Higgs Decays as a Window into the Dark Sector
Abstract
A light vector boson, Zd, associated with a "dark sector" U(1)d gauge group has been introduced to explain certain astrophysical observations as well as low energy laboratory anomalies. In such models, the Higgs boson may decay into X+Zd, where X=Z, Zd or γ. Here, we provide estimates of those decay rates as functions of the Zd coupling through either mass-mixing (e.g. via an enlarged Higgs mechanism) or through heavy new fermion loops and examine the implied LHC phenomenology. Our studies focus on the higher mZd case, > several GeV, where the rates are potentially measurable at the LHC, for interesting regions of parameter spaces, at a level complementary to low energy experimental searches for the Zd. We also show how measurement of the Zd polarization (longitudinal versus transverse) can be used to distinguish the physics underlying these rare decays.
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