Higgs boson pair production has not yet been observed at the LHC. The Standard Model predicts a small cross-section for non-resonant HH production via gluon–gluon fusion, approximately 31 fb at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. This small rate, coupled with large backgrounds in most decay channels, makes the search experimentally challenging. • Discovery of SM non-resonant HH production with a combined significance exceeding 7
σ, • Discovery threshold (5
σ) reached with 2 ab−1 of combined data from both experiments, • A measurement of \kappa_\lambda with better than 30% precision, • Discovery potential in certain BSM scenarios (e.g., enhanced self-coupling or new resonances decaying to HH). These projections are a significant improvement over the previous 2019 European Strategy Update, which projected a significance of 4
σ, below the discovery level. These improvements are driven by new graph-based architectures for
deep learning-based
jet tagging that have improved identification of H → b and H → τ+τ− decays across the full Higgs boson
pT spectrum, including boosted topologies where decay products overlap. Improved
b-tagging algorithms also contribute to the enhanced sensitivity. The updated HL-LHC projections also include sensitivity from additional channels such as multilepton final states (with two or more leptons) and bℓℓ+
ETmiss, which were not included in the 2019 estimates. Future hadron colliders such as the
FCC-hh (100 TeV) could achieve percent-level precision on \lambda_\text{HHH} and may enable observation of triple Higgs boson production (HHH), directly constraining the quartic Higgs self-coupling \lambda_{\text{HHHH}}.
Resonant searches Searches for heavy particles decaying into Higgs boson pairs (resonant HH production) are also ongoing. Such signals could arise from new scalar bosons or Kaluza–Klein gravitons in BSM models. Mass ranges from a few hundred GeV to several TeV have been explored, with no significant excess observed so far. == See also ==