
CMS releases final Run 1 results on H → γγ
The CMS collaboration achieved an important milestone this summer with completion of the analysis of the last of the five main channels that contributed to the discovery of a Higgs boson in July 2012.
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The CMS collaboration achieved an important milestone this summer with completion of the analysis of the last of the five main channels that contributed to the discovery of a Higgs boson in July 2012.
With the discovery of a Higgs boson at the LHC two years ago, the last piece of the Standard Model puzzle fell into place. Yet, several mysteries remain, one of which is the enigma of the origin of da...
The Standard Model of particle physics has been extremely successful in predicting a vast variety of phenomena – so successful, that it is easy to forget that some of its predictions have not yet be...
At the Quark Matter 2014 conference, held in Darmstadt on 19–25 May, ATLAS presented a variety of new results based on lead–lead (PbPb) and proton–lead (pPb) data collected during Run 1 of the...
Supersymmetry is one of the most popular theories beyond the Standard model.
After the discovery of a Higgs boson at the LHC in 2012, all of the measurements of its properties and tests of its spin-parity have proved to be consistent with the predictions of the Standard Model.
Since the observation of a Higgs boson at a mass around 125.5 GeV by ATLAS and CMS in July 2012, both collaborations are making every effort to pin it down and decide if it is indeed the Higgs boson ...
Results from precision studies in the charm energy region.
Data from the CDF and D0 experiments at the Tevatron have revealed one of the rarest methods of producing a top quark
The Standard Model predicts that the photons emitted in b → sγ transitions, which can only occur through loop-level processes, are predominantly left-handed.