{"id":9371,"date":"2021-02-12T15:40:07","date_gmt":"2021-02-12T15:40:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/?p=9371"},"modified":"2021-02-12T15:40:07","modified_gmt":"2021-02-12T15:40:07","slug":"new-evidence-of-higgs-boson-decay-at-cern","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/new-evidence-of-higgs-boson-decay-at-cern\/9371\/","title":{"rendered":"New evidence of Higgs boson decay at CERN"},"content":{"rendered":"
Known as Dalitz decay, this is one of the rarest Higgs boson decays yet seen at the Large Hadron Collider<\/a> (LHC). The Higgs boson can decay to a lepton pair and a photon in three ways: the leptons can be produced via an intermediate Z boson or a virtual photon (\u03b3*), or it can decay to two leptons with one lepton radiating a final-state photon.<\/p>\n For their new analysis, the ATLAS physicists targeted the decay mediated by the virtual photon. In contrast to the familiar stable, massless photon, the \u03b3* is a virtual particle that typically has a very small (but non-zero) mass and decays instantly to two leptons. The researchers searched the full LHC Run 2 data set for collision events with a photon and two leptons whose combined mass was less than 30 GeV.<\/p>\n