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. 2015 May 14;75(5):212. doi: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-015-3351-7

Precise determination of the mass of the Higgs boson and tests of compatibility of its couplings with the standard model predictions using proton collisions at 7 and 8TeV

V Khachatryan 1, A M Sirunyan 1, A Tumasyan 1, W Adam 2, T Bergauer 2, M Dragicevic 2, J Erö 2, M Friedl 2, R Frühwirth 2, V M Ghete 2, C Hartl 2, N Hörmann 2, J Hrubec 2, M Jeitler 2, W Kiesenhofer 2, V Knünz 2, M Krammer 2, I Krätschmer 2, D Liko 2, I Mikulec 2, D Rabady 2, B Rahbaran 2, H Rohringer 2, R Schöfbeck 2, J Strauss 2, W Treberer-Treberspurg 2, W Waltenberger 2, C-E Wulz 2, V Mossolov 3, N Shumeiko 3, J Suarez Gonzalez 3, S Alderweireldt 4, S Bansal 4, T Cornelis 4, E A De Wolf 4, X Janssen 4, A Knutsson 4, J Lauwers 4, S Luyckx 4, S Ochesanu 4, R Rougny 4, M Van De Klundert 4, H Van Haevermaet 4, P Van Mechelen 4, N Van Remortel 4, A Van Spilbeeck 4, F Blekman 5, S Blyweert 5, J D’Hondt 5, N Daci 5, N Heracleous 5, J Keaveney 5, S Lowette 5, M Maes 5, A Olbrechts 5, Q Python 5, D Strom 5, S Tavernier 5, W Van Doninck 5, P Van Mulders 5, G P Van Onsem 5, I Villella 5, C Caillol 6, B Clerbaux 6, G De Lentdecker 6, D Dobur 6, L Favart 6, A P R Gay 6, A Grebenyuk 6, A Léonard 6, A Mohammadi 6, L Perniè 6, A Randle-conde 6, T Reis 6, T Seva 6, L Thomas 6, C Vander Velde 6, P Vanlaer 6, J Wang 6, F Zenoni 6, V Adler 7, K Beernaert 7, L Benucci 7, A Cimmino 7, S Costantini 7, S Crucy 7, A Fagot 7, G Garcia 7, J Mccartin 7, A A Ocampo Rios 7, D Poyraz 7, D Ryckbosch 7, S Salva Diblen 7, M Sigamani 7, N Strobbe 7, F Thyssen 7, M Tytgat 7, E Yazgan 7, N Zaganidis 7, S Basegmez 8, C Beluffi 8, G Bruno 8, R Castello 8, A Caudron 8, L Ceard 8, G G Da Silveira 8, C Delaere 8, T du Pree 8, D Favart 8, L Forthomme 8, A Giammanco 8, J Hollar 8, A Jafari 8, P Jez 8, M Komm 8, V Lemaitre 8, C Nuttens 8, D Pagano 8, L Perrini 8, A Pin 8, K Piotrzkowski 8, A Popov 8, L Quertenmont 8, M Selvaggi 8, M Vidal Marono 8, J M Vizan Garcia 8, N Beliy 9, T Caebergs 9, E Daubie 9, G H Hammad 9, W L Aldá Júnior 10, G A Alves 10, L Brito 10, M Correa Martins Junior 10, T Dos Reis Martins 10, J Molina 10, C Mora Herrera 10, M E Pol 10, P Rebello Teles 10, W Carvalho 11, J Chinellato 11, A Custódio 11, E M Da Costa 11, D De Jesus Damiao 11, C De Oliveira Martins 11, S Fonseca De Souza 11, H Malbouisson 11, D Matos Figueiredo 11, L Mundim 11, H Nogima 11, W L Prado Da Silva 11, J Santaolalla 11, A Santoro 11, A Sznajder 11, E J Tonelli Manganote 11, A Vilela Pereira 11, C A Bernardes 12, S Dogra 12, T R Fernandez Perez Tomei 12, E M Gregores 12, P G Mercadante 12, S F Novaes 12, Sandra S Padula 12, A Aleksandrov 13, V Genchev 13, R Hadjiiska 13, P Iaydjiev 13, A Marinov 13, S Piperov 13, M Rodozov 13, S Stoykova 13, G Sultanov 13, M Vutova 13, A Dimitrov 14, I Glushkov 14, L Litov 14, B Pavlov 14, P Petkov 14, J G Bian 15, G M Chen 15, H S Chen 15, M Chen 15, T Cheng 15, R Du 15, C H Jiang 15, R Plestina 15, F Romeo 15, J Tao 15, Z Wang 15, C Asawatangtrakuldee 16, Y Ban 16, S Liu 16, Y Mao 16, S J Qian 16, D Wang 16, Z Xu 16, F Zhang 16, L Zhang 16, W Zou 16, C Avila 17, A Cabrera 17, L F Chaparro Sierra 17, C Florez 17, J P Gomez 17, B Gomez Moreno 17, J C Sanabria 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PMCID: PMC4433454  PMID: 25999783

Abstract

Properties of the Higgs boson with mass near 125GeV are measured in proton-proton collisions with the CMS experiment at the LHC. Comprehensive sets of production and decay measurements are combined. The decay channels include γγ, ZZ, WW, ττ, bb, and μμ pairs. The data samples were collected in 2011 and 2012 and correspond to integrated luminosities of up to 5.1fb-1 at 7TeV and up to 19.7fb-1 at 8TeV. From the high-resolution γγ and ZZ channels, the mass of the Higgs boson is determined to be 125.02-0.27+0.26(stat)-0.15+0.14(syst)GeV. For this mass value, the event yields obtained in the different analyses tagging specific decay channels and production mechanisms are consistent with those expected for the standard model Higgs boson. The combined best-fit signal relative to the standard model expectation is 1.00±0.09(stat)-0.07+0.08(theo)±0.07(syst) at the measured mass. The couplings of the Higgs boson are probed for deviations in magnitude from the standard model predictions in multiple ways, including searches for invisible and undetected decays. No significant deviations are found.

Introduction

One of the most important objectives of the physics programme at the CERN LHC is to understand the mechanism behind electroweak symmetry breaking (EWSB). In the standard model (SM) [13] EWSB is achieved by a complex scalar doublet field that leads to the prediction of one physical Higgs boson (H) [49]. Through Yukawa interactions, the Higgs scalar field can also account for fermion masses [1012].

In 2012 the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations at the LHC reported the observation of a new boson with mass near 125GeV  [1315], a value confirmed in later measurements [1618]. Subsequent studies of the production and decay rates [16, 1838] and of the spin-parity quantum numbers [16, 22, 3941] of the new boson show that its properties are compatible with those expected for the SM Higgs boson. The CDF and D0 experiments have also reported an excess of events consistent with the LHC observations [42, 43].

Standard model predictions have improved with time, and the results presented in this paper make use of a large number of theory tools and calculations [44168], summarized in Refs. [169171]. In proton-proton (pp) collisions at s=7--8TeV, the gluon-gluon fusion Higgs boson production mode (ggH) has the largest cross section. It is followed by vector boson fusion (VBF), associated WH and ZH production (VH), and production in association with a top quark pair (ttH). The cross section values for the Higgs boson production modes and the values for the decay branching fractions, together with their uncertainties, are tabulated in Ref. [171] and regular online updates. For a Higgs boson mass of 125GeV, the total production cross section is expected to be 17.5\,pb at s=7TeV and 22.3\,pb at 8TeV, and varies with the mass at a rate of about -1.6% per GeV.

This paper presents results from a comprehensive analysis combining the CMS measurements of the properties of the Higgs boson targeting its decay to bb  [21], WW  [22], ZZ  [16], ττ  [23], γγ  [18], and μμ  [30] as well as measurements of the ttH production mode [29] and searches for invisible decays of the Higgs boson [28]. For simplicity, bb is used to denote bb¯, ττ to denote τ+τ-, etc. Similarly, ZZ is used to denote ZZ() and WW to denote WW(). The broad complementarity of measurements targeting different production and decay modes enables a variety of studies of the couplings of the new boson to be performed.

The different analyses have different sensitivities to the presence of the SM Higgs boson. The Hγγ and HZZ4 (where =e,μ) channels play a special role because of their high sensitivity and excellent mass resolution of the reconstructed diphoton and four-lepton final states, respectively. The HWWνν measurement has a high sensitivity due to large expected yields but relatively poor mass resolution because of the presence of neutrinos in the final state. The bb and ττ decay modes are beset by large background contributions and have relatively poor mass resolution, resulting in lower sensitivity compared to the other channels; combining the results from bb and ττ, the CMS Collaboration has published evidence for the decay of the Higgs boson to fermions [172]. In the SM the ggH process is dominated by a virtual top quark loop. However, the direct coupling of top quarks to the Higgs boson can be probed through the study of events tagged as having been produced via the ttH process.

The mass of the Higgs boson is determined by combining the measurements performed in the Hγγ and HZZ4 channels [16, 18]. The SM Higgs boson is predicted to have even parity, zero electric charge, and zero spin. All its other properties can be derived if the boson’s mass is specified. To investigate the couplings of the Higgs boson to SM particles, we perform a combined analysis of all measurements to extract ratios between the observed coupling strengths and those predicted by the SM.

The couplings of the Higgs boson are probed for deviations in magnitude using the formalism recommended by the LHC Higgs Cross Section Working Group in Ref. [171]. This formalism assumes, among other things, that the observed state has quantum numbers JPC=0++ and that the narrow-width approximation holds, leading to a factorization of the couplings in the production and decay of the boson.

The data sets were processed with updated alignment and calibrations of the CMS detector and correspond to integrated luminosities of up to 5.1fb-1 at s=7TeV and 19.7fb-1 at 8TeV for pp collisions collected in 2011 and 2012. The central feature of the CMS detector is a 13\,m long superconducting solenoid of 6\,m internal diameter that generates a uniform 3.8\,T magnetic field parallel to the direction of the LHC beams. Within the solenoid volume are a silicon pixel and strip tracker, a lead tungstate crystal electromagnetic calorimeter, and a brass and scintillator hadron calorimeter. Muons are identified and measured in gas-ionization detectors embedded in the steel magnetic flux-return yoke of the solenoid. The detector is subdivided into a cylindrical barrel and two endcap disks. Calorimeters on either side of the detector complement the coverage provided by the barrel and endcap detectors. A more detailed description of the CMS detector, together with a definition of the coordinate system used and the relevant kinematic variables, can be found in Ref. [173].

This paper is structured as follows: Sect. 2 summarizes the analyses contributing to the combined measurements. Section 3 describes the statistical method used to extract the properties of the boson; some expected differences between the results of the combined analysis and those of the individual analyses are also explained. The results of the combined analysis are reported in the following four sections. A precise determination of the mass of the boson and direct limits on its width are presented in Sect. 4. We then discuss the significance of the observed excesses of events in Sect. 5. Finally, Sects. 6 and 7 present multiple evaluations of the compatibility of the data with the SM expectations for the magnitude of the Higgs boson’s couplings.

Inputs to the combined analysis

Table 1 provides an overview of all inputs used in this combined analysis, including the following information: the final states selected, the production and decay modes targeted in the analyses, the integrated luminosity used, the expected mass resolution, and the number of event categories in each channel.

Table 1.

Summary of the channels in the analyses included in this combination. The first and second columns indicate which decay mode and production mechanism is targeted by an analysis. Notes on the expected composition of the signal are given in the third column. Where available, the fourth column specifies the expected relative mass resolution for the SM Higgs boson. Finally, the last columns provide the number of event categories and the integrated luminosity for the 7 and 8TeV data sets. The notation is explained in the text

Decay tag and production tag Expected signal composition σmH/mH Luminosity (fb-1 )
No. of categories
7TeV 8TeV
Hγγ [18], Sect. 2.1 5.1 19.7
   γγ Untagged 76–93 % ggH 0.8–2.1 % 4 5
2-jet VBF 50–80 % VBF 1.0–1.3 % 2 3
Leptonic VH 95% VH (WH/ZH5) 1.3 % 2 2
ETmiss VH 70–80 % VH (WH/ZH1) 1.3 % 1 1
2-jet VH 65% VH (WH/ZH5) 1.0–1.3 % 1 1
Leptonic ttH 95% ttH 1.1 % 1 1
Multijet ttH >90% ttH 1.1 % 1
HZZ4 [16], Sect. 2.2 5.1 19.7
4μ, 2e2μ/2μ2e, 4e 0/1-jet 90% ggH 3 3
2-jet 42% (VBF+VH) 1.3, 1.8, 2.2 % 3 3
HWWνν [22], Sect. 2.3 4.9 19.4
   ee+μμ, eμ 0-jet 96–98 % ggH 16 % 2 2
1-jet 82–84 % ggH 17 % 2 2
2-jet VBF 78–86 % VBF 2 2
2-jet VH 31–40 % VH 2 2
33ν (WH) SF-SS, SF-OS 100% WH, up to 20 % ττ 2 2
+νjj (ZH) eee, eeμ, μμμ, μμe 100% ZH 4 4
Hττ [23], Sect. 2.4 4.9 19.7
   eτh, μτh 0-jet 98% ggH 11–14 % 4 4
1-jet 70–80 % ggH 12–16 % 5 5
2-jet VBF 75–83 % VBF 13–16 % 2 4
   τhτh 1-jet 67–70 % ggH 10–12 % 2
2-jet VBF 80 % VBF 11 % 1
   eμ 0-jet 98 % ggH, 23–30 % WW 16–20 % 2 2
1-jet 75–80 % ggH, 31–38 % WW 18–19 % 2 2
2-jet VBF 79–94 % VBF, 37–45 % WW 14–19 % 1 2
   ee, μμ 0-jet 88–98 % ggH 4 4
1-jet 74–78 % ggH, 17% WW 4 4
2-jet CJV 50% VBF, 45% ggH, 17–24 % WW 2 2
+LL (ZH) LL=τhτh,τh,eμ 15% (70 %) WW for LL=τh (eμ) 8 8
+τhτh (WH) 96% VH, ZH/WH0.1 2 2
+τh (WH) ZH/WH5%, 9–11 % WW 2 4
VH production with Hbb [21], Sect. 2.5 5.1 18.9
W(ν)H(bb) pT(V) bins 100 % VH, 96–98 % WH 4 6
W(τhν)H(bb) 93 % WH 1
Z()H(bb) pT(V) bins 100 % ZH 4 4
Z(νν)H(bb) pT(V) bins 100 % VH, 62–76 % ZH 10% 2 3
ttH production with Hhadrons or Hleptons [29], Sect. 2.6 5.0 19.6
tt¯ lepton+jets 90% bb but 24% WW in 6j+2b 7 7
Hbb tt¯ dilepton 45–85 % bb, 8–35 % WW, 4–14 % ττ 2 3
Hτhτh tt¯ lepton+jets 68–80 % ττ, 13–22 % WW, 5–13 % bb 6
2 SS WW/ττ3 6
3 WW/ττ3 2
4 2 jets, 1 b jet WW:ττ:ZZ3:2:1 1
Hinvisible [28], Sect. 2.7 4.9 19.7
H(inv) 2-jet VBF 94% VBF, 6% ggH 1
0-jet 2 2
ZHZ(ee,μμ)H(inv) 1-jet 100% ZH 2 2
Hμμ [30], Sect. 2.8 5.0 19.7
Untagged 88–99 % ggH 1.3–2.4 % 12 12
2-jet VBF 80% VBF 1.9 % 1 1
2-jet boosted 50% ggH, 50% VBF 1.8 % 1 1
μμ 2-jet other 68% ggH, 17% VH, 15% VBF 1.9 % 1 1

Events fulfilling the requirements of either selection are combined into one category

Values for analyses dedicated to the measurement of the mass that do not use the same categories and/or observables

Composition in the regions for which the ratio of signal and background s/(s+b)>0.05

Both Table 1 and the descriptions of the different inputs make use of the following notation. The expected relative mass resolution, σmH/mH, is estimated using different σmH calculations: the Hγγ, HZZ4, HWWνν, and Hμμ analyses quote σmH as half of the width of the shortest interval containing 68.3% of the signal events, the Hττ analysis quotes the RMS of the signal distribution, and the analysis of VH with Hbb quotes the standard deviation of the Gaussian core of a function that also describes non-Gaussian tails. Regarding leptons, denotes an electron or a muon, τh denotes a τ lepton identified via its decay into hadrons, and L denotes any charged lepton. Regarding lepton pairs, SF (DF) denotes same-flavour (different-flavour) pairs and SS (OS) denotes same-sign (opposite-sign) pairs. Concerning reconstructed jets, CJV denotes a central jet veto, pT is the magnitude of the transverse momentum vector, ETmiss refers to the magnitude of the missing transverse momentum vector, j stands for a reconstructed jet, and b denotes a jet tagged as originating from the hadronization of a bottom quark.

