6533b837fe1ef96bd12a29b8

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Factorization and N3LLp+NNLO predictions for the Higgs cross section with a jet veto

Lorena RothenThomas BecherMatthias Neubert

subject

Quantum chromodynamicsPhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsParticle physics010308 nuclear & particles physics530 PhysicsHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyFOS: Physical sciencesJet (particle physics)01 natural sciencesHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyCross section (physics)High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)Factorization0103 physical sciencesEffective field theoryHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentPerturbation theory (quantum mechanics)Anomaly (physics)Resummation010306 general physics

description

We have recently derived a factorization formula for the Higgs-boson production cross section in the presence of a jet veto, which allows for a systematic resummation of large Sudakov logarithms of the form alpha_s^n ln^m(p_T^veto/m_H), along with the large virtual corrections known to affect also the total cross section. Here we determine the ingredients entering this formula at two-loop accuracy. Specifically, we compute the dependence on the jet-radius parameter R, which is encoded in the two-loop coefficient of the collinear anomaly, by means of a direct, fully analytic calculation in the framework of soft-collinear effective theory. We confirm the result obtained by Banfi et al. from a related calculation in QCD, and demonstrate that factorization-breaking, soft-collinear mixing effects do not arise at leading power in p_T^veto/m_H, even for R=O(1). In addition, we extract the two-loop collinear beam functions numerically. We present detailed numerical predictions for the jet-veto cross section with partial next-to-next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy, matched to the next-to-next-to-leading order cross section in fixed-order perturbation theory. The only missing ingredients at this level of accuracy are the three-loop anomaly coefficient and the four-loop cusp anomalous dimension, whose numerical effects we estimate to be small.

https://dx.doi.org/10.7892/boris.42198