Abstract
We compute the top quark threshold contributions to the \(\gamma \gamma \) production at the LHC. They appear when the invariant mass of the photon pair, \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\) just exceeds two times the mass of the top quark and induce some feature in the \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\) distribution. We determine the magnitude of this threshold effect and characterize this feature with a simple empirical fitting function to show that it is possible to observe this effect at the LHC in future. We also explore some possible improvements that may enhance its significance.
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1 Introduction
The \(\gamma \gamma \) pair production in proton-proton colliders such as the LHC plays a very important role in the search for new physics. Recently this channel had attracted considerable attention due to a potential hint of new physics. The 2015 LHC data showed an excess over the Standard Model (SM) expectations around \(M_{\gamma \gamma }=750\) GeV where \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\) is the invariant mass of the photon pair [1,2,3]. However, the peak is absent in the latest record with improved statistics [4, 5] indicating that it was actually due to a statistical fluctuation. Irrespective of the origin of the peak, the SM background to this channel should be computed as precisely as possible to capture the essential expected features in the background simulation.
The background generally shows a smooth behavior with respect to the invariant mass of the photon pair (\(M_{\gamma \gamma }\)), as indicated, for example, by the background-only fits obtained by the ATLAS collaboration [1, 4]. However, at the threshold of production of a particle, this smooth feature would get modulated. In this paper, we primarily look at one such effect originating within the SM, namely, the top quark threshold effect that appears around \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\approx \) 350 GeV.
The \(\gamma \gamma \) pair production (\(pp\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \)) at the LHC gets contribution from the quark-antiquark annihilation \((q\bar{q}\rightarrow \gamma \gamma )\) at the leading order (LO) (with \(\mathcal O(\alpha ^2_\mathrm{ew})\) contribution to the cross-section). At the next-to-leading order (NLO) in QCD we get the \(\mathcal O(\alpha ^2_\mathrm{ew}\alpha _{s})\) contributions to the cross-section from virtual diagrams of quark-antiquark annihilation and real diagrams like quark-antiquark annihilation \((q \overline{q}\rightarrow g\gamma \gamma )\) and quark-gluon scattering \((q g\rightarrow q\gamma \gamma )\) [6]. At the next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in QCD we have the \(\mathcal {O}(\alpha ^2_{ew}\alpha ^2_{s})\) contribution to the cross-section from double-virtual, real-virtual and real-real diagrams [7].
At the same order, i.e. \(\mathcal O(\alpha ^2_\mathrm{ew}\alpha ^2_{s})\), another process opens up, namely, the fermion loop mediated gluon fusion process, \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) [7,8,9,10,11]. It involves loop diagrams such as the box and the cross-box diagrams like the one shown in Fig. 1 (box diagram). Though loop mediated, this process has no tree level part and hence we get a finite contribution from these loops. (The two-loop matrix elements for the gluon fusion is given in [8].) It is in this process where the top threshold effect appears from the destructive interference between the top loop diagrams containing on-shell top quarks and other diagrams containing light quark loops.Footnote 1 Once \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\) exceeds two times the mass of the top quark, \(m_t\approx 173\) GeV, the gluon fusion process gets contribution from on-shell tops in the box loop, creating a dip in the invariant mass distribution [7, 10, 11].
The precise nature of the threshold effect can be seen explicitly in Fig. 4 of [10]. It shows the ratio of the cross-sections of the gluon fusion process computed with \(m_t=173\) GeV to that obtained by setting \(m_t = \infty \) at the 14 TeV LHC. In other words, it shows the correction due to the top loop to the gluon fusion process. This ratio is found to be equal to unity for \(M_{\gamma \gamma }<200\) GeV. As \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\) increases, the ratio starts to decrease and shows a sudden dip at about \(M_{\gamma \gamma }=2m_t\). After the dip, it rises smoothly and eventually saturates to a value of approximately 1.75 for \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\approx 1600\) GeV. Note, however, there is nothing special about the top quark or about this process, similar dips are also predicted at the threshold of each new particle in the light by light scattering [12].
Though this threshold effect exists, a priori it is not clear whether it can be observed since the gluon-gluon fusion gives a sub-dominant contribution to the two photon production [6, 13,14,15,16,17,18]. As mentioned, the leading order contributions arise from the quark anti-quark annihilation process. Fortunately, the higher order contributions are relatively large for the \(\gamma \gamma \) pair production [18]. Mainly because of the large gluon parton density function (PDF), the gluon fusion process, although higher order in strong coupling in comparison to the quark anti-quark annihilation process, is not negligible and gives a significant contribution to the cross-section [8, 9, 18]. This may be further enhanced by imposing some kinematic cuts. An even higher order contribution to this, classified as N\(^3\)LO, has also been computed [9]. It is found to be small but not negligible.