Hγγ

The Hγγ analysis [18, 174] measures a narrow signal mass peak situated on a smoothly falling background due to events originating from prompt nonresonant diphoton production or due to events with at least one jet misidentified as an isolated photon.

The sample of selected events containing a photon pair is split into mutually exclusive event categories targeting the different Higgs boson production processes, as listed in Table 1. Requiring the presence of two jets with a large rapidity gap favours events produced by the VBF mechanism, while event categories designed to preferentially select VH or ttH production require the presence of muons, electrons, ETmiss, a pair of jets compatible with the decay of a vector boson, or jets arising from the hadronization of bottom quarks. For 7TeV data, only one ttH-tagged event category is used, combining the events selected by the leptonic ttH and multijet ttH selections. The 2-jet VBF-tagged categories are further split according to a multivariate (MVA) classifier that is trained to discriminate VBF events from both background and ggH events.

Fewer than 1 % of the selected events are tagged according to production mode. The remaining “untagged” events are subdivided into different categories based on the output of an MVA classifier that assigns a high score to signal-like events and to events with a good mass resolution, based on a combination of (i) an event-by-event estimate of the diphoton mass resolution, (ii) a photon identification score for each photon, and (iii) kinematic information about the photons and the diphoton system. The photon identification score is obtained from a separate MVA classifier that uses shower shape information and variables characterizing how isolated the photon candidate is to discriminate prompt photons from those arising in jets.

The same event categories and observables are used for the mass measurement and to search for deviations in the magnitudes of the scalar couplings of the Higgs boson.

In each event category, the background in the signal region is estimated from a fit to the observed diphoton mass distribution in data. The uncertainty due to the choice of function used to describe the background is incorporated into the statistical procedure: the likelihood maximization is also performed for a discrete variable that selects which of the functional forms is evaluated. This procedure is found to have correct coverage probability and negligible bias in extensive tests using pseudo-data extracted from fits of multiple families of functional forms to the data. By construction, this “discrete profiling” of the background functional form leads to confidence intervals for any estimated parameter that are at least as large as those obtained when considering any single functional form. Uncertainty in the parameters of the background functional forms contributes to the statistical uncertainty of the measurements.

HZZ

In the HZZ4 analysis [16, 175], we measure a four-lepton mass peak over a small continuum background. To further separate signal and background, we build a discriminant, Dbkgkin, using the leading-order matrix elements for signal and background. The value of Dbkgkin is calculated from the observed kinematic variables, namely the masses of the two dilepton pairs and five angles, which uniquely define a four-lepton configuration in its centre-of-mass frame.

Given the different mass resolutions and different background rates arising from jets misidentified as leptons, the 4μ, 2e2μ/2μ2e, and 4e event categories are analysed separately. A stricter dilepton mass selection is performed for the lepton pair with invariant mass closest to the nominal Z boson mass.

The dominant irreducible background in this channel is due to nonresonant ZZ production with both Z bosons decaying to a pair of charged leptons and is estimated from simulation. The smaller reducible backgrounds with misidentified leptons, mainly from the production of Z+jets, top quark pairs, and WZ+jets, are estimated from data.

For the mass measurement an event-by-event estimator of the mass resolution is built from the single-lepton momentum resolutions evaluated from the study of a large number of J/ψμμ and Z data events. The relative mass resolution, σm4/m4, is then used together with m4 and Dbkgkin to measure the mass of the boson.

To increase the sensitivity to the different production mechanisms, the event sample is split into two categories based on jet multiplicity: (i) events with fewer than two jets and (ii) events with at least two jets. In the first category, the four-lepton transverse momentum is used to discriminate VBF and VH production from ggH production. In the second category, a linear discriminant, built from the values of the invariant mass of the two leading jets and their pseudorapidity difference, is used to separate the VBF and ggH processes.

HWW

In the HWW analysis [22], we measure an excess of events with two OS leptons or three charged leptons with a total charge of ±1, moderate ETmiss, and up to two jets.

The two-lepton events are divided into eight categories, with different background compositions and signal-to-background ratios. The events are split into SF and DF dilepton event categories, since the background from Drell–Yan production (qqγ/Z()) is much larger for SF dilepton events. For events with no jets, the main background is due to nonresonant WW production. For events with one jet, the dominant backgrounds are nonresonant WW production and top quark production. The 2-jet VBF tag is optimized to take advantage of the VBF production signature and the main background is due to top quark production. The 2-jet VH tag targets the decay of the vector boson into two jets, Vjj. The selection requires two centrally-produced jets with invariant mass in the range 65<mjj<105GeV. To reduce the top quark, Drell–Yan, and WW backgrounds in all previous categories, a selection is performed on the dilepton mass and on the angular separation between the leptons. All background rates, except for very small contributions from WZ, ZZ, and Wγ production, are evaluated from data. The two-dimensional distribution of events in the (m,mT) plane is used for the measurements in the DF dilepton categories with zero and one jets; m is the invariant mass of the dilepton and mT is the transverse mass reconstructed from the dilepton transverse momentum and the ETmiss vector. For the DF 2-jet VBF tag the binned distribution of m is used. For the SF dilepton categories and for the 2-jet VH tag channel, only the total event counts are used.

In the 33ν channel targeting the WHWWW process, we search for an excess of events with three leptons, electrons or muons, large ETmiss, and low hadronic activity. The dominant background is due to WZ3ν production, which is largely reduced by requiring that all SF and OS lepton pairs have invariant masses away from the Z boson mass. The smallest angular distance between OS reconstructed lepton tracks is the observable chosen to perform the measurement. The background processes with jets misidentified as leptons, e.g. Z+jets and top quark production, as well as the WZ3ν background, are estimated from data. The small contribution from the ZZ4 process with one of the leptons escaping detection is estimated using simulated samples. In the 33ν channel, up to 20 % of the signal events are expected to be due to Hττ decays.

In the 3νjj channel, targeting the ZHZ+WW+νjj process, we first identify the leptonic decay of the Z boson and then require the dijet system to satisfy |mjj-mW|60GeV. The transverse mass of the νjj system is the observable chosen to perform the measurement. The main backgrounds are due to the production of WZ, ZZ, and tribosons, as well as processes involving nonprompt leptons. The first three are estimated from simulated samples, while the last one is evaluated from data.

Finally, a dedicated analysis for the measurement of the boson mass is performed in the 0-jet and 1-jet categories in the eμ channel, employing observables that are extensively used in searches for supersymmetric particles. A resolution of 16–17 % for mH=125GeV has been achieved.

Hττ

The Hττ analysis [23] measures an excess of events over the SM background expectation using multiple final-state signatures. For the eμ, eτh, μτh, and τhτh final states, where electrons and muons arise from leptonic τ decays, the event samples are further divided into categories based on the number of reconstructed jets in the event: 0 jets, 1 jet, or 2 jets. The 0-jet and 1-jet categories are further subdivided according to the reconstructed pT of the leptons. The 2-jet categories require a VBF-like topology and are subdivided according to selection criteria applied to the dijet kinematic properties. In each of these categories, we search for a broad excess in the reconstructed ττ mass distribution. The 0-jet category is used to constrain background normalizations, identification efficiencies, and energy scales. Various control samples in data are used to evaluate the main irreducible background from Zττ production and the largest reducible backgrounds from W+jets and multijet production. The ee and μμ final states are similarly subdivided into jet categories as above, but the search is performed on the combination of two MVA discriminants. The first is trained to distinguish Z events from Zττ events while the second is trained to separate Zττ events from Hττ events. The expected SM Higgs boson signal in the eμ, ee, and μμ categories has a sizeable contribution from HWW decays: 17–24 % in the ee and μμ event categories, and 23–45 % in the eμ categories, as shown in Table 1.

The search for ττ decays of Higgs bosons produced in association with a W or Z boson is conducted in events where the vector bosons are identified through the Wν or Z decay modes. The analysis targeting WH production selects events that have electrons or muons and one or two hadronically decaying tau leptons: μ+μτh, e+μτh or μ+eτh, μ+τhτh, and e+τhτh. The analysis targeting ZH production selects events with an identified Z decay and a Higgs boson candidate decaying to eμ, eτh, μτh, or τhτh. The main irreducible backgrounds to the WH and ZH searches are WZ and ZZ diboson events, respectively. The irreducible backgrounds are estimated using simulated event samples corrected by measurements from control samples in data. The reducible backgrounds in both analyses are due to the production of W bosons, Z bosons, or top quark pairs with at least one jet misidentified as an isolated e, μ, or τh. These backgrounds are estimated exclusively from data by measuring the probability for jets to be misidentified as isolated leptons in background-enriched control regions, and weighting the selected events that fail the lepton requirements with the misidentification probability. For the SM Higgs boson, the expected fraction of HWW events in the ZH analysis is 10–15 % for the ZHZ+τh channel and 70 % for the ZHZ+eμ channel, as shown in Table 1.

VH with Hbb

Exploiting the large expected Hbb branching fraction, the analysis of VH production and Hbb decay examines the W(ν)H(bb), W(τhν)H(bb), Z()H(bb), and Z(νν)H(bb) topologies [21].

The Higgs boson candidate is reconstructed by requiring two b-tagged jets. The event sample is divided into categories defined by the transverse momentum of the vector boson, pT(V). An MVA regression is used to estimate the true energy of the bottom quark after being trained on reconstructed b jets in simulated Hbb events. This regression algorithm achieves a dijet mass resolution of about 10 % for mH=125GeV. The performance of the regression algorithm is checked with data, where it is observed to improve the top quark mass scale and resolution in top quark pair events and to improve the pT balance between a Z boson and b jets in Z()+bb events. Events with higher pT(V) have smaller backgrounds and better dijet mass resolution. A cascade of MVA classifiers, trained to distinguish the signal from top quark pairs, V+jets, and diboson events, is used to improve the sensitivity in the W(ν)H(bb), W(τhν)H(bb), and Z(νν)H(bb) channels. The rates of the main backgrounds, consisting of V+jets and top quark pair events, are derived from signal-depleted data control samples. The WZ and ZZ backgrounds where Zbb, as well as the single top quark background, are estimated from simulated samples. The MVA classifier output distribution is used as the final discriminant in performing measurements.

At the time of publication of Ref. [21], the simulation of the ZH signal process included only qq¯-initiated diagrams. Since then, a more accurate prediction of the pT(Z) distribution has become available, taking into account the contribution of the gluon-gluon initiated associated production process ggZH, which is included in the results presented in this paper. The calculation of the ggZH contribution includes next-to-leading order (NLO) effects [176179] and is particularly important given that the ggZH process contributes to the most sensitive categories of the analysis. This treatment represents a significant improvement with respect to Ref. [21], as discussed in Sect. 3.4.

ttH production

Given its distinctive signature, the ttH production process can be tagged using the decay products of the top quark pair. The search for ttH production is performed in four main channels: Hγγ, Hbb, Hτhτh, and Hleptons  [19, 29]. The ttH search in Hγγ events is described in Sect. 2.1; the following focuses on the other three topologies.

In the analysis of ttH production with Hbb, two signatures for the top quark pair decay are considered: lepton+jets (tt¯νjjbb) and dilepton (tt¯ννbb). In the analysis of ttH production with Hτhτh, the tt¯ lepton+jets decay signature is required. In both channels, the events are further classified according to the numbers of identified jets and b-tagged jets. The major background is from top-quark pair production accompanied by extra jets. An MVA is trained to discriminate between background and signal events using information related to reconstructed object kinematic properties, event shape, and the discriminant output from the b-tagging algorithm. The rates of background processes are estimated from simulated samples and are constrained through a simultaneous fit to background-enriched control samples.

The analysis of ttH production with Hleptons is mainly sensitive to Higgs boson decays to WW, ττ, and ZZ, with subsequent decay to electrons and/or muons. The selection starts by requiring the presence of at least two central jets and at least one b jet. It then proceeds to categorize the events according to the number, charge, and flavour of the reconstructed leptons: 2 SS, 3 with a total charge of ±1, and 4. A dedicated MVA lepton selection is used to suppress the reducible background from nonprompt leptons, usually from the decay of b hadrons. After the final selection, the two main sources of background are nonprompt leptons, which is evaluated from data, and associated production of top quark pairs and vector bosons, which is estimated from simulated samples. Measurements in the 4 event category are performed using the number of reconstructed jets, Nj. In the 2 SS and 3 categories, an MVA classifier is employed, which makes use of Nj as well as other kinematic and event shape variables to discriminate between signal and background.

Searches for Higgs boson decays into invisible particles

The search for a Higgs boson decaying into particles that escape direct detection, denoted as H(inv) in what follows, is performed using VBF-tagged events and ZH-tagged events [28]. The ZH production mode is tagged via the Z or Zbb decays. For this combined analysis, only the VBF-tagged and Z channels are used; the event sample of the less sensitive Zbb analysis overlaps with that used in the analysis of VH with Hbb decay described in Sect. 2.5 and is not used in this combined analysis.

