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Measurement of the associated production of a Z boson and b-jets, in the dimuon channel, in pp collisions at √s = 8 TeV with the ATLAS detectorLooper, Kristina Anne 02 October 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Search for Enhancements of Associated Top Quark Production in Multiple Lepton Final States in the Context of Effective Field TheoriesLefeld, Anthony J. January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Top Quark Spin Correlations with the CMS DetectorJason R Thieman (15354421) 27 April 2023 (has links)
<p>This dissertation presents precision measurements of top quark polarizations and top quark pair spin correlations, which probe the independent coefficients of the top-spin components of the top quark pair production density matrix, targeting all channels (ee, eµ, µµ) of the top quark pair dileptonic decay mode with final states containing two oppositely charged leptons, and using 137.7 fb<strong>⁻¹</strong> of data recorded by the CMS experiment at the LHC with 13 TeV center-of-mass energy, during 2016, 2017, and 2018.</p>
<p>All measured observables are corrected for detector efficiencies, acceptances, and migrations, unfolded to parton-level, and extrapolated to the full phase space using a regularized unfolding procedure.</p>
<p>Spin-density coefficients are extracted from the unfolded distributions and compared to theoretical predictions and predictions from Monte Carlo simulations with next-to-leading-order matrix element accuracy interfaced with parton-shower algorithms.</p>
<p>The measurements are performed both in the full phase-space and differentially as a function of top quark pair invariant mass.</p>
<p>The measured coefficients showed decent agreement with the MC predictions, and better agreement when compared to QCD perturbative calculations for top quark pair production at NLO with electroweak corrections, and the measurement precision for one-dimensional normalized unfolded cross-sections and extracted coefficients were improved by as much as a factor of two compared to previous measurements.</p>
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Search for boosted Higgs bosons decaying to b-quarks at sqrt{s}=13 TeV with the ATLAS detectorFollega, Francesco Maria 28 April 2020 (has links)
A search for the Higgs boson produced with large transverse momentum and decaying as H -> bb is presented, using the 80 fb^{-1} from the dataset collected by the ATLAS detector at sqrt{s}=13 TeV. The Higgs boson is reconstructed as a large-R jet with two b-tagged variable radius track-jets. The work focuses on a peculiar event topology in which the Higgs is produced in association with another Large-R jet. Considering events with reconstructed pT above 480 GeV and with a reconstructed mass from 70-230 GeV, a signal significance of 1.6 sigma for the Higgs and of 5 sigma for the V (Z boson + W boson) is observed. Furthermore, the new Full Run2 analysis is presented, using 136 fb^{-1} from the dataset collected by the ATLAS detector at sqrt{s}=13 TeV. The strategy up to the computation of the expected sensitivity for the Higgs boson is presented in this thesis. The validation of the background modeling is described in details, including tests on data. A preliminary extraction of the Z boson signal is performed and the measured signal strength corresponds to muZ = 0.82 +/- 0.09.
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Search for stopped long-lived particles produced in pp collisions at 8 TeV at CMSRodenburg, Marissa L. January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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456 |
Search for displaced leptons in the e-mu final state at the CMS experimentLiu, Bingxuan January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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457 |
A measurement of the <i>W<sup>±</sup>Z</i> production cross section and limits on anomalous trilinear gauge couplings in proton-proton collisions at √<i>s</i> = 7 TeV using 4.64 fb<sup>-1</sup> of data collected with the ATLAS detectorNagarkar, Advait Neel 20 December 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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Signatures of Dark Matter at the LHC : A phenomenological study combining collider and cosmological bounds to constrain a vector dark matter particle modelOlsson, Anton January 2022 (has links)
Everything that humans have ever touched, created or built something from consists of a type of matter that only makes up 15 percent of the total matter in the universe. The remaining 85 percent is attributed to dark matter, a so far not discovered and non-luminous type of matter. In this thesis a potential dark matter particle candidate has been studied by investigating an extension of the SU(2) symmetry into a dark gauge sector, where the new sector is connected to the standard model through a vector-like fermion portal. In order to understand how such an extension is made, the Lagrangian density of the standard model and its different gauge sectors were derived. The cross sections of the process of pair production of dark matter particles and tau leptons in the final state due to proton-proton collisions at the LHC was simulated with the software \texttt{MadGraph}. The cross sections were used to draw significance contours for the exclusion and discovery regions for parts of the parameter space of the new model, for current and projected luminosities of the LHC. The projected luminosity scans also consider how lowering the uncertainty in the number of background events through hypothetical improvements to detectors would impact the exclusion and discovery contours. The significance contours were combined with relic density constraints, derived from comparisons between measurements of the Planck telescope and calculations from the software \texttt{MicrOMEGAs}. The resulting graphs show that there are non-forbidden regions of the parameter space that are significant for exclusion and discovery for luminosity of current searches. Increasing the luminosity while keeping the uncertainty in the number of background events the same yielded only minor increases to the exclusion and discovery contours. Combining the projected luminosities with improvements to the background uncertainty instead produced exclusion and discovery regions that were significantly larger than those for the current luminosity.
