Wednesday 6 January 2016

Do-or-die year

The year 2016 began as any other year... I mean the hangover situation in particle physics. We have a theory of fundamental interactions - the Standard Model - that we know is certainly not the final  theory because it cannot account for dark matter, matter-antimatter asymmetry, and cosmic inflation. At the same time, the Standard Model perfectly describes any experiment we have performed here on Earth (up to a few outliers that can be shrugged off as statistical fluctuations)... If you're having a déjà vu, maybe it's the Monty Python sketch, or maybe because this post begins exactly the same as one written a year ago.   Back then,  I was optimistically  assuming that the 2015 LHC operation would go better than the projections, and that some 15 inverse femtobarn of data would be collected by each experiment. That amount would have clarified our chances for a discovery in the LHC run-2, and determine whether or not we should dust off our No Future t-shirts. Instead, due to machine's hiccups during the summer, only about 4 fb-1 was delivered to each experiment. This added up to the magnet and calorimeters problems in the CMS experiment who managed to collect only 2.4 fb-1 of useful data, against 3.6 fb-1 in ATLAS. With that amount, the discriminating power is improved with respect to run-1 only for particles heavier than ~1 TeV.  As a consequence, the boundaries of our knowledge have changed only slightly compared to the status a year ago. At the end of the day, it's this year, and not the previous one, that is going to be decisive for the field.

So the tension is similar as last year at this time, however the mood is considerably better, see the plot. We have two intriguing hints of new physics that have a non-negligible chance to develop into a strong evidence: one is the B-meson anomalies discussed several times in this blog, and the other is the 750 GeV diphoton excess. Especially the latter stirs theorists' imagination,  even if some experimentalists deplore the fact (theorists writing papers inspired by experimental data? oh horror...).   A significant deviation from the Standard Model seen independently  by 2 different collaborations  in an experimentally clean channel happens for the first time in my life.  In my private poll, the chances for the B-meson anomalies to be new physics are estimated as 1%, while for the diphoton the chances are 10%. This adds up to a whopping 11% chance, the biggest ever, of finding new physics soon. Moreover, if the diphoton excess is really a new particle, we are basically guaranteed to find other phenomena beyond the Standard Model. Indeed, most models accommodating the 750 GeV excess require new colored states with O(1) TeV mass, which are then most naturally embedded in a theory with new strong interactions at a few TeV scale.  Not only would that give a boost to future LHC analyses, but it would also motivate building a higher-energy collider,  e.g.  a 30 TeV collider that could be constructed at a short time scale at CERN.

Anything may happen this year, for good or for worse. Cross your fingers and fasten your seat belts.

35 comments:

kal said...

I really don't understand the outrage sparked by the amount of theory papers on the di-photon resonance? What's the big deal? There is a speculative signal out there and people are working on it. If you ask me, this is much better than adding another prefix to MSSM or mentally masturbating about the holographic principle in 2+1 dimensions.

Are people concerned that there are too many crappy papers being put out just for citations? As far as I can tell, about 50% of the papers so far are crap and the other 50% are solid particle phenomenology. This is about the same percentage as on any di-photon-less day on the arXiv. As long as the paper is good, I don't see a problem with chasing citations either. Unfortunately, we live in a super-competitive field of particle physics with O(10) real, permanent jobs each year where citations count a lot (even though they really shouldn't, at least not that much). How can you blame someone for chasing citations then!?

Rastus Odinga Odinga said...

I agree that people writing papers about this is not a problem, though the speed with which the papers appeared was pretty laughable. What is really disturbing is that it is obviously so easy to come up with an explanation. As they say about religions, they can't all be right, but they can all be wrong.... the other disturbing thing is how boring all these papers are. Do we really want to have to start thinking about sgoldstinos? Is that a prospect that makes your pulse race? Do we really want something like technicolor to rise from the grave? YAWN!

Anonymous said...

Holy cow, Rastus, if you're not excited by the possible discovery of the sgoldstino and what it implies you probably chose the wrong job.

Jester, should we conclude from the plot that we should expect another explosion at the LHC?

Jester said...

One should not extrapolate too much :)

Jester said...

Kal, i agree except that i think the citation thing is becoming a bit of a problem. In science, citation count is used as a value estimator. It's of course imperfect, but normalized to each discipline and integrated over long time and many papers it does a decent job. However, in cases like this, a handful of papers that would look bad even on Twitter get the same number of citations as good ones, which skews the system. This is the fault of our citation culture that allows for mass grave references and citation whining. The risk is that our citation count will become meaningless, just like authorship has become for HEP experimentalists.