The VBF-tagged event selection is performed only on the 8TeV data and requires a dijet mass above 1100GeV as well as a large separation of the jets in pseudorapidity, η. The ETmiss is required to be above 130GeV and events with additional jets with pT>30GeV and a value of η between those of the tagging jets are rejected. The single largest background is due to the production of Z(νν)+jets and is estimated from data using a sample of events with visible Zμμ decays that also satisfy the dijet selection requirements above. To extract the results, a one bin counting experiment is performed in a region where the expected signal-to-background ratio is 0.7, calculated assuming the Higgs boson is produced with the SM cross section but decays only into invisible particles.

The event selection for ZH with Z rejects events with two or more jets with pT>30GeV. The remaining events are categorized according to the Z boson decay into ee or μμ and the number of identified jets, zero or one. For the 8TeV data, the results are extracted from a two-dimensional fit to the azimuthal angular difference between the leptons and the transverse mass of the system composed of the dilepton and the missing transverse energy in the event. Because of the smaller amount of data in the control samples used for modelling the backgrounds in the signal region, the results for the 7TeV data set are based on a fit to the aforementioned transverse mass variable only. For the 0-jet categories the signal-to-background ratio varies between 0.24 and 0.28, while for the 1-jet categories it varies between 0.15 and 0.18, depending on the Z boson decay channel and the data set (7 or 8TeV). The signal-to-background ratio increases as a function of the transverse mass variable.

The data from these searches are used for results in Sects. 7.5 and 7.8, where the partial widths for invisible and/or undetected decays of the Higgs boson are probed.

Hμμ

The Hμμ analysis [30] is a search in the distribution of the dimuon invariant mass, mμμ, for a narrow signal peak over a smoothly falling background dominated by Drell–Yan and top quark pair production. A sample of events with a pair of OS muons is split into mutually exclusive categories of differing expected signal-to-background ratios, based on the event topology and kinematic properties. Events with two or more jets are assigned to 2-jet categories, while the remaining events are assigned to untagged categories. The 2-jet events are divided into three categories using selection criteria based on the properties of the dimuon and the dijet systems: a VBF-tagged category, a boosted dimuon category, and a category with the remaining 2-jet events. The untagged events are distributed among twelve categories based on the dimuon pT and the pseudorapidity of the two muons, which are directly related to the mμμ experimental resolution.

The mμμ spectrum in each event category is fitted with parameterized signal and background shapes to estimate the number of signal events, in a procedure similar to that of the Hγγ analysis, described in Sect. 2.1. The uncertainty due to the choice of the functional form used to model the background is incorporated in a different manner than in the Hγγ analysis, namely by introducing an additive systematic uncertainty in the number of expected signal events. This uncertainty is estimated by evaluating the bias of the signal function plus nominal background function when fitted to pseudo-data generated from alternative background functions. The largest absolute value of this difference for all the alternative background functions considered and Higgs boson mass hypotheses between 120 and 150GeV is taken as the systematic uncertainty and applied uniformly for all Higgs boson mass hypotheses. The effect of these systematic uncertainties on the final result is sizeable, about 75 % of the overall statistical uncertainty.

The data from this analysis are used for the results in Sect. 7.4, where the scaling of the couplings with the mass of the involved particles is explored.

Combination methodology

The combination of Higgs boson measurements requires the simultaneous analysis of the data selected by all individual analyses, accounting for all statistical uncertainties, systematic uncertainties, and their correlations.

The overall statistical methodology used in this combination was developed by the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations in the context of the LHC Higgs Combination Group and is described in Refs. [15, 180, 181]. The chosen test statistic, q, is based on the profile likelihood ratio and is used to determine how signal-like or background-like the data are. Systematic uncertainties are incorporated in the analysis via nuisance parameters that are treated according to the frequentist paradigm. Below we give concise definitions of statistical quantities that we use for characterizing the outcome of the measurements. Results presented herein are obtained using asymptotic formulae [182], including routines available in the RooStats package [183].

Characterizing an excess of events: p-value and significance

To quantify the presence of an excess of events over the expected background we use the test statistic where the likelihood appearing in the numerator corresponds to the background-only hypothesis:

q0=-2lnL(data|b,θ^0)L(data|μ^s+b,θ^),withμ^>0, 1

where s stands for the signal expected for the SM Higgs boson, μ is a signal strength modifier introduced to accommodate deviations from the SM Higgs boson predictions, b stands for backgrounds, and θ represents nuisance parameters describing systematic uncertainties. The value θ^0 maximizes the likelihood in the numerator under the background-only hypothesis, μ=0, while μ^ and θ^ define the point at which the likelihood reaches its global maximum.

The quantity p0, henceforth referred to as the local p-value, is defined as the probability, under the background-only hypothesis, to obtain a value of q0 at least as large as that observed in data, q0data:

p0=Pq0q0data|b. 2

The local significance z of a signal-like excess is then computed according to the one-sided Gaussian tail convention:

p0=z+12πexp(-x2/2)dx. 3

It is important to note that very small p-values should be interpreted with caution, since systematic biases and uncertainties in the underlying model are only known to a given precision.

Extracting signal model parameters

Signal model parameters a, such as the signal strength modifier μ, are evaluated from scans of the profile likelihood ratio q(a):

q(a)=-2ΔlnL=-2lnL(data|s(a)+b,θ^a)L(data|s(a^)+b,θ^). 4

The parameter values a^ and θ^ correspond to the global maximum likelihood and are called the best-fit set. The post-fit model, obtained using the best-fit set, is used when deriving expected quantities. The post-fit model corresponds to the parametric bootstrap described in the statistics literature and includes information gained in the fit regarding the values of all parameters [184, 185].

The 68 and 95 % confidence level (CL) confidence intervals for a given parameter of interest, ai, are evaluated from q(ai)=1.00 and q(ai)=3.84, respectively, with all other unconstrained model parameters treated in the same way as the nuisance parameters. The two-dimensional (2D) 68 and 95 % CL confidence regions for pairs of parameters are derived from q(ai,aj)=2.30 and q(ai,aj)=5.99, respectively. This implies that boundaries of 2D confidence regions projected on either parameter axis are not identical to the one-dimensional (1D) confidence interval for that parameter. All results are given using the chosen test statistic, leading to approximate CL confidence intervals when there are no large non-Gaussian uncertainties [186188], as is the case here. If the best-fit value is on a physical boundary, the theoretical basis for computing intervals in this manner is lacking. However, we have found that for the results in this paper, the intervals in those conditions are numerically similar to those obtained by the method of Ref. [189].

Grouping of channels by decay and production tags

The event samples selected by each of the different analyses are mutually exclusive. The selection criteria can, in many cases, define high-purity selections of the targeted decay or production modes, as shown in Table 1. For example, the ttH-tagged event categories of the Hγγ analysis are pure in terms of γγ decays and are expected to contain less than 10 % of non-ttH events. However, in some cases such purities cannot be achieved for both production and decay modes.

Mixed production mode composition is common in VBF-tagged event categories where the ggH contribution can be as high as 50 %, and in VH tags where WH and ZH mixtures are common.

For decay modes, mixed composition is more marked for signatures involving light leptons and ETmiss, where both the HWW and Hττ decays may contribute. This can be seen in Table 1, where some VH-tag analyses targeting HWW decays have a significant contribution from Hττ decays and vice versa. This is also the case in the eμ channel in the Hττ analysis, in particular in the 2-jet VBF tag categories, where the contribution from HWW decays is sizeable and concentrated at low values of mττ, entailing a genuine sensitivity of these categories to HWW decays. On the other hand, in the ee and μμ channels of the Hττ analysis, the contribution from HWW is large when integrated over the full range of the MVA observable used, but given that the analysis is optimized for ττ decays the contribution from HWW is not concentrated in the regions with largest signal-to-background ratio, and provides little added sensitivity.

Another case of mixed decay mode composition is present in the analyses targeting ttH production, where the Hleptons decay selection includes sizeable contributions from HWW and Hττ decays, and to a lesser extent also from HZZ decays. The mixed composition is a consequence of designing the analysis to have the highest possible sensitivity to the ttH production mode. The analysis of ttH with Hτhτh decay has an expected signal composition that is dominated by Hττ decays, followed by HWW decays, and a smaller contribution of Hbb decays. Finally, in the analysis of ttH with Hbb, there is an event category of the lepton+jets channel that requires six or more jets and two b-tagged jets where the signal composition is expected to be 58 % from Hbb decays, 24 % from HWW decays, and the remaining 18 % from other SM decay modes; in the dilepton channel, the signal composition in the event category requiring four or more jets and two b-tagged jets is expected to be 45 % from Hbb decays, 35 % from HWW decays, and 14 % from Hττ decays.

When results are grouped according to the decay tag, each individual category is assigned to the decay mode group that, in the SM, is expected to dominate the sensitivity in that channel. In particular,

  • Hγγ tagged includes only categories from the Hγγ analysis of Ref. [18].

  • HZZ tagged includes only categories from the HZZ analysis of Ref. [16].

  • HWW tagged includes all the channels from the HWW analysis of Ref. [22] and the channels from the analysis of ttH with Hleptons of Ref. [29].

  • Hττ tagged includes all the channels from the Hττ analysis of Ref. [23] and the channels from the analysis of ttH targeting Hτhτh of Ref. [29].

  • Hbb tagged includes all the channels of the analysis of VH with Hbb of Ref. [21] and the channels from the analysis of ttH targeting Hbb of Ref. [29].

  • Hμμ tagged includes only categories from the Hμμ analysis of Ref. [30].

When results are grouped by the production tag, the same reasoning of assignment by preponderance of composition is followed, using the information in Table 1.

In the combined analyses, all contributions in a given production tag or decay mode group are considered as signal and scaled accordingly.

Expected differences with respect to the results of input analyses

The grouping of channels described in Sect. 3.3 is among the reasons why the results of the combination may seem to differ from those of the individual published analyses. In addition, the combined analysis takes into account correlations among several sources of systematic uncertainty. Care is taken to understand the post-fit behaviour of the parameters that are correlated between analyses, both in terms of the post-fit parameter values and uncertainties. Finally, the combination is evaluated at a value of mH that is not the value that was used in some of the individual published analyses, entailing changes to the expected production cross sections and branching fractions of the SM Higgs boson. Changes are sizeable in some cases:

  • In Refs. [16, 22] the results for HZZ4 and HWWνν are evaluated for mH=125.6GeV, the mass measured in the HZZ4 analysis. In the present combination, the results are evaluated for mH=125.0GeV, the mass measured from the combined analysis of the Hγγ and HZZ4 measurements, presented in Sect. 4.1. For values of mH in this region, the branching fractions for HZZ and HWW vary rapidly with mH. For the change of mH in question, B(HZZ,mH=125.0GeV)/B(HZZ,mH=125.6GeV)=0.95 and B(HWW,mH=125.0GeV)/B(HWW,mH=125.6GeV)=0.96 [171].

  • The expected production cross sections for the SM Higgs boson depend on mH. For the change in mH discussed above, the total production cross sections for 7 and 8TeV collisions vary similarly: σtot(mH=125.0GeV)/σtot(mH=125.6GeV)1.01. While the variation of the total production cross section is dominated by the ggH production process, the variation is about 1.005 for VBF, around 1.016 for VH, and around 1.014 for ttH  [171].

  • The Hττ analysis of Ref. [23] focused on exploring the coupling of the Higgs boson to the tau lepton. For this reason nearly all results in Ref. [23] were obtained by treating the HWW contribution as a background, set to the SM expectation. In the present combined analysis, both the Hττ and HWW contributions are considered as signal in the ττ decay tag analysis. This treatment leads to an increased sensitivity to the presence of a Higgs boson that decays into both ττ and WW.

  • The search for invisible Higgs decays of Ref. [28] includes a modest contribution to the sensitivity from the analysis targeting ZH production with Zbb decays. The events selected by that analysis overlap with those of the analysis of VH production with Hbb decays, and are therefore not considered in this combination. Given the limited sensitivity of that search, the overall sensitivity to invisible decays is not significantly impacted.

  • The contribution from the ggZH process was not included in Ref. [21] as calculations for the cross section as a function of pT(Z) were not available. Since then, the search for VH production with Hbb has been augmented by the use of recent NLO calculations for the ggZH contribution [176179]. In the Z(νν)H(bb) and Z()H(bb) channels, the addition of this process leads to an increase of the expected signal yields by 10 % to 30 % for pT(Z) around and above 150GeV. When combined with the unchanged WH channels, the overall expected sensitivity for VH production with Hbb increases by about 10 %.

In all analyses used, the contribution from associated production of a Higgs boson with a bottom quark pair, bbH, is neglected; in inclusive selections this contribution is much smaller than the uncertainties in the gluon fusion production process, whereas in exclusive categories it has been found that the jets associated with the bottom quarks are so soft that the efficiency to select such events is low enough and no sensitivity is lost. In the future, with more data, it may be possible to devise experimental selections that permit the study of the bbH production mode as predicted by the SM.

Mass measurement and direct limits on the natural width

In this section we first present a measurement of the mass of the new boson from the combined analysis of the high-resolution Hγγ and HZZ4 channels. We then proceed to set direct limits on its natural width.

