Resonance of mass ≈750 GeV decaying into two photons could have been seen by CERN in 2015[8][9] (though sufficient statistical significance never reached)
The 750 GeV diphoton excess in
particle physics was an anomaly in data collected at the
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in 2015, which could have been an indication of a new particle or
resonance.[8][9] The anomaly was absent in data collected in 2016, suggesting that the diphoton excess was a statistical fluctuation.[1][2] In the interval between the December 2015 and August 2016 results, the anomaly generated considerable interest in the scientific community, including about 500 theoretical studies.[10][11][12][13] The hypothetical particle was denoted by the
Greek letter
Ϝ (pronounced digamma) in the scientific literature, owing to the decay channel in which the anomaly occurred.[3] The data, however, were always less than five
standard deviations (sigma) different from that expected if there was no new particle, and, as such, the anomaly never reached the accepted level of
statistical significance required to announce a discovery in particle physics.[14] After the August 2016 results, interest in the anomaly sank as it was considered a statistical fluctuation.[15]
Indeed, a
Bayesian analysis of the anomaly found that whilst data collected in 2015 constituted "substantial" evidence for the digamma on the
Jeffreys scale, data collected in 2016 combined with that collected in 2015 was evidence against the digamma.[16]
December 2015 data
On December 15, 2015, the
ATLAS and
CMS collaborations at
CERN presented results from the second operational run of the
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at the
centre-of-momentum energy of 13 TeV, the highest ever achieved in proton-proton collisions. Among the results, the
invariant mass distribution of pairs of high-energy photons produced in the collisions showed an excess of events compared to the
Standard Model prediction at around 750 GeV/c2. The
statistical significance of the deviation was reported to be 3.9 and 3.4
standard deviations (locally) respectively for each experiment.[8][9]
The excess could have been explained by the production of a new particle (the digamma) with a mass of about 750 GeV/c2 that decayed into two photons. The
cross-section at 13 TeV centre-of-momentum energy required to explain the excess, multiplied by the
branching fraction into two photons, was estimated to be
This result, while unexpected, was compatible with previous experiments, and in particular with the LHC measurements at a lower centre-of-momentum energy of 8 TeV.
August 2016 data
Analysis of a larger sample of data, collected by ATLAS and CMS in the first half 2016, did not confirm the existence of the
Ϝ particle, which indicates that the excess seen in 2015 was a statistical fluctuation.[1][2]
Implications for particle physics research
The non-observation of the 750 GeV bump in follow-up searches by the ATLAS and CMS experiments had a significant impact on the particle physics community.[17] The event highlighted the desire in the community for the LHC to discover a fundamentally new particle, and the difficulties in searching for a signal which is unknown a priori.[18]