Able Lawrence said...

Whats the likelihood that the 2TeV signal would come back in a longer run?

Jester said...

It's not conclusive yet, but the best-fit cross section to the 2 TeV ATLAS diboson excess is excluded by the 13 TeV analyses. Fair to say it's not exciting any more.

Unknown said...

"the Standard Model - that we know is certainly not the final theory because it cannot account for dark matter, matter-antimatter asymmetry, and cosmic inflation"

I appreciate this blog very much. Hence I advise to skip "dark matter" and "inflation" from this list, there is still hope for them within the SM, and to add: the values of the 30+ constants of Nature.

Anonymous said...

theon55, SM DM and inflation? How??

Anonymous said...

theonh55,
You are correct (and more so than you think) regarding your comment about not needing beyond the standard model physics. The 4 big “unknowns” can likely be explained within the Standard Model:
Inflation and Dark Energy are likely due to the Higgs field as phi changes value; Dark Matter and Matter Asymmetry are likely due to the physics of massive neutrinos.
(1) Inflation is likely just due to the Higgs field at high values of phi (the scalar field energy). The shape of energy density in the Higgs field looks amazingly similar to the field that would be required in single-field, slow-roll inflation models that fit all experimental data within a few sigma. In addition, we already know that the Higgs field couples to the known particles, so particle creation at the end of inflation is not ad-hoc.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1631070515001401
(2) If the Higgs field is the inflation field, then the averaged energy density of the field near the minimum of the potential might just be what we call "dark energy." While most models of the Higgs field have the energy density go negative at a value of phi = 246 GeV, this seems somewhat arbitrary. So, we might as well be just as arbitrary and make the value at the minimum of the Higgs potential go to the value needed to describe dark energy. We would then have V(phi) always positive, and we could test this theory against experimental data on the shape of the primordial scalar and tensor fluctuations from CMB data.
http://arxiv.org/pdf/1404.0532.pdf
(3) There are still 3 (or 6) particles which we haven't found within the "standard model (after including neutrino mass)". These are the three (or six) sterile neutrinos that are mixing-partners of the six active neutrinos (3 families times 2 options for particle vs, anti-particle) because massive neutrinos implies that left handed particles can convert into right handed particles. It is possible that some of these sterile neutrinos could be the dark matter of the universe if their mass were somehow larger than the mass of the active neutrinos and/or if their velocity were somehow much colder than the relic active neutrinos.
http://arxiv.org/abs/0906.4049
(4) The asymmetry of matter and anti-matter can be fully achieved within the standard model of particle physics if we discover a sizable CP violation within the neutrino sector. The latest data from neutrino detectors suggest a sizable (near maximal) value of CP violation, and hence, this could be the cause of the matter/anti-matter asymmetry in our universe.
http://arxiv.org/pdf/1507.08134.pdf

It seems to me that the Standard Model is not so well known as some physicists like to describe it. For example, there is still fairly large uncertainty on many of the parameters within the Standard Model (top quark mass, Higgs mass and self-coupling, neutrino masses, neutrino mixing angles, neutrino CP violation, and sterile neutrino mass/mixing angles) that many of the big problems could still be solved within the Standard Model+Massive Neutrino Physics.

--Eddie Devere

Anonymous said...

"...latter stirs theorists' imagination"

I wished that was the case, instead pretty much the same paper was re-written like 100 times with a few nuances here and there... oh well... It was amusing to read a day after, e.g. "While this paper was in preparation a number of attempts at
explaining the diphoton excess appeared" I really hope there's something here or the community will look really at odds with the rest of science...

Anonymous said...

Eddie, Higgs inflation is dead.

Ervin Goldfain said...

Eddie,

You seem to be overly optimistic in your assertions. Sterile neutrinos (if they exist)are definitely BSM physics. No robust proof on the DM-sterile neutrino connection has been established, at least as of today. CP violation in the neutrino sector cannot easily account for CP violation in the (heavy) quark sector. The Higgs phenomenology is still riddled with many open questions, naturalness is still a puzzle, SM does not explain the source of physical parameters, why there are three gauge groups, why the g-2 anomaly and so on.

akidbelle said...