Mass of the observed state

Figure 1 shows the 68 % CL confidence regions for two parameters of interest, the signal strength relative to the SM expectation, μ=σ/σSM, and the mass, mH, obtained from the HZZ4 and γγ channels, which have excellent mass resolution. The combined 68 % CL confidence region, bounded by a black curve in Fig. 1, is calculated assuming the relative event yield between the two channels as predicted by the SM, while the overall signal strength is left as a free parameter.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

The 68 % CL confidence regions for the signal strength σ/σSM versus the mass of the boson mH for the Hγγ and HZZ4 final states, and their combination. The symbol σ/σSM denotes the production cross section times the relevant branching fractions, relative to the SM expectation. In this combination, the relative signal strength for the two decay modes is set to the expectation for the SM Higgs boson

To extract the value of mH in a way that is not completely dependent on the SM prediction for the production and decay ratios, the signal strength modifiers for the (ggH,ttH)γγ, (VBF,VH)γγ, and ppHZZ4 processes are taken as independent, unconstrained, parameters. The signal in all channels is assumed to be due to a single state with mass mH. The best-fit value of mH and its uncertainty are extracted from a scan of the combined test statistic q(mH) with the three signal strength modifiers profiled together with all other nuisance parameters; i.e. the signal strength modifiers float freely in the fits performed to scan q(mH). Figure 2 (left) shows the scan of the test statistic as a function of the mass mH separately for the Hγγ and HZZ4 channels, and for their combination. The intersections of the q(mH) curves with the thick horizontal line at 1.00 and thin line at 3.84 define the 68 % and 95 % CL confidence intervals for the mass of the observed particle, respectively. These intervals include both the statistical and systematic uncertainties. The mass is measured to be mH=125.02-0.31+0.29GeV. The less precise evaluations from the HWW analysis [22], mH=128-5+7GeV, and from the Hττ analysis [23], mH=122±7GeV, are compatible with this result.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

(Left) Scan of the test statistic q(mH)=-2ΔlnL versus the mass of the boson mH for the Hγγ and HZZ4 final states separately and for their combination. Three independent signal strengths, (ggH,ttH)γγ, (VBF,VH)γγ, and ppHZZ4, are profiled together with all other nuisance parameters. (Right) Scan of the test statistic q(mHγγ-mH4) versus the difference between two individual mass measurements for the same model of signal strengths used in the left panel

To evaluate the statistical component of the overall uncertainty, we also perform a scan of q(mH) fixing all nuisance parameters to their best-fit values, except those related to the Hγγ background models; given that the Hγγ background distributions are modelled from fits to data, their degrees of freedom encode fluctuations which are statistical in nature. The result is shown by the dashed curve in Fig. 2 (left). The crossings of the dashed curve with the thick horizontal line define the 68 % CL confidence interval for the statistical uncertainty in the mass measurement: -0.27+0.26GeV. We derive the systematic uncertainty assuming that the total uncertainty is the sum in quadrature of the statistical and systematic components; the full result is mH=125.02-0.27+0.26(stat)-0.15+0.14(syst)GeV. The median expected uncertainty is evaluated using an Asimov pseudo-data sample [182] constructed from the best-fit values obtained when testing for the compatibility of the mass measurement in the Hγγ and HZZ4 channels. The expected uncertainty thus derived is -0.25+0.26(stat)±0.14(syst)GeV, in good agreement with the observation in data. As a comparison, the median expected uncertainty is also derived by constructing an Asimov pseudo-data sample as above except that the signal strength modifiers are set to unity (as expected in the SM) and mHγγ=mH4=125GeV, leading to an expected uncertainty of ±0.28(stat)±0.13(syst)GeV. As could be anticipated, the statistical uncertainty is slightly larger given that the observed signal strength in the Hγγ channel is larger than unity, and the systematic uncertainty is slightly smaller given the small mass difference between the two channels that is observed in data.

To quantify the compatibility of the Hγγ and HZZ mass measurements with each other, we perform a scan of the test statistic q(mHγγ-mH4), as a function of the difference between the two mass measurements. Besides the three signal strength modifiers, there are two additional parameters in this test: the mass difference and mHγγ. In the scan, the three signal strengths and mHγγ are profiled together with all nuisance parameters. The result from the scan shown in Fig. 2 (right) is mHγγ-mH4=-0.89-0.57+0.56GeV. From evaluating q(mHγγ-mH4=0) it can be concluded that the mass measurements in Hγγ and HZZ4 agree at the 1.6σ level.

To assess the dependency of the result on the SM Higgs boson hypothesis, the measurement of the mass is repeated using the same channels, but with the following two sets of assumptions: (i) allowing a common signal strength modifier to float, which corresponds to the result in Fig. 1, and (ii) constraining the relative production cross sections and branching fractions to the SM predictions, i.e. μ=1. The results from these two alternative measurements differ by less than 0.1GeV from the main result, both in terms of the best-fit value and the uncertainties.

Direct limits on the width of the observed state

For mH125GeV the SM Higgs boson is predicted to be narrow, with a total width ΓSM4MeV. From the study of off-shell Higgs boson production, CMS has previously set an indirect limit on the total width, Γtot/ΓSM<5.4(8.0) observed (expected) at the 95 % CL [27]. While that result is about two orders of magnitude better than the experimental mass resolution, it relies on assumptions on the underlying theory, such as the absence of contributions to Higgs boson off-shell production from particles beyond the standard model. In contrast, a direct limit does not rely on such assumptions and is only limited by the experimental resolution.

The best experimental mass resolution, achieved in the Hγγ and HZZ4 analyses, is typically between 1GeV and 3GeV, as shown in Table 1. The resolution depends on the energy, rapidity, and azimuthal angle of the decay products, and on the flavour of the leptons in the case of the HZZ4 decay. If found inconsistent with the expected detector resolution, the total width measured in data could suggest the production of a resonance with a greater intrinsic width or the production of two quasi-degenerate states.

To perform this measurement the signal models in the Hγγ and HZZ4 analyses allow for a natural width using the relativistic Breit–Wigner distribution, as described in Refs. [16, 18]. Figure 3 shows the likelihood scan as a function of the assumed natural width. The mass of the boson and a common signal strength are profiled along with all other nuisance parameters. The dashed lines show the expected results for the SM Higgs boson. For the Hγγ channel the observed (expected) upper limit at the 95 % CL is 2.4 (3.1)GeV. For the HZZ4 channel the observed (expected) upper limit at the 95 % CL is 3.4 (2.8)GeV. For the combination of the two analyses, the observed (expected) upper limit at the 95 % CL is 1.7 (2.3)GeV.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Likelihood scan as a function of the width of the boson. The continuous (dashed) lines show the observed (expected) results for the Hγγ analysis, the HZZ4 analysis, and their combination. The data are consistent with ΓSM4MeV and for the combination of the two channels the observed (expected) upper limit on the width at the 95 % CL is 1.7 (2.3)GeV

Significance of the observations in data

This section provides an assessment of the significance of the observed excesses at the best-fit mass value, mH=125.0GeV.

Table 2 summarizes the median expected and observed local significance for a SM Higgs boson mass of 125.0GeV from the different decay mode tags, grouped as described in Sect. 3.3. The value of mH is fixed to the best-fit combined measurement presented in Sect. 4.1. The values of the expected significance are evaluated using the post-fit expected background rates and the signal rates expected from the SM. In the three diboson decay mode tags, the significance is close to, or above, 5σ. In the ττ decay mode tag the significance is above 3σ.

Table 2.

The observed and median expected significances of the excesses for each decay mode group, assuming mH=125.0GeV. The channels are grouped by decay mode tag as described in Sect. 3.3; when there is a difference in the channels included with respect to the published results for the individual channels, the result for the grouping used in those publications is also given

Channel grouping Significance (σ)
Observed Expected
HZZ tagged 6.5 6.3
Hγγ tagged 5.6 5.3
HWW tagged 4.7 5.4
Grouped as in Ref. [22] 4.3 5.4
Hττ tagged 3.8 3.9
Grouped as in Ref. [23] 3.9 3.9
Hbb tagged 2.0 2.6
Grouped as in Ref. [21] 2.1 2.5
Hμμ tagged <0.1 0.4

Differences between the results in Table 2 and the individual publications are understood in terms of the discussion in Sects. 3.3 and 3.4, namely the grouping of channels by decay mode tag, the change of the mH value at which the significance of the HZZ4 and HWW analyses is evaluated, and the treatment of HWW as part of the signal, instead of background, in the Hττ analysis.

Finally, the observation of the Hγγ and HZZ4 decay modes indicates that the new particle is a boson, and the diphoton decay implies that its spin is different from unity [190, 191]. Other observations, beyond the scope of this paper, disfavour spin-1 and spin-2 hypotheses and, assuming that the boson has zero spin, are consistent with the pure scalar hypothesis, while disfavouring the pure pseudoscalar hypothesis [16, 22, 41].

Compatibility of the observed yields with the SM Higgs boson hypothesis

The results presented in this section focus on the Higgs boson production and decay modes, which can be factorized under the narrow-width approximation, leading to NijσiBj, where Nij represents the event yield for the combination of production mode i and decay mode j, σi is the production cross section for production process i, and Bj is the branching fraction into decay mode j. Studies where the production and decay modes are interpreted in terms of underlying couplings of particles to the Higgs boson are presented in Sect. 7.

The size of the current data set permits many compatibility tests between the observed excesses and the expected SM Higgs boson signal. These compatibility tests do not constitute measurements of any physics parameters per se, but rather allow one to probe for deviations of the various observations from the SM expectations. The tests evaluate the compatibility of the data observed in the different channels with the expectations for the SM Higgs boson with a mass equal to the best-fit value found in Sect. 4.1, mH=125.0GeV.

This section is organized by increasing degree of complexity of the deviations being probed. In Sect. 6.1 we assess the compatibility of the overall signal strength for all channels combined with the SM Higgs hypothesis. In Sect. 6.2 the compatibility is assessed by production tag group, decay tag group, and production and decay tag group. We then turn to the study of production modes. Using the detailed information on the expected SM Higgs production contributions, Sect. 6.3 discusses, for each decay tag group, the results of considering two signal strengths, one scaling the ggH and ttH contributions, and the other scaling the VBF and VH contributions. Then, assuming the expected relative SM Higgs branching fractions, Sect. 6.4 provides a combined analysis for signal strengths scaling the ggH, VBF, VH, and ttH contributions individually. Turning to the decay modes, Sect. 6.5 performs combined analyses of signal strength ratios between different decay modes, where some uncertainties from theory and some experimental uncertainties cancel out. Finally, using the structure of the matrix of production and decay mode signal strengths, Sect. 6.6 tests for the possibility that the observations are due to the presence of more than one state degenerate in mass.

Overall signal strength

The best-fit value for the common signal strength modifier μ^=σ^/σSM, obtained from the combined analysis of all channels, provides the simplest compatibility test. In the formal fit, μ^ is allowed to become negative if the observed number of events is smaller than the expected yield for the background-only hypothesis. The observed μ^, assuming mH=125.0GeV, is 1.00-0.13+0.14, consistent with unity, the expectation for the SM Higgs boson. This value is shown as the vertical bands in the three panels of Fig. 4.

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

Values of the best-fit σ/σSM for the overall combined analysis (solid vertical line) and separate combinations grouped by production mode tag, predominant decay mode, or both. The σ/σSM ratio denotes the production cross section times the relevant branching fractions, relative to the SM expectation. The vertical band shows the overall σ/σSM uncertainty. The horizontal bars indicate the ±1 standard deviation uncertainties in the best-fit σ/σSM values for the individual combinations; these bars include both statistical and systematic uncertainties. (Top left) Combinations grouped by analysis tags targeting individual production mechanisms; the excess in the ttH-tagged combination is largely driven by the ttH-tagged Hγγ and HWW channels as can be seen in the bottom panel. (Top right) Combinations grouped by predominant decay mode. (Bottom) Combinations grouped by predominant decay mode and additional tags targeting a particular production mechanism

The total uncertainty can be broken down into a statistical component (stat); a component associated with the uncertainties related to renormalization and factorization scale variations, parton distribution functions, branching fractions, and underlying event description (theo); and any other systematic uncertainties (syst). The result is 1.00±0.09(stat)-0.07+0.08(theo)±0.07(syst). Evolution of the SM predictions may not only reduce the associated uncertainties from theory, but also change the central value given above.

Grouping by predominant decay mode and/or production tag

One step in going beyond a single signal strength modifier is to evaluate the signal strength in groups of channels from different analyses. The groups chosen reflect the different production tags, predominant decay modes, or both. Once the fits for each group are performed, a simultaneous fit to all groups is also performed to assess the compatibility of the results with the SM Higgs boson hypothesis.

Figure 4 shows the μ^ values obtained in different independent combinations of channels for mH=125.0GeV, grouped by additional tags targeting events from particular production mechanisms, by predominant decay mode, or both. As discussed in Sect. 3.3, the expected purities of the different tagged samples vary substantially. Therefore, these plots cannot be interpreted as compatibility tests for pure production mechanisms or decay modes, which are studied in Sect. 6.4.

For each type of grouping, the level of compatibility with the SM Higgs boson cross section can be quantified by the value of the test statistic function of the signal strength parameters simultaneously fitted for the N channels considered in the group, μ1,μ2,,μN,

qμ=-2ΔlnL=-2lnL(data|μi,θ^μi)L(data|μ^i,θ^) 5

evaluated for μ1=μ2==μN=1. For each type of grouping, the corresponding qμ(μ1=μ2==μN=1) from the simultaneous fit of N signal strength parameters is expected to behave asymptotically as a χ2 distribution with N degrees of freedom (dof).

The results for the four independent combinations grouped by production mode tag are depicted in Fig. 4 (top left). An excess can be seen for the ttH-tagged combination, due to the observations in the ttH-tagged Hγγ and Hleptons analyses that can be appreciated from the bottom panel. The simultaneous fit of the signal strengths for each group of production process tags results in χ2/dof=5.5/4 and an asymptotic p-value of 0.24, driven by the excess observed in the group of analyses tagging the ttH production process.

The results for the five independent combinations grouped by predominant decay mode are shown in Fig. 4 (top right). The simultaneous fit of the corresponding five signal strengths yields χ2/dof=1.0/5 and an asymptotic p-value of 0.96.

The results for sixteen individual combinations grouped by production tag and predominant decay mode are shown in Fig. 4 (bottom). The simultaneous fit of the corresponding signal strengths gives a χ2/dof=10.5/16, which corresponds to an asymptotic p-value of 0.84.

The p-values above indicate that these different ways of splitting the overall signal strength into groups related to the production mode tag, decay mode tag, or both, all yield results compatible with the SM prediction for the Higgs boson, μ=μi=1. The result of the ttH-tagged combination is compatible with the SM hypothesis at the 2.0σ level.

Fermion- and boson-mediated production processes and their ratio

The four main Higgs boson production mechanisms can be associated with either couplings of the Higgs boson to fermions (ggH and ttH) or vector bosons (VBF and VH). Therefore, a combination of channels associated with a particular decay mode tag, but explicitly targeting different production mechanisms, can be used to test the relative strengths of the couplings to the vector bosons and fermions, mainly the top quark, given its importance in ggH production. The categorization of the different channels into production mode tags is not pure. Contributions from the different signal processes, evaluated from Monte Carlo simulation and shown in Table 1, are taken into account in the fits, including theory and experimental uncertainties; the factors used to scale the expected contributions from the different production modes are shown in Table 3 and do not depend on the decay mode. For a given decay mode, identical deviations of μVBF,VH and μggH,ttH from unity may also be due to a departure of the decay partial width from the SM expectation.

Table 3.