It is intriguing that the 2015 ATLAS data [1] showed a hint of a dip at \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\approx 2 m_t\), exactly where it is expected from the top threshold effect. The dip is not so obvious in the latest data set [4], but it is not in contradiction with the dip. In this paper, we numerically simulate NLO events for the \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) and LO events for the loop mediated \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process to investigate the possibility of observing the top quark threshold effect at the 13 TeV LHC. Through a statistical analysis we aim to establish that though difficult, it is possible to observe this effect at the LHC in future.
Note that while observation of this phenomenon is interesting by itself, it may also be useful to understand the relative magnitudes of different contributions and the process in general. Theoretically, these have significant uncertainties due to the unknown higher order contributions. If the effect can be observed with sufficient accuracy, it could provide another measurement of the top quark mass [19].
Going beyond the top-quark effect, in general, studying such threshold effects can be useful for new physics also. They can tell us about heavy particles contributing in loop processes where the final state particles are observed at the LHC. For example, since it arises from the interference terms, any heavy particle (carrying electric and color charges) that can run in the loop of the \(gg \rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process would lead to such a threshold effect. Hence, even in absence of any direct detection of heavy particles at the LHC, observation (or non-observation) of any such effect in the \(\gamma \gamma \) spectrum could let us infer about heavy particles carrying non-zero electromagnetic charge.
2 Computations and results
We generate events for both LO \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) and NLO \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) processes at the 13 TeV LHC in the MadGraph5_aMC @NLO [20] environment with NN23NLO parton density functions (PDFs) [21]. We use Pythia6 [22] for parton showers (PS). Finally we pass the events through Delphes 3.3.1 [23], a detector simulator, with the default ATLAS card to generate realistic distributions.
It is possible to estimate the cross-sections of these processes more precisely with the parton level Monte Carlo code MCFM [7, 24].Footnote 2 It can compute the \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process cross-section at \(\mathcal O(\alpha ^2_\mathrm{ew}\alpha ^2_{s})\) (NNLO) and the \(\mathcal O(\alpha ^2_\mathrm{ew}\alpha ^3_{s})\) (NLO) correction to the \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process. In our estimations, we include the effects of these higher order corrections to the production processes in the form of overall K-factors. We scale the NLO \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) cross-section (obtained from MadGraph) by
and the LO \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) cross-section by,
The numerators in Eqs. (1) and (2) are computed with the NN23 NNLO PDF sets. These K-factors are estimated for the region of the phase-space where \(E^\gamma _\mathrm{T}>40\) GeV and \(M_{\gamma \gamma } \ge 200\) GeV. For our calculations we have considered photons with \(E^\gamma _\mathrm{T}>40\) GeV and \(|\eta ^\gamma | < 2.5\) only. The photons are isolated using a smooth cone isolation prescription [25] with \(\epsilon _\gamma =1\), \(n=1\), \(\delta _0=0.4\) (the choice of the isolation parameters are motivated by Ref. [25]). We consider dynamic renormalization and factorization scales and set them as \(\mu _\mathrm{R}=\mu _\mathrm{F}=M_{\gamma \gamma }\).
2.1 Gluon fusion (\(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \))
For \(E^\gamma _\mathrm{T}>40\) GeV and \(M_{\gamma \gamma } \ge 200\) GeV, the LO cross-section for the gluon fusion is about 162 fb which roughly increases to 240 fb after multiplying with \(K^{gg}_\mathrm{NLO}\) [Eq. (2)]. The ATLAS analysis [1] imposes the following additional cuts on the photons,
Since we look at \(M_{\gamma \gamma } \ge 200\) GeV only, applying the ATLAS cuts will ensure all events have \(E^{\gamma _1}_\mathrm{T} > 80\) GeV and \(E^{\gamma _2}_\mathrm{T} > 60\) GeV. Figure 2 (where we have shown the correlation among the transverse momentum/energy of the two photons) indicates that it is possible to keep more gluon-fusion events by relaxing these cuts.Footnote 3 Hence, we choose the following cuts:
We find that the ratio of gg to qX events does not change substantially by this change in cuts. The cross-section in the gluon fusion channel reduces to about 130 fb once these cuts are imposed.
