 174 publications
(166 citation statements)
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“…with the couplingg fixed such that invisible branching ratios from the kinematically allowed decay H 1 → V V of BR(H 1 → inv) = 25% and 2.5% are obtained. While the first value corresponds to the present experimental sensitivity [23,26], 2.5 % represents the projected limit from the high-luminosity upgrade of the LHC [37]. The obtained model points shown in red have been compared with the exclusion bound from XENON1T, depicted by the blue region above the dashed blue line, as well as with the projected sensitivities from the XENONnT [38] (a similar sensitivity is expected for the LZ experiment [39]) and DARWIN experiments [40], the dashed magenta and solid purple lines, respectively, and finally with the contour corresponding to invisible Higgs branching ratios of BR(H → inv) = 25% (left) and 2.5% (right panel), shown by the thick solid black lines, obtained in the effective vector Higgs-portal scenario.…”
Section: Comparing the Eft And Uv-complete Approachesmentioning
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…with the couplingg fixed such that invisible branching ratios from the kinematically allowed decay H 1 → V V of BR(H 1 → inv) = 25% and 2.5% are obtained. While the first value corresponds to the present experimental sensitivity [23,26], 2.5 % represents the projected limit from the high-luminosity upgrade of the LHC [37]. The obtained model points shown in red have been compared with the exclusion bound from XENON1T, depicted by the blue region above the dashed blue line, as well as with the projected sensitivities from the XENONnT [38] (a similar sensitivity is expected for the LZ experiment [39]) and DARWIN experiments [40], the dashed magenta and solid purple lines, respectively, and finally with the contour corresponding to invisible Higgs branching ratios of BR(H → inv) = 25% (left) and 2.5% (right panel), shown by the thick solid black lines, obtained in the effective vector Higgs-portal scenario.…”
Section: Comparing the Eft And Uv-complete Approachesmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…In Fig. 1, we further include the constraints on the [M V , λ HV V ] parameter space from the most recent LHC measurements of the invisible Higgs branching ratio [23,26] which exclude the grey area and from the direct detection of DM states by the XENON1T experiment [33] which excludes the blue area. As can be seen, the latter constraints are, in any case, much more stringent than the perturbative unitarity bound.…”
Section: The Theoretical Set-upmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By combining all runs, an upper limit of 0.26% can be achieved at the ILC. This result can be compared with the current model dependent LHC results of 26% and 19% by ATLAS [7] and CMS [8], respectively, and 3.8% at HL-LHC with 3 ab −1 [9]. The ILC will give two orders (one order) of magnitude better result than current LHC (future HL-LHC) experiments.…”
Section: Upper Limits On the Branching Fractionmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…For example, it implies the existence of a new invisible Higgs decay channel with majoron emission [8]. This has phenomenomenological implications for collider experiments [17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27] and has indeed been searched by LEP and LHC collaborations [28,29].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%