Parameterization used to scale the expected SM Higgs boson yields from the different production modes when obtaining the results presented in Table 5 and Fig. 5 (left). The signal strength modifiers μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH, common to all decay modes, are associated with the ggH and ttH and with the VBF and VH production mechanisms, respectively

Parameters of interest: μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH
Signal model Hγγ HZZ HWW Hττ Hbb
ggH μggH,ttH μggH,ttH μggH,ttH μggH,ttH μggH,ttH
VBF μVBF,VH μVBF,VH μVBF,VH μVBF,VH μVBF,VH
VH μVBF,VH μVBF,VH μVBF,VH μVBF,VH μVBF,VH
ttH μggH,ttH μggH,ttH μggH,ttH μggH,ttH μggH,ttH

Figure 5 (left) shows the 68 % CL confidence regions for the signal strength modifiers associated with the ggH and ttH and with the VBF and VH production mechanisms, μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH, respectively. The five sets of contours correspond to the five predominant decay mode groups, introduced in Sect. 3.3. It can be seen in Fig. 5 (left) how the analyses in the Hbb decay group constrain μVBF,VH more than μggH,ttH, reflecting the larger sensitivity of the analysis of VH production with Hbb with respect to the analysis of ttH production with Hbb. An almost complementary situation can be found for the HZZ analysis, where the data constrain μggH,ttH better than μVBF,VH, reflecting the fact that the analysis is more sensitive to ggH, the most abundant production mode. The SM Higgs boson expectation of (1,1) is within the 68 % CL confidence regions for all predominant decay groups. The best-fit values for each decay tag group are given in Table 5.

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

(Left) The 68 % CL confidence regions (bounded by the solid curves) for the signal strength of the ggH and ttH and of the VBF and VH production mechanisms, μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH, respectively. The crosses indicate the best-fit values obtained in each group of predominant decay modes: γγ, ZZ, WW, ττ, and bb. The diamond at (1,1) indicates the expected values for the SM Higgs boson. (Right) Likelihood scan versus the ratio μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH, combined for all channels. The fit for μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH is performed while profiling the five μggH,ttH parameters, one per visible decay mode, as shown in Table 4. The solid curve represents the observed result in data while the dashed curve indicates the expected median result in the presence of the SM Higgs boson. Crossings with the horizontal thick and thin lines denote the 68 % CL and 95 % CL confidence intervals, respectively

Table 5.

The best-fit values for the signal strength of the VBF and VH and of the ggH and ttH production mechanisms, μVBF,VH and μggH,ttH, respectively, for mH=125.0GeV. The channels are grouped by decay mode tag as described in Sect. 3.3. The observed and median expected results for the ratio of μVBF,VH to μggH,ttH together with their uncertainties are also given for the full combination. In the full combination, μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH is determined while profiling the five μggH,ttH parameters, one per decay mode, as shown in Table 4

Channel grouping Best fit (μggH,ttH,μVBF,VH)
Hγγ tagged (1.07,1.24)
HZZ tagged (0.88,1.75)
HWW tagged (0.87,0.66)
Hττ tagged (0.52,1.21)
Hbb tagged (0.55,0.85)
Combined best fit μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH
Observed (expected)
1.25-0.44+0.62 (1.00-0.35+0.49)

The ratio of μVBF,VH and μggH,ttH provides a compatibility check with the SM Higgs boson expectation that can be combined across all decay modes. To perform the measurement of μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH, the SM Higgs boson signal yields in the different production processes and decay modes are parameterized according to the scaling factors presented in Table 4. The fit is performed simultaneously in all channels of all analyses and takes into account, within each channel, the full detail of the expected SM Higgs contributions from the different production processes and decay modes.

Table 4.

Parameterization used to scale the expected SM Higgs boson yields for the different production processes and decay modes when obtaining the μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH results presented in Table 5 and Fig. 5 (right)

Parameter of interest: R=μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH
Other parameters: μggH,ttHγγ, μggH,ttHZZ, μggH,ttHWW, μggH,ttHττ, and μggH,ttHbb
Signal model Hγγ HZZ HWW Hττ Hbb
ggH μggH,ttHγγ μggH,ttHZZ μggH,ttHWW μggH,ttHττ μggH,ttHbb
VBF RμggH,ttHγγ RμggH,ttHZZ RμggH,ttHWW RμggH,ttHττ RμggH,ttHbb
VH RμggH,ttHγγ RμggH,ttHZZ RμggH,ttHWW RμggH,ttHττ RμggH,ttHbb
ttH μggH,ttHγγ μggH,ttHZZ μggH,ttHWW μggH,ttHττ μggH,ttHbb

Figure 5 (right) shows the likelihood scan of the data for μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH, while the bottom part of Table 5 shows the corresponding values; the best-fit μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH is observed to be 1.25-0.44+0.62, compatible with the expectation for the SM Higgs boson, μVBF,VH/μggH,ttH=1.

Individual production modes

While the production modes can be grouped by the type of interaction involved in the production of the SM Higgs boson, as done in Sect. 6.3, the data set and analyses available allow us to explore signal strength modifiers for different production modes, μggH, μVBF, μVH, and μttH. These scaling factors are applied to the expected signal contributions from the SM Higgs boson according to their production mode, as shown in Table 6. It is assumed that the relative values of the branching fractions are those expected for the SM Higgs boson. This assumption is relaxed, in different ways, in Sects. 6.5 and 6.6.

Table 6.

Parameterization used to scale the expected SM Higgs boson yields of the different production and decay modes when obtaining the results presented in Fig. 6

Parameters of interest: μggH, μVBF, μVH, and μttH
Signal model Hγγ HZZ HWW Hττ Hbb
ggH μggH μggH μggH μggH μggH
VBF μVBF μVBF μVBF μVBF μVBF
VH μVH μVH μVH μVH μVH
ttH μttH μttH μttH μttH μttH

Figure 6 summarizes the results of likelihood scans for the four parameters of interest described in Table 6 in terms of the 68 % CL (inner) and 95 % CL (outer) confidence intervals. When scanning the likelihood of the data as a function of one parameter, the other parameters are profiled.

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

Likelihood scan results for μggH, μVBF, μVH, and μttH. The inner bars represent the 68 % CL confidence intervals while the outer bars represent the 95 % CL confidence intervals. When scanning each individual parameter, the three other parameters are profiled. The SM values of the relative branching fractions are assumed for the different decay modes

Table 7 shows the best-fit results for the 7TeV and 8TeV data sets separately, as well as for the full combined analysis. Based on the combined likelihood ratio values for each parameter, Table 7 also shows the observed significance, the expected significance, and the pull of the results with respect to the SM hypothesis. The observed significance is derived from the observed likelihood ratio for the background-only hypothesis, μi=0, in data. The expected significance is derived from the likelihood ratio for μi=0 obtained using the median expected result for the SM Higgs boson. The pull with respect to the SM hypothesis is derived from the observed likelihood ratio for μi=1; by definition, the expected pull with respect to the SM hypothesis is zero.

Table 7.

The best-fit results for independent signal strengths scaling the ggH, VBF, VH, and ttH production processes; the expected and observed significances with respect to the background-only hypothesis, μi=0; and the pull of the observation with respect to the SM hypothesis, μi=1. The best-fit results are also provided separately for the 7TeV and 8TeV data sets, for which the predicted cross sections differ. These results assume that the relative values of the branching fractions are those predicted for the SM Higgs boson

Parameter Best-fit result (68 % CL) Significance (σ) Pull to SM
7TeV 8TeV Combined Observed Expected (σ)
μggH 1.03-0.33+0.37 0.79-0.17+0.19 0.85-0.16+0.19 6.6 7.4 -0.8
μVBF 1.77-0.90+0.99 1.02-0.36+0.39 1.16-0.34+0.37 3.7 3.3 +0.4
μVH <0.99 0.96-0.39+0.41 0.92-0.36+0.38 2.7 2.9 -0.2
μttH <2.19 3.27-1.04+1.20 2.90-0.94+1.08 3.5 1.2 +2.2

The μggH best-fit value is found to be 0.85-0.16+0.19. After calculating the component of the uncertainty that is statistical in nature (stat) and the component related to the theory inputs (theo), one can subtract them in quadrature from the total uncertainty and assign the remainder as the systematic uncertainty (syst), yielding 0.85-0.09+0.11(stat)-0.08+0.11(theo)-0.09+0.10(syst). Advances in the calculation of the ggH cross section, e.g. when considering higher-order effects, may not only reduce the uncertainty above, but also shift the central value. The signal strengths for the VBF and VH production modes are assessed independently. Individual likelihood scans are performed as a function of μVBF (or μVH), allowing the modifiers associated with the other production processes to float in the fit together with the nuisance parameters. In data, the best-fit result for μVBF is 1.16-0.34+0.37, while for μVH it is 0.92-0.36+0.38. For the ttH production mode, the best-fit value for μttH is found to be 2.90-0.94+1.08. The results for VBF, VH, and ttH are driven by the corresponding tagged categories, while the contribution from ggH is constrained by the 0-jet and untagged categories.

The results in Table 7 show a clear observation of Higgs bosons produced through gluon fusion, and evidence for the production of Higgs bosons through vector boson fusion, for which both the expected and observed significances are above the 3σ level. For VH production, the expected significance is 2.9σ and the observed significance is 2.7σ. The large best-fit value for μttH is compatible with the results presented and discussed in Sect. 6.2; the data are compatible with the μttH=1 hypothesis at the 2.2σ level. Because of the different parameterizations used, this significance is not exactly the same as that found in Sect. 6.2 when considering the combination of ttH-tagged categories.

Ratios between decay modes

Some of the largest uncertainties in SM Higgs predictions are related to the production cross sections. In an attempt to evade those uncertainties, it has been proposed [192, 193] to perform measurements of ratios of the signal strengths in different decay modes, λyy,xx=βyy/βxx, where βxx=B(Hxx)/B(Hxx)SM and B denotes a branching fraction. In such βxx ratios, uncertainties related to the production and decay predictions for the Higgs boson, as well as some experimental uncertainties, may cancel out. On the other hand, the uncertainty in a given ratio will reflect the combined statistical uncertainties of both the yy and xx decay modes.

To probe the different λyy,xx, the expected signal yields for the different production and decay modes are scaled by the factors shown in Table 8. To reduce the dependency of the results on the expected structure of the SM Higgs production cross section, the μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH parameters are introduced and allowed to float independently. Therefore, these measurements only assume the SM ratio of ggH and ttH cross sections and the ratio of VBF and VH cross sections.

Table 8.

Parameterization used to scale the expected SM Higgs boson yields of the different production and decay modes when obtaining the results presented in Table 9. The μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH parameters are introduced to reduce the dependency of the results on the SM expectation

Parameters of interest: λyy,xx, λii,xx, λjj,xx, and λkk,xx
Other parameters: μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH
Signal model Hxx Hyy Hii Hjj Hkk
ggH μggH,ttH μggH,ttHλyy,xx μggH,ttHλii,xx μggH,ttHλjj,xx μggH,ttHλkk,xx
VBF μVBF,VH μVBF,VHλyy,xx μVBF,VHλii,xx μVBF,VHλjj,xx μVBF,VHλkk,xx
VH μVBF,VH μVBF,VHλyy,xx μVBF,VHλii,xx μVBF,VHλjj,xx μVBF,VHλkk,xx
ttH μggH,ttH μggH,ttHλyy,xx μggH,ttHλii,xx μggH,ttHλjj,xx μggH,ttHλkk,xx

Given the five decay modes that are currently accessible, four ratios can be probed at a time. For example, the choice of the Hγγ decay as denominator, xx=γγ, fixes the four ratio parameters to be λZZ,γγ, λbb,γγ, λWW,γγ, and λττ,γγ. When scanning the likelihood for the data as a function of a given λyy,xx ratio, the production cross section modifiers μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH, as well as the other three ratios, are profiled. The best-fit results for each choice of denominator are presented as the different rows in Table 9. While correlated uncertainties from theory and correlated experimental uncertainties may cancel out to some extent in these ratios, each ratio includes the statistical uncertainties from the two decay modes involved. For the available data set and analyses, the resulting statistical uncertainty dominates the total uncertainty. It can be seen that the SM expectation, λyy,xx=1, is inside the 68 % CL confidence interval for all measurements.

Table 9.

The best-fit results and 68 % CL confidence intervals for signal strength ratios of the decay mode in each column and the decay mode in each row, as modelled by the parameterization in Table 8. When the likelihood of the data is scanned as a function of each individual parameter, the three other parameters in the same row, as well the production cross sections modifiers μggH,ttH and μVBF,VH, are profiled. Since each row corresponds to an independent fit to data, the relation λyy,xx=1/λxx,yy is only approximately satisfied

Best-fit λcol,row Hγγ HZZ HWW Hττ Hbb
Hγγ 1 0.92-0.27+0.38 0.83-0.22+0.27 0.71-0.25+0.43 0.63-0.35+0.44
HZZ 1.06-0.31+0.44 1 0.88-0.26+0.38 0.76-0.30+0.43 0.65-0.37+0.59
HWW 1.21-0.31+0.41 1.10-0.33+0.44 1 0.86-0.32+0.42 0.74-0.41+0.61
Hττ 1.41-0.45+0.75 1.31-0.48+0.81 1.15-0.44+0.68 1 0.87-0.49+0.69
Hbb 1.60-0.70+1.86 1.48-0.70+1.85 1.32-0.59+1.57 1.14-0.52+1.34 1

Search for mass-degenerate states with different coupling structures

One assumption that is made in Sect. 7 when studying the couplings of the Higgs boson is that the observations are due to the manifestation of a single particle. Alternatively, a superposition of states with indistinguishable mass values is expected in models or theories beyond the SM [194197]. In this section we explore the validity of this assumption.

Taking advantage of the very good mass resolution in the Hγγ analysis, the presence of near mass-degenerate states has been previously probed down to mass differences between 2.5GeV and 4GeV without evidence for the presence of a second state [18]. Given the finite mass resolution, such searches are not sensitive to a mixture of states with mass values closer than the resolution itself, such that other reported measurements would integrate the contributions from both states.

In the case of two or more states with masses closer to each other than the experimental resolution, it becomes impossible to discern them using the mass observables. However, the distinction between states can still be made, provided that the states have different coupling structures, i.e. different coupling strengths to the SM particles. Using the measurements of the different production and decay tags, as well as the detailed knowledge of their expected composition in terms of production processes and decay modes, it is possible to test the compatibility of the observations with the expectations from a single state. Several authors discussed this possibility, proposing methods to look for deviations assuming that, in the presence of more than one state, the individual states would couple differently to the SM particles [198, 199].

A general parameterization of the 5×4 matrix, M, of signal strengths for the different production processes and decay modes is shown in Table 10. This parameterization has as many degrees of freedom as there are elements in the matrix and is completely general. Depending on whether there is one particle or more particles responsible for the observations in data, the algebraic properties of M, namely its rank, rank(M), will vary.

Table 10.