We show the invariant mass distribution obtained from the \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process in Fig. 3 (top plot). To show the threshold effect prominently in this plot, we have generated a large number of events (600K) with \(M_{\gamma \gamma } \ge 200\) GeV in the gluon fusion channel alone and then applied the cuts defined in Eq. (4) on these events. This is useful in order to precisely determine the shape of this dip. In full analysis we will use only a smaller number of events which can be obtained in a reasonable time scale at the LHC. The red line in the top panel is a smooth fit to the simulated events in the 200 GeV \(<M_{\gamma \gamma }<\) 1000 GeV range. The fitting function is taken to be of the same form as used by ATLAS [1],
The top threshold effect is very clearly visible in the middle panel of Fig. 3 where we have shown the difference between the simulated events and the smooth fit. The errorbars shown represent the the square-root of the number of events in each bin (\(\sqrt{N}\)). We see a clear dip in the cross-section approximately at the position of twice the top quark mass.Footnote 4 It originates from the destructive interference between the top loop diagrams containing on-shell top quarks and other diagrams containing light quark loops. We fit the dip with the following function,
in the range \(250 \le M_{\gamma \gamma } \le 510\) GeV (see the bottom panel of Fig. 3). The parameter x is defined in Eq. (5). Roughly, the Gaussian part accounts for the dip and the other term dictates the steep behavior at lower \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\). The parameter \(x_0\) indicates the location of the dip. The fit gives \(x_0 = 2.6077\times 10^{-2}\) which corresponds to \(M_{\gamma \gamma } = 339\) GeV which is roughly twice the top quark mass. The width of the dip is given by \(\sigma _g = 3.3169 \times 10^{-3}\) which is equivalent to a width of 43.1 GeV. The parameter \(\sigma \) becomes \(9.4362\times 10^{-3}\). The \(\chi ^2\) per degree of freedom for this fit is about 1.2. The relative factor \(\mathcal R= 6.8338\). The overall normalization depends on the number of events generated and is specified below for the final fit.
2.2 Other processes (\(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \))
As mentioned before, the total \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) cross-section is much larger than that of the \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process. For good statistics we have generated 8 million events with \(E_\mathrm{T}^\gamma \ge 40\) GeV in the \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) channel. This corresponds to a luminosity of about 346 fb\(^{-1}\). After applying the cuts defined in Eq. (4), the total \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) cross-section comes down to 1718 fb which is still about thirteen times larger than the corresponding \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) cross-section.
We fit these events with the ATLAS fitting function [Eq. (5)]. In Fig. 4 we show the difference between the fit and the events. Notice that, even with such high number events, the difference plot shows fluctuations indicating small deviations from the fit in the region of our interest namely \(250 \le M_{\gamma \gamma } \le 510\) GeV.
2.3 Combined processes (\(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma + qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \))
We now combine the events from \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) and \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) processes after multiplying their cross-sections with the respective K-factors [Eqs. (2) & (1), respectively]. While combining we keep the luminosity same as the qX processes, 346 fb\(^{-1}\). We then fit the combined events with the ATLAS fitting function [Eq. (5)]. The dip due to the gluon fusion is clearly visible in the top panel of Fig. 5 where we show the difference between the combined events and the ATLAS fit. As earlier, we focus in \(250 \le M_{\gamma \gamma } \le 510\) GeV and fit the difference with a function that is a linear combination of \(g_0(x)\) [Eq. (6)] and a quadratic polynomial,Footnote 5
The quadratic polynomial is added to account for the fluctuations of the \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process seen in Fig. 4. Note that in this step, only \(\mathcal Q_i\)’s and \(\mathcal G\) are allowed to vary while other parameters (i.e. \(\mathcal R\), \(\sigma \), \(\sigma _g\) and \(x_0\)) are held fixed to their respective values obtained earlier. In the bottom panel of Fig. 5 we show the fit thus obtained. The parameter values are \(\mathcal G=624.35\), \(\mathcal Q_0=-1.6684\times 10^{3}\), \(\mathcal Q_1=1.1332\times {10}^{5}\) and \(\mathcal Q_2=-1.8397\times 10^{6}\). This four parameter fit has \(\chi ^2/\mathrm{d.o.f.} = 1.09\), indicating that it is a good fit. The one sigma error in \(\mathcal G\) is about 114, which indicates that the dip is detected at the significance of roughly 5\(\sigma \). This demonstrates that within \(346~\mathrm{fb}^{-1}\) of LHC luminosity such a statistical fitting can isolate the gluon fusion threshold contribution with a high degree of accuracy. A reasonable three to four sigma detection may be possible even with much lower luminosity. Hence it would be worthwhile to apply our analysis to data that would be available in near future.
