Search for long-lived particles that decay into final states containing two muons, reconstructed using only the CMS muon chambers
A search is performed for long-lived neutral particles that decay into final states that include a pair of muons. These are reconstructed using only the CMS muon chambers. The experimental signature is a distinctive topology consisting of a pair of muons originating from a displaced secondary vertex. Events corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 20.5 fb were collected with the CMS detector at the CERN LHC in pp collisions at TeV. No significant excess is observed above standard model expectations. Upper limits on the product of the cross section and branching fraction of such a signal are presented as a function of the long-lived particle's mean proper decay length. The limits are provided for two specific models. In the first model, a Higgs boson decays into a pair of long-lived, neutral bosons, each of which can decay into a pair of muons. In the second model, squarks are pair produced and the decay of each produces a long-lived neutralino that subsequently decays to two muons and a neutrino. The limits are also presented in an approximately model-independent way, allowing them to be applied to a wide class of models yielding the above topology. A combination of these limits with those from a related search that used muons reconstructed in the CMS silicon tracker is also presented.