A completely general signal parameterization used to scale the expected yields of the 5×4 different production and decay modes. The particular choice of parameters is such that the single-particle parameterization shown in Table 11 is a nested model, i.e. it can be obtained by assuming λij=λi, where i runs through the production processes except ggH and j runs through the decay modes. The expectation for the SM Higgs boson is λij=μj=1. This parameterization is used in the denominator of the test statistic defined in Eq. (6)

All parameters constrained to be positive
Signal model Hγγ HZZ HWW Hττ Hbb
ggH μγγ μZZ μWW μττ μbb
VBF λVBFγγμγγ λVBFZZμZZ λVBFWWμWW λVBFττμττ λVBFbbμbb
VH λVHγγμγγ λVHZZμZZ λVHWWμWW λVHττμττ λVHbbμbb
ttH λttHγγμγγ λttHZZμZZ λttHWWμWW λttHττμττ λttHbbμbb

If there is only one state it follows that rank(M)=1, i.e. there should be one common multiplier per row and one common multiplier per column. A general matrix with rank(M)=1 can be parameterized as shown in Table 11. This parameterization can also be obtained by taking the most general 5×4 parameterization in Table 10 and assuming λij=λi, where i runs through the production processes except ggH and j runs through the decay modes. Given this relationship, the model for a general matrix with rank(M)=1 presented in Table 11 is nested, in the statistics sense, in the general parameterization of the 5×4 matrix presented in Table 10.

Table 11.

A general single-state parameterization used to scale the expected yields of the different production and decay modes. For this parameterization the matrix has rank(M)=1 by definition. It can be seen that this parameterization is nested in the general one presented in Table 10, and can be obtained by setting λij=λi, where i runs through the production processes except ggH and j runs through the decay modes. The expectation for the SM Higgs boson is λi=μj=1. This parameterization is used in the numerator of the test statistic defined in Eq. (6)

All parameters constrained to be positive
Signal model Hγγ HZZ HWW Hττ Hbb
ggH μγγ μZZ μWW μττ μbb
VBF λVBFμγγ λVBFμZZ λVBFμWW λVBFμττ λVBFμbb
VH λVHμγγ λVHμZZ λVHμWW λVHμττ λVHμbb
ttH λttHμγγ λttHμZZ λttHμWW λttHμττ λttHμbb

The expectation for the SM Higgs boson is a particular case of a rank 1 matrix, namely that for which λi=μj=1, where i runs through the production processes except ggH and j runs through the decay modes.

If there is more than one particle contributing to the observations, the structure of M may be such that rank(M)>1 as a consequence of the different interaction strengths of the individual, yet mass-degenerate, states.

The procedure to test for the presence of mass-degenerate states proposed in Ref. [200] takes into account both the fact that there may be missing matrix elements and the fact that there are uncertainties in the measurements, including their correlations. A profile likelihood ratio test statistic, qλ, is built using two different models for the structure of M, namely those presented in Tables 10 and 11,

qλ=-2lnL(data|λij=λ^i,μj^)L(data|λ^ij,μj^). 6

The test statistic qλ is a function of the 20 variables defined in Table 10: λij and μj, where the index i runs through the VBF, VH, and ttH production processes and the index j runs through the decay modes. In this likelihood ratio, the model in Table 10 is taken as the alternative hypothesis and corresponds to the so-called “saturated model” in statistics, as it contains as many degrees of freedom as there are elements in M. The null hypothesis model is the one presented in Table 11, which parameterizes M as a general rank 1 matrix, where all rows are multiples of each other, as expected for a single particle. If the observations are due to a single particle, the λi do not depend on the decay mode and the value of the qλ is not very large, since both hypotheses fit the data equally well. However, for a matrix with rank(M)1, the most general 5×4 matrix model will fit the data better than the general rank 1 matrix model and the value of qλ is expected to be large.

The compatibility of the value of the test statistic observed in data, qλobs, with the expectation from the SM is evaluated using pseudo-data samples randomly generated under the SM hypothesis. Figure 7 shows the distribution of qλ for the SM pseudo-data samples as well as the value observed in data, qλobs=12.2. Under the SM hypothesis, we find that the probability of observing a value of qλqλobs is (7.9±0.3)%, where the uncertainty reflects only the finite number of pseudo-data samples generated. Such a p-value corresponds to a deviation from the SM expectation of about 1.4σ. This small tension, not present in previous tests performed in this section, is due to the observed data in the dijet-tagged channel of the HZZ analysis; performing a fit to a model where the VBF and VH production modes are floated separately shows that the data prefer a very large VH contribution and a very small VBF contribution. When HZZ analysis inputs are not considered, the p-value is found to be about 33 %.

Fig. 7.

Fig. 7

Distribution of the profile likelihood ratio qλ between different assumptions for the structure of the matrix of signal strengths for the production processes and decay modes both for pseudo-data samples generated under the SM hypothesis and the value observed in data. The likelihood in the numerator is that for the data under a model of a general rank 1 matrix, expected if the observations are due to a single particle and of which the SM is a particular case. The likelihood in the denominator is that for the data under a “saturated model” with as many parameters as there are matrix elements. The arrow represents the observed value in data, qλobs. Under the SM hypothesis, the probability to find a value of qλqλobs is (7.9±0.3)%, where the uncertainty reflects only the finite number of pseudo-data samples generated

Compatibility of the observed data with the SM Higgs boson couplings

Whereas in Sect. 6 the production and decay of the boson were explored separately, the studies presented in this section simultaneously investigate the couplings of the boson to SM particles in the production and decay processes. In this way, correlations are handled consistently between the production modes and the decay modes. For example, the coupling of the SM Higgs boson to the Z boson is involved both in the ZH production mode and the HZZ decay mode, such that more information can be extracted from a simultaneous modelling of the production and decay modes in terms of the couplings involved.

Following the framework laid out in Ref. [171], we assume the signal arises from a single particle with JPC=0++ and a width such that the narrow-width approximation holds, permitting its production and decay to be considered independently. These assumptions are supported by the results of Sect. 6.6 on the presence of more particles at the same mass, those of Refs. [40, 41] regarding alternative JP assignments and mixtures, and those of Ref. [27] concerning the width of the particle.

Under the assumptions above, the event yield in a given (production)×(decay) mode is related to the production cross section and the partial and total Higgs boson decay widths via

σB(xHyy)=σxΓyyΓtot, 7

where σx is the production cross section through process x, which includes ggH, VBF, WH, ZH, and ttH; Γyy is the partial decay width into the final state yy, such as WW, ZZ, bb, ττ, gg, or γγ; and Γtot is the total width of the boson.

Some quantities, such as σggH, Γgg, and Γγγ, are generated by loop diagrams and, therefore, are sensitive to the presence of certain particles beyond the standard model (BSM). The possibility of Higgs boson decays to BSM particles, with a partial width ΓBSM, can also be accommodated by considering Γtot as a dependent parameter so that Γtot=Γyy+ΓBSM, where Γyy stands for the sum over partial widths for all decays to SM particles. With the data from the H(inv) searches, ΓBSM can be further broken down as ΓBSM=Γinv+Γundet, where Γinv can be constrained by searches for invisible decays of the Higgs boson and Γundet corresponds to Higgs boson decays not fitting into the previous definitions. The definition of Γundet is such that two classes of decays can give rise to Γundet>0: (i) BSM decays not studied in the analyses used in this paper, such as hypothetical lepton flavour violating decays, e.g. Hμτ, and (ii) decays that might not be detectable with the existing experimental setup because of the trigger conditions of the experiment, such as hypothetical decays resulting in a large multiplicity of low-pT particles.

To test the observed data for possible deviations from the rates expected for the SM Higgs boson in the different channels, we introduce coupling modifiers, denoted by the scale factors κi [171]. The scale factors are defined for production processes by κi2=σi/σiSM, for decay processes by κi2=Γii/ΓiiSM, and for the total width by κH2=Γtot/ΓSM, where the SM values are tabulated in Ref. [171]. When considering the different κi, the index i can represent many ways to test for deviations:

  • For SM particles with tree-level couplings to the Higgs boson: κW (W bosons), κZ (Z bosons), κb (bottom quarks), κτ (tau leptons), κt (top quarks), and κμ (muons). Unless otherwise noted, the scaling factors for other fermions are tied to those that can be constrained by data.

  • Particular symmetries of the SM make it interesting to test for deviations in whole classes of particles, leading to κV (massive vector bosons), κf (fermions), κ (leptons), κq (quarks), κu (up-type fermions), and κd (down-type fermions).

  • For SM particles with loop-induced couplings, the scaling factors can be expressed in terms of the tree-level coupling modifiers, assuming the SM loop structure, but can also be taken as effective coupling modifiers: κg (gluons) and κγ (photons).

  • The scaling factors for couplings to second generation fermions are equal to those for the third generation: κs=κb, κμ=κτ, and κc=κt, except in Sect. 7.4, where κμ is constrained from the analysis of Hμμ decays.

Given their small expected contributions, the couplings to electrons, up quarks, and down quarks, are neglected.

In addition to the κi parameters, the existence of BSM decays, invisible decays, and undetectable decays of the Higgs boson is considered; the corresponding branching fractions are denoted BRBSM, BRinv, and BRundet, as in Ref. [171].

Significant deviations of any κ parameter from unity or of any BR parameter from zero would imply new physics beyond the SM Higgs boson hypothesis. The size of the current data set is insufficient to precisely quantify all phenomenological parameters defining the Higgs boson production and decay rates. Therefore, we present a set of combined analyses of different numbers of parameters, where the remaining parameters are either set to the SM expectations or profiled in the likelihood scans together with all other nuisance parameters. The value of mH is fixed to the measured value of 125.0GeV, as determined in Sect. 4.1. Since results for the individual channels are based on different assumed values of the mass, differences should be expected when comparing the previously published results from the individual channels with those in this combined analysis.

This section is organized as follows. In Sect. 7.1 we explore whether κW and κZ are compatible with each other and can be meaningfully used together as κV. In Sect. 7.2 we test for deviations that would affect the couplings of massive vector bosons and fermions differently. The scaling factors among different types of fermions, leptons versus quarks and up-type versus down-type, are investigated in Sect. 7.3. In Sect. 7.4, we consider the results of a fit for the tree-level coupling scaling factors and the relation between the observations and the corresponding particle masses. We then turn to the study of models where BSM physics could manifest itself in loops (κg, κγ) or decays (BRBSM, BRinv, BRundet). In Sect. 7.5 the tree-level couplings are constrained to those expected in the SM, and the searches for H(inv) are included. This restriction is lifted in Sect. 7.6, where a coupling scaling factor for the massive vector bosons and individual fermion coupling scaling factors are allowed to float, while in Sect. 7.7 the total width scaling factor is also left free to float. In Sect. 7.8, the results from the searches for invisible decays are included, and from the combination of the visible and invisible decays, limits on BRundet are set. Table 12 summarizes the results of the tests performed.

Table 12.

Tests of the compatibility of the data with the SM Higgs boson couplings. The best-fit values and 68 % and 95 % CL confidence intervals are given for the evaluated scaling factors κi or ratios λij=κi/κj. The different compatibility tests discussed in the text are separated by horizontal lines. When one of the parameters in a group is evaluated, others are treated as nuisance parameters

Model parameters Table in Ref. [171] Parameter Best-fit result Comment
68 % CL 95 % CL
κZ, λWZ (κf  = 1) λWZ 0.94-0.18+0.22 [0.61,1.45] λWZ=κW/κZ from ZZ and 0/1-jet WW channels
κZ, λWZ, κf 44 (top) λWZ 0.92-0.12+0.14 [0.71,1.24] λWZ=κW/κZ from full combination
κV, κf 43 (top) κV 1.01-0.07+0.07 [0.87,1.14] κV scales couplings to W and Z bosons
κf 0.87-0.13+0.14 [0.63,1.15] κf scales couplings to all fermions
κV, λdu, κu 46 (top) λdu 0.99-0.18+0.19 [0.65,1.39] λdu=κu/κd, relates up-type and down-type fermions
κV, λq, κq 47 (top) λq 1.03-0.21+0.23 [0.62,1.50] λq=κ/κq, relates leptons and quarks
κW, κZ, κt, κb, κτ, κμ Extends 51 κW 0.95-0.13+0.14 [0.68,1.23]
κZ 1.05-0.16+0.16 [0.72,1.35]
κt 0.81-0.15+0.19 [0.53,1.20] Up-type quarks (via t)
κb 0.74-0.29+0.33 [0.09,1.44] Down-type quarks (via b)
κτ 0.84-0.18+0.19 [0.50,1.24] κτ scales the coupling to tau leptons
κμ 0.49-0.49+1.38 [0.00,2.77] κμ scales the coupling to muons
M, ϵ Ref. [206] M (GeV) 245±15 [217,279] κf=vmfϵM1+ϵ and κV=vmV2ϵM1+2ϵ (Sect. 7.4)
ϵ 0.014-0.036+0.041 [-0.054,0.100]
κg, κγ 48 (top) κg 0.89-0.10+0.11 [0.69,1.11] Effective couplings to gluons (g) and photons (γ)
κγ 1.14-0.13+0.12 [0.89,1.40]
κg, κγ, BRBSM 48 (middle) BRBSM 0.14 [0.00,0.32] Allows for BSM decays
With H(inv) searches BRinv 0.03-0.03+0.15 [0.00,0.32] H(inv) use implies BRundet =0
With H(inv) and κi=1 BRinv 0.06-0.06+0.11 [0.00,0.27] Assumes κi=1 and uses H(inv)
κgZ, λWZ, λZg, λbZ, λγZ, λτZ, λtg 50 (bottom) κgZ 0.98-0.13+0.14 [0.73,1.27] κgZ=κgκZ/κH, i.e. floating κH
λWZ 0.87-0.13+0.15 [0.63,1.19] λWZ=κW/κZ
λZg 1.39-0.28+0.36 [0.87,2.18] λZg=κZ/κg
λbZ 0.59-0.23+0.22 1.07 λbZ=κb/κZ
λγZ 0.93-0.14+0.17 [0.67,1.31] λγZ=κγ/κZ
λτZ 0.79-0.17+0.19 [0.47,1.20] λτZ=κτ/κZ
λtg 2.18-0.46+0.54 [1.30,3.35] λtg=κt/κg
κV, κb, κτ, κt, κg, κγ Similar to 50 (top) κV 0.96-0.15+0.14 [0.66,1.23]
κb 0.64-0.29+0.28 [0.00,1.23] Down-type quarks (via b)
κτ 0.82-0.18+0.18 [0.48,1.20] Charged leptons (via τ)
κt 1.60-0.32+0.34 [0.97,2.28] Up-type quarks (via t)
κg 0.75-0.13+0.15 [0.52,1.07]
κγ 0.98-0.16+0.17 [0.67,1.33]
With κV1 and BRBSM BRBSM 0.34 [0.00,0.57] Allows for BSM decays
With κV1 and H(inv) BRinv 0.17±0.17 [0.00,0.49] H(inv) use implies BRundet=0
With κV1, H(inv), BRinv, and BRundet BRinv 0.17±0.17 [0.00,0.49] Separates BRinv from BRundet,BRBSM=BRinv+BRundet
BRundet 0.23 [0.00,0.52]

Relation between the coupling to the W and Z bosons

In the SM, the Higgs sector possesses an approximate SU(2)L×SU(2)R global symmetry, which is broken by the Higgs vacuum expectation value to the diagonal subgroup SU(2)L+R. As a result, the tree-level ratios of the W and Z boson masses, mW/mZ, and the ratio of their couplings to the Higgs boson, gW/gZ, are protected against large radiative corrections, a property known as “custodial symmetry” [201, 202]. However, large violations of custodial symmetry are possible in new physics models. We focus on the two scaling factors κW and κZ that modify the couplings of the SM Higgs boson to the W and Z bosons and perform two different combined analyses to assess the consistency of the ratio λWZ=κW/κZ with unity.