The above procedure of fitting the difference effectively amounts to fitting the \(pp\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) combined events with the following function
instead of fitting them with only \(f_0(x)\). Note that this increases the number of parameters in the fit just by four (\(\mathcal Q_i\)’s and \(\mathcal G\), all other parameters inside \(g_0(x)\) are already determined before). In the full range, \(200\le M_{\gamma \gamma } \le 1000\) GeV, the ATLAS fit (two parameters) has \(\chi ^2_{global}=64\) while the fit with \(f^\prime _0(x)\) (six parameters) has \(\chi ^2_{global}=38\). Hence it is clear that our fitting function provides a much improved fit to the data.
In this paper, we have focused on detecting the signal of the dip. However, as pointed out in the literature [7, 10, 11, 19], it may provide a useful measurement of the top quark mass. From Fig. 5 we see that it may be possible to extract useful information about the top mass from this analysis. The main challenge would be to minimize the error induced by the fluctuations due to the \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process. We postpone a detailed analysis of such an extraction to future research.
3 Possible improvements
So far, apart from applying the global cuts shown in Eq. (4), we have not used any other technique to improve the \(\sigma _{gg}/\sigma _{qX}\) ratio. It is actually quite difficult to isolate the gg channel from the qX significantly using simple kinematic cuts – most of the gg distributions (of standard variables \(p_\mathrm{T}, \eta \) of photons etc.) are very similar to those of qX. The small cross-section of the gg channel complicates the situation further. In such a situation, sophisticated numerical techniques (like multivariate analysis with machine learning) could possibly help, but are beyond the scope of this paper. Here we sketch some such possible directions with some basic estimation.
In the literature there are several studies showing that it is possible to statistically discriminate between a gluon-jet and a quark jet [26,27,28,29,30,31]. Now, since, a good fraction of total qX events will have a leading quark jet (because of the presence of \(qg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma q\)), if we demand the leading \(p_\mathrm{T}\) jet not to be a quark jet, it should improve the \(\sigma _{gg}/\sigma _{qX}\) ratio. The second row of Table 1 shows that such a condition does indeed improve the ratio, even though the cross-sections reduce significantly. At best, we only find a marginal improvement with this condition. In Fig. 6, we show the difference obtained from the same combined events but with this new condition of jet flavor on the leading jet.
While obtaining the above estimate we have ignored the efficiency of gluon-jet tagging. In other words, we have been optimistic and have taken the gluon-jet-tagging efficiency, \(\epsilon =1\). In practice, not all quark/gluon-jets can be identified and also a fraction of quark jets will be misidentified as gluon jets, making \(\epsilon <1\). This will increase the luminosity requirement. For simplicity, if we assume \(\epsilon \) is same for the qX and gg channels and set a modest value, i.e., \(\epsilon = 0.4\) (current CMS estimations put the gluon tagging efficiency close to 40% while quark identification efficiency to about 70% [26, 27]), the luminosity required to observe the dip with the same significance will be quite high, \(346/\epsilon = 865\) fb\(^{-1}\). However, one has to keep in mind that the obtained luminosity requirement is an estimate; advanced analysis technique like multivariate analysis can reduce the luminosity requirement significantly. Also, the recent advancements in jet-substructure techniques indicate to the possibility of significant improvement of quark/gluon tagging efficiency.
Before we proceed further, we would like to mention that we have also explored the possibility of varying the \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\) dependent cut in Eq. (4) to improve the significance. We have tried loosening the cuts on the transverse energies of the photons even further, such as,
and
with \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\ge 200\) GeV. Out of these, the one in Eq. (11) gives the best results. For this cut we again generate 8000 K and 600 K events for the qX and gg channels respectively with \(E_\mathrm{T}^\gamma > 20\) GeV and \(|\eta ^\gamma |<2.5\). However, with such loose cut on \(E_\mathrm{T}^\gamma \), the qX cross-section becomes huge and, as a result, even with such large number of events we can only probe a lower luminosity, about 50 fb\(^{-1}\). On these events we apply the cut defined in Eq. (11) and follow the same steps described in Sects. 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3. We get the cross-sections of \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) and \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) as 201 and 2690 fb respectively after multiplying with the respective K-factors (which are updated accordingly). For 50 fb\(^{-1}\) of integrated luminosity, we obtain \(\mathcal {G}=117 \pm 62\), i.e., the dip is detected at a significance of roughly \(2\sigma \). Our estimation indicates that to get the threshold effect at a significance of \(4\sigma \) we need roughly the four times the number of events generated. However, performing such computation within a reasonable time limit is beyond our existing capabilities. Hence we refrain from analyzing this direction further.