Hi,

One thing of interest about the 750 Giga-papers is that any of those can be right - plus certainly more to come.
And this is proof that we understand nothing about the real thing! The proof is independent of the existence of the 750 Giga-stuff.

Thanks for the posts Jester.

J.

andrew said...

"Kal, i agree except that i think the citation thing is becoming a bit of a problem. In science, citation count is used as a value estimator. It's of course imperfect, but normalized to each discipline and integrated over long time and many papers it does a decent job. However, in cases like this, a handful of papers that would look bad even on Twitter get the same number of citations as good ones, which skews the system. This is the fault of our citation culture that allows for mass grave references and citation whining. The risk is that our citation count will become meaningless, just like authorship has become for HEP experimentalists."

Not sure that I agree. Papers that have the potential to explain actual data of more than trivial statistical significance that could point to BSM physics have a lot more intrinsic value than papers that consider random BSM physics possibilities that have no corresponding experimental motivation. People are publishing fast and furiously (my guess is that we have a couple hundred authors so far which is a very large percentage of the pool of people who the skill set to write such articles), because they recognize this fact. Mobilizing the community of phenomenologists around an issue, even if it ultimately turns out to be a false alarm, is a worthwhile thing and also a good natural experiment to demonstrate how much group think or diversity there is in understanding potential BSM physics in the community, because almost every major or minor approach within the field has been invoked.

Anonymous said...

If I'm not mistaken, the Nobel Prize was awarded just last month for discovering physics beyond the standard model.

And let's not pretend that neutrino oscillations are standard model physics. Unless you can tell me the additional fields that need to be added to the standard model to accommodate mass (right-handed neutrinos with Yukawa couplings? heavy Majorana states?) you don't know what the right way to modify the standard model is. And we don't know that.

Neutrino mass opens up a hole in the standard model that we don't know what to fill it with yet (although we of course we have ideas).

Sorry, but this is a pet peeve of mine.

tulpoeid said...

Which is the "significant deviation"?
And why should the SM account for a purely theorized conjecture? (aka cosmic inflation, unjustly mentioned in the same sentence as dark matter and matter-antimatter asymmetry)
Just keeping things in perspective ... while being glad to an almost inappropriate degree by the return to humorous posts :p

Jester said...

Tulpoeid, my opinion about inflation is indeed on the radical side, but I consider it proven (the general mechanism, not any specific model). And local 3.6/3.9 sigma (ATLAS numbers assuming narrow and large width) is arguably significant :)
Anon 20:30, i don't think it's the same paper all around. Many different production (direct, heavier resonance, associated, non-resonant,...) and decay (2-photon, 2-photon+MET, 4-photon, ... ) mechanisms were studied, and embedding in multiple frameworks (MSSM, 2HDM, strong interactions, dark matter, composite Higgs, hidden valley, ...) were discussed. The problem is rather opposite, namely that at this point almost anything goes, and numerous phenomenologically distinct options are still left on the table.

Anonymous said...

Would the citation system survive if we were not obligated to cite any paper that is not *directly* relevant to our work?

Anonymous said...

The diboson anomaly is not dead. In the diboson case, the background arises from gluon scatterings, and the possible signal from quark scatterings, so going from 8 to 13 TeV the background increases more than the signal. The opposite is true for the diphoton anomaly.

Jester said...

Anon 17:01, yes, that would be the idea :) However, the practice is different currently, and evolving in the wrong direction.

Martin said...

We can all look forward to 6 months of speculation, theorizing and earnest debate.
Then, dreary reality will set in or the first glipse of new physics will be confirmed. I haven't been this excited since I saw my first Quark*.

*I think it was a blue one

Anonymous said...

"The problem is rather opposite, namely that at this point almost anything goes, and numerous phenomenologically distinct options are still left on the table."

That is a fascinating take, given your original post on the subject: "[...] Variation of this minimal toy model will appear in a 100 papers this week."

This is *precisely* what I referring to. Of course, a lot of possibilities to embed the `new particle(s)' into. But we all know the only 'paper' worth written has been repeating more than a 100 times, from a bottom up perspective and the only thing worth mentioning at this point. Of course, as you attempted, you can try to get 'creative' and relate this to naturalness in a more general framework, you can also point to 'new places to look' but c'mon, do we really need 100+ papers on this right now? Remember what happened with B-modes! ;)

mfb said...