The dominant production mechanism populating the 0-jet and 1-jet channels of the HWWνν analysis and the untagged channels of the HZZ4 analysis is ggH. Therefore, the ratio of event yields in these channels provides a nearly model-independent measurement of λWZ. We perform a combined analysis of these two channels with two free parameters, κZ and λWZ. The likelihood scan versus λWZ is shown in Fig. 8 (left). The scale factor κZ is treated as a nuisance parameter. The result is λWZ=0.94-0.18+0.22, i.e. the data are consistent with the SM expectation (λWZ=1).

Fig. 8.

Fig. 8

Likelihood scans versus λWZ, the ratio of the coupling scaling factors to W and Z bosons: (left) from untagged ppHWW and ppHZZ searches, assuming the SM couplings to fermions, κf=1; (right) from the combination of all channels, profiling the coupling to fermions. The solid curve represents the observation in data. The dashed curve indicates the expected median result in the presence of the SM Higgs boson. Crossings with the horizontal thick and thin lines denote the 68 % CL and 95 % CL confidence intervals, respectively

We also extract λWZ from the combined analysis of all channels. In this approach, we introduce three parameters: λWZ, κZ, and κf. The BSM Higgs boson width ΓBSM is set to zero. The partial width Γgg, induced by top and bottom quark loops, scales as κf2. The partial width Γγγ is induced via loop diagrams, with the W boson and top quark being the dominant contributors, and is scaled with κγ2(κb,κτ,κt,κW), a function defined in Eq. (113) of Ref. [171]. In the likelihood scan as a function of λWZ, both κZ and κf are profiled together with all other nuisance parameters. The introduction of κf carries with it the assumption that the coupling to all fermions is common, but possibly different from the SM expectation. The likelihood scan is shown in Fig. 8 (right) with a solid curve. The dashed curve indicates the median expected result for the SM Higgs boson, given the current data set. The measured value from the combined analysis of all channels is λWZ=0.92-0.12+0.14 and is consistent with the expectation from the SM.

Given these results, and unless otherwise noted, in all subsequent measurements we assume λWZ=1 and use a common factor κV to modify the couplings to W and Z bosons, while preserving their ratio.

Test of the couplings to massive vector bosons and fermions

In the SM, the nature of the coupling of the Higgs boson to fermions, through a Yukawa interaction, is different from the nature of the Higgs boson coupling to the massive vector bosons, a result of electroweak symmetry breaking. Some BSM models predict couplings to fermions and massive vector bosons different from those in the SM.

We compare the observations in data with the expectation for the SM Higgs boson by fitting two parameters, κV and κf, where κV=κW=κZ is a common scaling factor for massive vector bosons, and κf=κb=κt=κτ is a common scaling factor for fermions. We assume that ΓBSM=0. At leading order, all partial widths scale either as κV2 or κf2, except for Γγγ. As discussed in Sect. 7.1, the partial width Γγγ is induced via loops with virtual W bosons or top quarks and scales as a function of both κV and κf. For that reason, the Hγγ channel is the only channel being combined that is sensitive to the relative sign of κV and κf.

Figure 9 shows the 2D likelihood scan over the (κV,κf) parameter space. While Fig. 9 (left) allows for different signs of κV and κf, Fig. 9 (right) constrains the scan to the (+,+) quadrant that contains the SM expectation (1,1). The (-,-) and (-,+) quadrants are not shown since they are degenerate with respect to the ones studied, with the implication that with the available analyses we can only probe whether κV and κf have the same sign or different signs. Studies of the production of a Higgs boson associated with a single top quark can, in principle, lift that degeneracy.

Fig. 9.

Fig. 9

Results of 2D likelihood scans for the κV and κf parameters. The cross indicates the best-fit values. The solid, dashed, and dotted contours show the 68 %, 95 %, and 99.7 % CL confidence regions, respectively. The diamond shows the SM point (κV,κf)=(1,1). The left plot shows the likelihood scan in two quadrants, (+,+) and (+,-). The right plot shows the likelihood scan constrained to the (+,+) quadrant

In Fig. 9 the 68 %, 95 %, and 99.7 % CL confidence regions for κV and κf are shown with solid, dashed, and dotted curves, respectively. The data are compatible with the expectation for the standard model Higgs boson: the point (κV,κf)=(1,1) is within the 68 % CL confidence region defined by the data. Because of the way these compatibility tests are constructed, any significant deviations from (1,1) would not have a straightforward interpretation within the SM and would imply BSM physics; the scale and sign of the best-fit values in the case of significant deviations would guide us in identifying the most plausible BSM scenarios.

Figure 10 shows the results of this combined analysis in the different decay mode groups. The role and interplay of different channels is important. For example, Fig. 9 (left) shows a region in the (+,-) quadrant, where κV and κf have opposite signs, which is excluded at the 95 % CL but not at the 99.7 % CL; it can be seen in Fig. 10 (left) how the combined exclusion in the (+,-) quadrant is foremost due to the ability of the Hγγ decay to discern the relative sign between κV and κf. This is due to the destructive interference between the amplitudes of the W loops and top quark loops in the Hγγ decay: κγ21.59κV2-0.66κVκf+0.07κf2; if κV and κf have opposite signs, the interference becomes constructive, leading to a larger Hγγ branching fraction. The shapes of the confidence regions for other decay channels are also interesting: the analyses of decays to massive vector bosons constrain κV better than κf, whereas the analyses of decays to fermions constrain κf better than κV. In the model used for this analysis, the total width scales as κH20.75κf2+0.25κV2, reflecting the large expected contributions from the bottom quark and W boson.

Fig. 10.

Fig. 10

The 68 % CL confidence regions for individual channels (coloured swaths) and for the overall combination (thick curve) for the κV and κf parameters. The cross indicates the global best-fit values. The dashed contour bounds the 95 % CL confidence region for the combination. The diamond represents the SM expectation, (κV,κf)=(1,1). The left plot shows the likelihood scan in two quadrants (+,+) and (+,-), the right plot shows the positive quadrant only

The 95 % CL confidence intervals for κV and κf, obtained from a scan where the other parameter is floated, are [0.87,1.14] and [0.63,1.15], respectively.

Test for asymmetries in the couplings to fermions

In models with two Higgs doublets (2HDM) [203], the couplings of the neutral Higgs bosons to fermions can be substantially modified with respect to the couplings predicted for the SM Higgs boson. For example, in the minimal supersymmetric standard model [204], the couplings of neutral Higgs bosons to up-type and down-type fermions are modified, with the modification being the same for all three generations and for quarks and leptons. In more general 2HDMs, leptons can be made to virtually decouple from one Higgs boson that otherwise behaves in a SM-like way with respect to the W bosons, Z bosons, and quarks. Inspired by the possibility of such modifications to the fermion couplings, we perform two combinations in which we allow for different ratios of the couplings to down-type fermions and up-type fermions (λdu=κd/κu) or different ratios of the couplings to leptons and quarks (λq=κ/κq).

Figure 11 (left) shows the likelihood scan versus λdu, with κV and κu profiled together with all other nuisance parameters. Figure 11 (right) shows the likelihood scan versus λq, with κV and κq profiled. Assuming that both λdu and λq are positive, the 95 % CL confidence intervals are found to be [0.65,1.39] and [0.62,1.50], respectively. There is no evidence that different classes of fermions have different scaling factors.

Fig. 11.

Fig. 11

(Left) Likelihood scan versus ratio of couplings to down/up fermions, λdu, with the two other free coupling modifiers, κV and κu, profiled together with all other nuisance parameters. (Right) Likelihood scan versus ratio of couplings to leptons and quarks, λq, with the two other free coupling modifiers, κV and κq, profiled together with all other nuisance parameters

Test of the scaling of couplings with the masses of SM particles

Under the assumption that there are no interactions of the Higgs boson other than to the massive SM particles, the data allow a fit for deviations in κW, κZ, κb, κτ, κt, and κμ. In this fit, the loop-induced processes (σggH, Γgg, and Γγγ) are expressed in terms of the above tree-level κ parameters and are scaled according to their SM loop structure. The result for this fit is displayed in Fig. 12 (left) and shows no significant deviations from the SM expectation. The small uncertainty in the κt parameter directly reflects the fact that in this model, the ggH production mode is being described in terms of κt and κb, κg21.11κt2+0.01κtκb-0.12κb2, such that κb has a small contribution.

Fig. 12.

Fig. 12

(Left) Results of likelihood scans for a model where the gluon and photon loop-induced interactions with the Higgs boson are resolved in terms of the couplings of other SM particles. The inner bars represent the 68 % CL confidence intervals while the outer bars represent the 95 % CL confidence intervals. When performing the scan for one parameter, the other parameters in the model are profiled. (Right) The 2D likelihood scan for the M and ϵ parameters of the model detailed in the text. The cross indicates the best-fit values. The solid, dashed, and dotted contours show the 68 %, 95 %, and 99.7 % CL confidence regions, respectively. The diamond represents the SM expectation, (M,ϵ)=(v,0), where v is the SM Higgs vacuum expectation value, v=246.22GeV

In the SM, the Yukawa coupling between the Higgs boson and the fermions, λf, is proportional to the mass of the fermion, mf. This is in contrast with the coupling to weak bosons, gV, which involves the square of the mass of the weak boson, mV. With these differences in mind, it is possible to motivate a phenomenological parameterization relating the masses of the fermions and weak bosons to the corresponding κ modifiers using two parameters, M and ϵ [205, 206]. In such a model one has for each fermion κf=vmfϵ/M1+ϵ and for each weak boson κV=vmV2ϵ/M1+2ϵ, where v is the SM Higgs boson vacuum expectation value, v=246.22GeV [207]. The SM expectation, κi=1, is recovered when (M,ϵ)=(v,0). The parameter ϵ changes the power with which the coupling scales with the particle mass; if the couplings were independent of the masses of the particles, one would expect to find ϵ=-1. To perform a fit to data, the particle mass values need to be specified. For leptons and weak bosons we have taken the values from Ref. [207]. For consistency with theoretical calculations used in setting the SM expectations, the top quark mass is taken to be 172.5GeV. The bottom quark is evaluated at the scale of the Higgs boson mass, mb(mH=125.0GeV)=2.76GeV. In the fit, the mass parameters are treated as constants. The likelihood scan for (M,ϵ) is shown in Fig. 12 (right). It can be seen that the data do not significantly deviate from the SM expectation. The 95 % CL confidence intervals for the M and ϵ parameters are [217,279]GeV and [-0.054,0.100], respectively.

The results of the two fits above are plotted versus the particle masses in Fig. 13. While the choice of the mass values for the abscissas is discussed above, to be able to show both Yukawa and weak boson couplings in the same plot requires a transformation of the results of the κ fit. Since gVκV2mV2/v and λfκfmf/v, we have chosen to plot a “reduced” weak boson coupling, gV/(2v)=κV1/2mV/v. This choice allows fermion and weak boson results to be plotted together, as shown in Fig. 13, but implies that the uncertainties for κW and κZ will seem to be reduced. This simply reflects the square root in the change of variables and not any gain of information with respect to the κ fit shown Fig. 12 (left). The result of the (M,ϵ) fit is shown in Fig. 13 as the band around the dashed line that represents the SM expectation. While the existing measurement of the scaling factor for the coupling of the boson with muons is clearly imprecise, the picture that arises from covering more than three orders of magnitude in particle mass is that the boson couples differently to the different particles and that those couplings are related to the mass of each particle. This is further supported by upper limits set in searches for Hee decays: when assuming the production cross sections predicted in the SM, the branching fraction is limited to be B(Hee)<1.9×10-3 at the 95 % CL [30].

Fig. 13.

Fig. 13

Graphical representation of the results obtained for the models considered in Fig. 12. The dashed line corresponds to the SM expectation. The points from the fit in Fig. 12 (left) are placed at particle mass values chosen as explained in the text. The ordinates are different for fermions and massive vector bosons to take into account the expected SM scaling of the coupling with mass, depending on the type of particle. The result of the (M,ϵ) fit from Fig. 12 (right) is shown as the continuous line while the inner and outer bands represent the 68 % and 95 % CL confidence regions

Test for the presence of BSM particles in loops

The manifestation of BSM physics can considerably modify the Higgs boson phenomenology even if the underlying Higgs boson sector in the model remains unaltered. Processes that are loop-induced at leading order, such as the Hγγ decay and ggH production, can be particularly sensitive to the presence of new particles. Therefore, we combine and fit the data for the scale factors for these two processes, κγ and κg. The partial widths associated with the tree-level production processes and decay modes are assumed to be those expected in the SM, and the total width scales as κH20.0857κg2+0.0023κγ2+0.912.

Figure 14 shows the 2D likelihood scan for the κg and κγ parameters, assuming that ΓBSM=0. The results are compatible with the expectation for the SM Higgs boson, with the point (κγ,κg)=(1,1) within the 68 % CL confidence region defined by the data. The best-fit point is (κγ,κg)=(1.14,0.89). The 95 % CL confidence interval for κγ, when profiling κg and all nuisance parameters, is [0.89,1.40]. For κg, the 95 % CL confidence interval is [0.69,1.11], when profiling κγ and all other nuisance parameters.

Fig. 14.

Fig. 14

The 2D likelihood scan for the κg and κγ parameters, assuming that ΓBSM=0. The cross indicates the best-fit values. The solid, dashed, and dotted contours show the 68 %, 95 %, and 99.7 % CL confidence regions, respectively. The diamond represents the SM expectation, (κγ,κg)=(1,1). The partial widths associated with the tree-level production processes and decay modes are assumed to be unaltered (κ=1)

Another way in which BSM physics may manifest itself is through the decay of the boson into BSM particles. To explore this possibility, we consider a further parameter that allows for a partial decay width into BSM particles, BRBSM=ΓBSM/Γtot. In this case, the total width scales as κH2(0.0857κg2+0.0023κγ2+0.912)/(1-BRBSM).