4 Other sources of threshold effect
Finally, before we conclude, we note that there are other sources of top threshold effect in the photon pair production channel. Just like the \(pp\rightarrow q\bar{q}\gamma \gamma \) process (that appears as a NNLO correction to the \(pp\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process), one can consider \(pp\rightarrow t \bar{t}\gamma \gamma \). This opens up when the center-of-mass energy in the parton frame crosses two times the mass of the top quark. However, the cross-section of this process is tiny compared to the processes considered here (about 5 fb which further reduces to about 0.7 fb once we set \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\ge 200\) GeV) and it induces no noticeable feature in the \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\) distribution. Then, just as the gluon splitting creates \(c\bar{c}\) and \(b\bar{b}\) pairs that contribute in the sea quark density of a proton, once the top threshold is crossed, one could also imagine \(t\bar{t}\) pairs appearing in the sea (i.e. a ‘t-PDF’) (see, e.g., [32]). Hence, additional threshold effects would arise due to the processes \(t\bar{t}\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) and \(tg\rightarrow t\gamma \gamma \). If, naïvely, one assumes that the ‘t-PDF’ at a scale Q is roughly given by the b-PDF at the scale \(Qm_b/m_t\), the contributions of these processes turn out to be much smaller than the effect considered here. It is not easy to quantify this argument, as the behavior of this density function near the top threshold won’t be captured properly due to sizable top mass effects. However, since the top quark is much heavier than the b-quark, it is reasonable to assume that these processes are unlikely to produce any observable features with the present luminosity. Qualitatively, for the \(tg\rightarrow t\gamma \gamma \) process, this is supported by the small cross-section of the \(pp\rightarrow t\bar{t}\gamma \gamma \) process mentioned before.
5 Summary and conclusions
In this paper we have investigated the top quark threshold effect in the two photon channel at the LHC. This effect arises in the loop mediated \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) subprocess due to the destructive interference between top loop diagrams containing on-shell top quarks and other light quark loop diagrams. It appears as a dip in the invariant mass distribution of the photon pair near two times the mass of the top quark.
Within the SM, the gluon fusion process is overshadowed by the \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process that has a larger cross-section. However, here, we have argued that a statistical fit can isolate the dip in the gluon channel reasonably well. Though it is beyond the scope of this paper, it might be possible to make the threshold effect even more prominent with sophisticated techniques like multivariate analysis etc.
It will be very interesting to observe this SM effect more accurately at the LHC. However, there are other motivations to look into this in detail. It can provide us yet another way to probe the top-mass experimentally. Not only this, threshold effects can also tell us about some beyond the SM fermions indirectly. Since this effect arises from the interference effects, any heavy fermion that can run in the loop of the \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process would lead to such a threshold effect. Hence, observation (or non-observation) of any such effect in the gamma gamma spectrum could let us infer about new heavy colored fermions carrying non-zero electromagnetic charge in a model independent manner.
Notes
To avoid any confusion, throughout this paper we shall refer to all \(pp\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) processes except the box- and cross-box-diagram mediated \(gg\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process (and its higher order corrections) collectively as \(qX\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) process computed up to different orders of QCD coupling.
\(pp\rightarrow \gamma \gamma \) at NNLO QCD was first computed with 2gNNLO in Ref. [18].
Apart from the events in the low \(E^{\gamma }_\mathrm{T}\) region, the ATLAS cuts (3) will also eliminate any event with \(M_{\gamma \gamma } \sim 350\) GeV (the region of our interest), if it has \(E^{\gamma _1}_\mathrm{T}\) between 105 and 140 GeV and \(E^{\gamma _2}_\mathrm{T}\) greater than 105 GeV (approximately) – a region which is quite densely populated in Fig. 2.
Note that the fit is not very precise at the low values of \(M_{\gamma \gamma }\) (\(\sim 200\) GeV), but this happens because of the limitations of the simple form of the fitting function in Eq. (5).
Increasing the degree of this polynomial does not lead to any better fit.
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Acknowledgements
PS and RKV thank the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD), Government of India for their Ph.D. fellowships. We thank an anonymous referee for useful comments which have helped to improve the paper.
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Dugad, S.R., Jain, P., Mitra, S. et al. The top threshold effect in the \(\gamma \gamma \) production at the LHC. Eur. Phys. J. C 78, 715 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-6188-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-6188-z