At least some of those papers are useful, because they lead to interesting things to check for experimentalists. Take the idea that the diphotons could actually be two pairs of collimated photons, for example: that is something the experiments can check, but the idea has to come up in the first place.
Obvious things like additional missing transverse energy, additional visible activity in the events and so on have been checked before, of course.

Herbi said...

How old were you in 1997? (Hera anomaly)

Jester said...

I wasn't born yet. At least, not as a physicist ;)

toofhtoum said...

A colleague recently pointed out to me that 1512.04933 made a replacement on the arXiv about 3 weeks after their v1.

In the v2 it turns out they generously rewrite the paper, and also introduce a number of results which were not in the v1.

Am I the only one to be shocked by such practice? Essentially, people can put out a paper which is not ready (or even wrong, it happened for a diboson paper from reknown british people ...), since you can come up with a v2 that is completely rewritten and no one cares about the v1 anymore...

But after reading carefully, the case of 1512.04933 is even more embarrassing. The new content they introduce (DM, RG perturbativity, photon fusion...) had been pointed out by other authors just a few days after their v1. Now, in 1512.04933, they *do not* refer to these authors as if they got it right first: they refer to them in a "note added" after the conclusion. That's usually what you do when your result was already in the v1 and your concurrents got the same almost simultaneously, so that everyone should share the credit.
What essentially happens is they claim ownership of other people's results, so they get a share of credit for other people's idea. Seriously, isn't that a case of plagiarism?

Yes I said the word :)

I am sure some people may turn a blind eye to this kind of practice. Then I would really want to ask those: Would you do the same if these authors were some unknown people from a third-world country instead of reknown people from cern?

Jester said...

Basically every 750 paper has changed substantially between v1 and v2. There is no question it is a bad practice to submit an incomplete v1 (who casts the first stone...). However, as long as the later paper that inspired the changes are cited, I think there is no case for big words.

Rastus Odinga Odinga said...

http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.03153

If this had been the first of the 750 papers, would it have stopped the flood?

Anonymous said...

I have experienced before the bad acausal practice pointed out by toofhtoum and it is not nice to see your results presented as new in a posterior replacement.

Regarding the "750" citations, I do see a problem in that papers on the subject have a long list of references to every paper connected to the diphoton excess. Most authors are not bothering to select the papers with relevant new ideas or results. The reason for this anomalous inclusive approach appears to be that people expect to be cited back, that is, to be accepted in the happy 750 self-citing community. This new practice will be harmful to forests and will make citation counts less useful

Finally, 1601.03153 looks interesting. But I expect in most future papers it will only appear hidden among the long list of references . I guess the experimentalists will study the background in greater detail...

Anonymous said...

I disagree with "However, as long as the later paper that inspired the changes are cited, I think there is no case for big words." If you are inspired by the later papers, you publish your new results in another paper. Or you hold the submit button as long as you can not to miss anything important.

It is sad to see that integrity is gone.

andrew said...

A preprint by Davis, et al., casts real doubt on the reported local significance of the ATLAS 750 GeV bump, arguing that it is really just 2 sigma and that the calculation of the margin of error in the background made by ATLAS was artificially low because it involved a formula that gave undue weight to the Run-1 data and insufficient weight to the Run-2 data at higher energies.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.03153

If this analysis is on the mark, then the whole exercise has really been much ado about nothing.

Anonymous said...

I noticed that "toofhtoum" (do you have a name?) attacks my paper 1512.04933 because in its v2 some references are cited in a Note Added rather than in the main text. Let me explain. I would have put all material in v1, but some cautious coauthors preferred to include only the parts that had been fully checked. Some of the material omitted from the first version was presented in talks and even discussed with others who later wrote it in papers by working during Xmas (congratulations). The point of including the extra stuff in v2 is that our treatment goes beyond the papers appeared during the vacations, and cited in the Note Added. For those who consider physics more interesting than placement of citations, let me mention some new points:
- DM abundance has been computed in a model-independent way in terms of widths.
- gamma gamma production predicts a (13 TeV)/(8 TeV) ratio lower than what suggested by data and with a small theory uncertainty.
- RGE: we show that low-scale Landau poles cannot be avoided if the width is large, we include bounds from precision LEP data

best,
as

Andre Holzner said...

to fuel the inspiration of model builders: I'm sure you already noticed that 750 GeV = 6 * 125 GeV :-)

Anonymous said...

A bound state of 6 Higgs? A Higgsagon?