Figure 15 (left) shows the likelihood scan versus BRBSM, with κg and κγ constrained to be positive and profiled together with all other nuisance parameters. While under the SM hypothesis the expected 95 % CL confidence interval for BRBSM is [0.00,0.42], the data are such that the 95 % CL confidence interval for BRBSM is [0.00,0.32], narrower than the expectation. The best fit in data also takes into account variations in κg and κγ, particularly the preference for κg smaller than unity in data, which influences the observed limit on BRBSM.

Fig. 15.

Fig. 15

(Left) The likelihood scan versus BRBSM=ΓBSM/Γtot. The solid curve represents the observation and the dashed curve indicates the expected median result in the presence of the SM Higgs boson. The partial widths associated with the tree-level production processes and decay modes are assumed to be as expected in the SM. (Middle) Result when also combining with data from the H(inv) searches, thus assuming that BRBSM=BRinv, i.e. that there are no undetected decays, BRundet=0. (Right) Result when further assuming that κg=κγ=1 and combining with the data from the H(inv) searches

A further step can be taken by also including the data from the searches for H(inv). The H(inv) searches reported an observed (expected) upper limit on BRinv of 0.58 (0.44) at the 95 % CL [28]. When including the H(inv) search results in the combined analysis, one can only obtain bounds assuming that there are no undetected decay modes, BRundet=0, i.e. that BRBSM=BRinv. The results for the likelihood scan as a function of BRinv(BRundet=0) when including the data from the H(inv) searches is shown in Fig. 15 (middle). The expected 95 % CL confidence interval for BRinv(BRundet=0) under the SM hypothesis is [0.00,0.29], 31 % narrower than in the above case studied without the H(inv) data, a reflection of the added power of the H(inv) analysis. On the other hand, the 95 % CL confidence interval for BRinv(BRundet=0) in data is [0.00,0.32], similar to the result obtained without including the H(inv) data, because the observed upper limit on BRinv was found to be larger than expected in those searches. It should be noted that the shape of the observed curve changes substantially and the inclusion of the H(inv) data leads to a very shallow minimum of the likelihood when BRinv(BRundet=0)=0.03.

Finally, one may further set κg=κγ=1, which effectively implies κi=1, i.e. assumes that the couplings to all SM particles with mass are as expected from the SM. From the combined analysis including the data from the H(inv) searches, we can thus obtain bounds on BRinv(BRundet=0,κi=1). The likelihood scan results are shown in Fig. 15 (right). The expected 95 % CL confidence interval for BRinv(BRundet=0,κi=1) under the SM hypothesis is [0.00,0.21], which is 28 % narrower than in the previous paragraph, a reflection of the total width now being fixed to the SM expectation. The 95 % CL confidence interval for BRinv(BRundet=0,κi=1) in data is [0.00,0.27], showing again a shallow minimum of the likelihood when BRinv(BRundet=0,κi=1)=0.06.

The results obtained from the different combined analyses presented in Fig. 15 show the added value from combining the H(inv) searches with the visible decay measurements, with the expected 95 % CL combined upper limit on BRinv being up to a factor of two smaller than either, depending on the assumptions made.

Test of a model with scaling factors for SM particles

After having examined the possibility for BSM physics to manifest itself in loop-induced couplings while fixing all the other scaling factors, we now release the latter assumption. For that, we explore a model with six independent coupling modifiers and make the following assumptions:

  • The couplings to W and Z bosons scale with a common parameter κV=κW=κZ.

  • The couplings to third generation fermions, i.e. the bottom quark, tau lepton, and top quark, scale independently with κb, κτ, and κt, respectively.

  • The effective couplings to gluons and photons, induced by loop diagrams, scale with free parameters κg and κγ, respectively.

  • The partial width ΓBSM is zero.

A likelihood scan for each of the six coupling modifiers is performed while profiling the other five, together with all other nuisance parameters; the results are shown in Fig. 16. With this set of parameters, the ggH-production measurements will constrain κg, leaving the measurements of ttH production to constrain κt, which explains the best-fit value, κt=1.60-0.32+0.34. The current data do not show any statistically significant deviation with respect to the SM Higgs boson hypothesis. For every κi probed, the measured 95 % CL confidence interval contains the SM expectation, κi=1. A goodness-of-fit test between the parameters measured in this model and the SM prediction yields a χ2/dof=7.5/6, which corresponds to an asymptotic p-value of 0.28.

Fig. 16.

Fig. 16

Likelihood scans for parameters in a model with coupling scaling factors for the SM particles, one coupling at a time while profiling the remaining five together with all other nuisance parameters; from top to bottom: κV (W and Z bosons), κb (bottom quarks), κτ (tau leptons), κt (top quarks), κg (gluons; effective coupling), and κγ (photons; effective coupling). The inner bars represent the 68 % CL confidence intervals while the outer bars represent the 95 % CL confidence intervals

Test of a general model without assumptions on the total width

Given the comprehensiveness of the set of analyses being combined, we can explore the most general model proposed in Ref. [171], which makes no assumptions on the scaling of the total width. In this model, the total width is not rescaled according to the different κi values as a dependent parameter, but is rather left as a free parameter, embedded in κgZ=κgκZ/κH. All other parameters of interest are expressed as ratios between coupling scaling factors, λij=κi/κj.

A likelihood scan for each of the parameters κgZ, λWZ, λZg, λbZ, λγZ, λτZ, and λtg is performed while profiling the other six, together with all other nuisance parameters. The results are shown in Fig. 17 and are in line with those found in Sect. 7.6.

Fig. 17.

Fig. 17

Likelihood scans for parameters in a model without assumptions on the total width and with six coupling modifier ratios, one parameter at a time while profiling the remaining six together with all other nuisance parameters; from top to bottom: κgZ (=κgκZ/κH), λWZ (=κW/κZ), λZg (=κZ/κg), λbZ (=κb/κZ), λγZ (=κγ/κZ), λτZ (=κτ/κZ), and λtg (=κt/κg). The inner bars represent the 68 % CL confidence intervals while the outer bars represent the 95 % CL confidence intervals

Constraints on BRBSM in a scenario with free couplings

An alternative and similarly general scenario can be built by allowing for ΓBSM>0. In order to avoid the degeneracy through which the total width and the coupling scaling factors can compensate each other, we constrain κV1, a requirement that holds in a wide class of models, namely in any model with an arbitrary number of Higgs doublets, with and without additional Higgs singlets [171]. The model has the following parameters: κV, κb, κτ, κt, κg, κγ, and BRBSM. This is a much more general treatment than that performed in Sect. 7.5, where only the loop-induced couplings to photons and gluons were allowed to deviate from the SM expectation. As in Sect. 7.5, this model also allows for a combined analysis with the data from the H(inv) searches.

Figure 18 (left) shows the likelihood scan versus BRBSM derived in this scenario, while profiling all the other coupling modifiers and nuisance parameters. Within these assumptions, the 95 % CL confidence interval for BRBSM in data is [0.00,0.57], while the expected interval for the SM hypothesis is [0.00,0.52].

Fig. 18.

Fig. 18

(Left) Likelihood scan versus BRBSM=ΓBSM/Γtot. The solid curve represents the observation in data and the dashed curve indicates the expected median result in the presence of the SM Higgs boson. The modifiers for both the tree-level and loop-induced couplings are profiled, but the couplings to the electroweak bosons are assumed to be bounded by the SM expectation (κV1). (Right) Result when also combining with data from the H(inv) searches, thus assuming that BRBSM=BRinv, i.e. BRundet=0

Assuming that there are no undetected decay modes, BRundet=0, it follows that BRBSM=BRinv and the data from the searches for H(inv) can be combined with the data from the other channels to set bounds on BRinv. The likelihood scan for such a model and combination is shown in Fig. 18 (right). The 95 % CL confidence interval for BRinv in data is [0.00,0.49], while the expected interval for the SM hypothesis is [0.00,0.32]. The difference between the expected and observed confidence intervals reflects the results of the H(inv) analysis that reported an observed (expected) upper limit on BRinv of 0.58 (0.44) at the 95 % CL [28].

Finally, instead of simply assuming BRundet=0, a simultaneous fit for BRinv and BRundet is performed. In this case, the data from the H(inv) searches constrains BRinv, while the visible decays constrain BRBSM=BRinv+BRundet. The 2D likelihood scan for (BRinv,BRundet) is shown in Fig. 19 (left), while Fig. 19 (right) shows the likelihood scan for BRundet when profiling all other parameters, BRinv included. The 95 % CL confidence interval for BRundet in data is [0.00,0.52], while the expected interval for the SM hypothesis is [0.00,0.51].

Fig. 19.

Fig. 19

(Left) The 2D likelihood scan for the BRinv and BRundet parameters for a combined analysis of the H(inv) search data and visible decay channels. The cross indicates the best-fit values. The solid, dashed, and dotted contours show the 68 %, 95 %, and 99.7 % CL confidence regions, respectively. The diamond represents the SM expectation, (BRinv,BRundet)=(0,0). (Right) The likelihood scan versus BRundet. The solid curve represents the observation in data and the dashed curve indicates the expected median result in the presence of the SM Higgs boson. BRinv is constrained by the data from the H(inv) searches and modifiers for both the tree-level and loop-induced couplings are profiled, but the couplings to the electroweak bosons are assumed to be bounded by the SM expectation (κV1)

Summary of tests of the compatibility of the data with the SM Higgs boson couplings

Figure 20 summarizes the results for the benchmark scenarios of Ref. [171] with fewest parameters and shows that, in those benchmarks, all results are compatible with the SM expectations.

Fig. 20.

Fig. 20

Summary plot of likelihood scan results for the different parameters of interest in benchmark models from Ref. [171] separated by dotted lines. The BRBSM value at the bottom is obtained for the model with three parameters (κg,κγ,BRBSM). The inner bars represent the 68 % CL confidence intervals while the outer bars represent the 95 % CL confidence intervals

A much more comprehensive overview of the searches performed for deviations from the SM Higgs boson expectation is provided in Table 12, where all results obtained in this section are summarized.

No statistically significant deviations are observed with respect to the SM Higgs boson expectation.

Summary

Properties of the Higgs boson with mass near 125GeV are measured in proton-proton collisions with the CMS experiment at the LHC. Comprehensive sets of production and decay measurements are combined. The decay channels include γγ, ZZ, WW, ττ, bb, and μμ pairs. The data samples were collected in 2011 and 2012 and correspond to integrated luminosities of up to 5.1fb-1 at 7TeV and up to 19.7fb-1 at 8TeV. From the high-resolution γγ and ZZ channels, the mass of the Higgs boson is determined to be 125.02-0.27+0.26(stat)-0.15+0.14(syst)GeV. For this mass value, the event yields obtained in the different analyses tagging specific decay channels and production mechanisms are consistent with those expected for the standard model Higgs boson. The combined best-fit signal relative to the standard model expectation is 1.00±0.09(stat)-0.07+0.08(theo)±0.07(syst) at the measured mass. The couplings of the Higgs boson are probed for deviations in magnitude from the standard model predictions in multiple ways, including searches for invisible and undetected decays. No significant deviations are found.

Acknowledgments

We congratulate our colleagues in the CERN accelerator departments for the excellent performance of the LHC and thank the technical and administrative staffs at CERN and at other CMS institutes for their contributions to the success of the CMS effort. In addition, we gratefully acknowledge the computing centres and personnel of the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid for delivering so effectively the computing infrastructure essential to our analyses. Finally, we acknowledge the enduring support for the construction and operation of the LHC and the CMS detector provided by the following funding agencies: the Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy and the Austrian Science Fund; the Belgian Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique, and Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek; the Brazilian Funding Agencies (CNPq, CAPES, FAPERJ, and FAPESP); the Bulgarian Ministry of Education and Science; CERN; the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Ministry of Science and Technology, and National Natural Science Foundation of China; the Colombian Funding Agency (COLCIENCIAS); the Croatian Ministry of Science, Education and Sport, and the Croatian Science Foundation; the Research Promotion Foundation, Cyprus; the Ministry of Education and Research, Estonian Research Council via IUT23-4 and IUT23-6 and European Regional Development Fund, Estonia; the Academy of Finland, Finnish Ministry of Education and Culture, and Helsinki Institute of Physics; the Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules/CNRS, and Commissariat à l’Énergie Atomique et aux Énergies Alternatives/CEA, France; the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, and Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft Deutscher Forschungszentren, Germany; the General Secretariat for Research and Technology, Greece; the National Scientific Research Foundation, and National Innovation Office, Hungary; the Department of Atomic Energy and the Department of Science and Technology, India; the Institute for Studies in Theoretical Physics and Mathematics, Iran; the Science Foundation, Ireland; the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Italy; the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning, and National Research Foundation (NRF), Republic of Korea; the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences; the Ministry of Education, and University of Malaya (Malaysia); the Mexican Funding Agencies (CINVESTAV, CONACYT, SEP, and UASLP-FAI); the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, New Zealand; the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission; the Ministry of Science and Higher Education and the National Science Centre, Poland; the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, Portugal; JINR, Dubna; the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation, the Federal Agency of Atomic Energy of the Russian Federation, Russian Academy of Sciences, and the Russian Foundation for Basic Research; the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of Serbia; the Secretaría de Estado de Investigación, Desarrollo e Innovación and Programa Consolider-Ingenio 2010, Spain; the Swiss Funding Agencies (ETH Board, ETH Zurich, PSI, SNF, UniZH, Canton Zurich, and SER); the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taipei; the Thailand Center of Excellence in Physics, the Institute for the Promotion of Teaching Science and Technology of Thailand, Special Task Force for Activating Research and the National Science and Technology Development Agency of Thailand; the Scientific and Technical Research Council of Turkey, and Turkish Atomic Energy Authority; the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, and State Fund for Fundamental Researches, Ukraine; the Science and Technology Facilities Council, UK; the US Department of Energy, and the US National Science Foundation. Individuals have received support from the Marie-Curie programme and the European Research Council and EPLANET (European Union); the Leventis Foundation; the A. P. Sloan Foundation; the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation; the Belgian Federal Science Policy Office; the Fonds pour la Formation à la Recherche dans l’Industrie et dans l’Agriculture (FRIA-Belgium); the Agentschap voor Innovatie door Wetenschap en Technologie (IWT-Belgium); the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (MEYS) of the Czech Republic; the Council of Science and Industrial Research, India; the HOMING PLUS programme of Foundation for Polish Science, cofinanced from European Union, Regional Development Fund; the Compagnia di San Paolo (Torino); the Consorzio per la Fisica (Trieste); MIUR project 20108T4XTM (Italy); the Thalis and Aristeia programmes cofinanced by EU-ESF and the Greek NSRF; and the National Priorities Research Program by Qatar National Research Fund.

Footnotes

This paper is dedicated to the memory of Robert Brout and Gerald Guralnik, whose seminal contributions helped elucidate the mechanism for spontaneous breaking of the electroweak symmetry.

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