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Development and deployment of an Inner Detector Minimum Bias Trigger and analysis of minimum bias data of the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron ColliderKwee, Regina 19 July 2012 (has links)
Weiche inelastische QCD Prozesse dominieren am LHC. Über 20 solcher Kollisionen werden innerhalb einer Strahlkreuzung bei ATLAS stattfinden, sobald der LHC die nominelle Luminosität von L = 1034 cm−2 s−1 und die Schwerpunktsenergie von p s = 14 TeV erreicht. Diese inelastischen Wechselwirkungen sind durch einen geringen Impulsübertrag gekennzeichnet, welche theoretisch lediglich durch phänomenologische Modelle angenähernd beschrieben werden können. Zu Beginn des Strahlbetriebs des LHC’s 2009 war die Luminosität relativ niedrig mit L = 1027 bis 1031 cm−2 s−1, was ein sehr gutes Szenario bot, um einzelne Proton-Proton Kollisionen zu selektieren und deren allgemeine Eigenschaften experimentell zu untersuchen. Zunächst wurde ein Minimum-Bias Trigger entwickelt, um Daten mit ATLAS aufzunehmen. Dieser Trigger, mbSpTrk, verarbeitet Signale der Silizium-Spurdetektoren und verwirft effizient Ereignisse ohne eine Proton-Wechselwirkung, wobei zugleich eine mögliche Verschiebung zu bestimmten Ereignistypen hin minimier wird. Um einen flexiblen Einsatz des Triggers zu gewährleisten, wurde er mit einer Sequenz ausgestattet, welche effizient Machinenuntergrund unterdrückt. Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurden geladenen Teilchenmultiplizitäten im zentralen Bereich in zwei kinematisch definierten Phasenräumen gemessen. Mindestens ein geladenes Teilchen mit einer Pseudorapidität kleiner als 0.8 und einem Transversalimpuls von pT > 0.5 bzw. 1 GeV musste vorhanden sein. Vier typische Minimum-Bias Verteilungen wurden bei zwei Schwerpunktsenergien von p s = 0.9 und 7 TeV gemessen. Die Ergebnisse sind derart präsentiert, dass sie nur minimal von Monte Carlo Modellen abhängen. Die vorgestellten Messungen stellen zudem den Beitrag der ATLAS Kollaboration dar für die erste, LHC-weit durchgeführte Analyse, der auch die CMS und ALICE Kollaborationen zustimmten. Ein Vergleich konnte mit den Pseudorapiditätsverteilungen angestellt werden. / Soft inelastic QCD processes are the dominant proton-proton interaction type at the LHC. More than 20 of such collisions pile up within a single bunch-crossing at ATLAS, when the LHC is operated at design luminosity of L = 1034 cm−2 s−1 colliding proton bunches with an energy of p s = 14 TeV. Inelastic interactions are characterised by a small transverse momemtum transfer and can only be approximated by phenomenological models that need experimental data as input. The initial phase of LHC beam operation in 2009, with luminosites ranging from L = 1027 to 1031 cm−2 s−1, offered an ideal period to select single proton-proton interactions and study general aspects of their properties. As first part of this thesis, a Minimum Bias trigger was developed and used for data-taking in ATLAS. This trigger, mbSpTrk, processes signals of the silicon tracking detectors of ATLAS and was designed to fulfill efficiently reject empty events, while possible biases in the selection of proton-proton collisions is reduced to a minimum. The trigger is flexible enough to cope also with changing background conditions allowing to retain low-pT events while machine background is highly suppressed. As second part, measurements of inelastic charged particles were performed in two phase-space regions. Centrally produced charged particles were considered with a pseudorapidity smaller than 0.8 and a transverse momentum of pT > 0.5 or 1 GeV. Four characteristic distributions were measured at two centre-of-mass energies of p s = 0.9 and 7 TeV. The results are presented with minimal model dependency to compare them to predictions of different Monte Carlo models for soft particle production. This analysis represents also the ATLAS contribution for the first common LHC analysis to which the ATLAS, CMS and ALICE collaborations agreed. The pseudorapidity distributions for both energies and phase-space regions are compared to the respective results of ALICE and CMS.
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Étude des collisions proton-proton dans l’expérience ATLAS avec les détecteurs ATLAS-MPXScallon, Olivia 05 1900 (has links)
Les seize détecteurs MPX constituant le réseau ATLAS-MPX ont été placés à différentes
positions dans le détecteur ATLAS et sa averne au CERN dans le but de mesurer en emps réel les champs de radiation produits ar des particules primaires (protons des faisceaux) et des particules secondaires (kaons, pions, g, protons) issues des collisions proton-proton. Des films de polyéthylène (PE) et de fluorure de lithium (6LiF) recouvrent les détecteurs afin d’augmenter leur sensibilité aux neutrons produits par les particules primaires et secondaires interagissant avec les matériaux présents dans l’environnement d’ATLAS. La reconnaissance des traces laissées par les particules dans un détecteur ATLAS-MPX se fait à partir des algorithmes du logiciel MAFalda (“Medipix Analysis Framework”) basé sur les librairies et le logiciel d’analyse de données ROOT. Une étude sur le taux d’identifications erronées et le chevauchement d’amas a été faite en reconstruisant les activités des sources 106Ru et 137Cs. L’efficacité de détection des neutrons rapides a été mesurée à l’aide des sources 252Cf et 241AmBe (neutrons d’énergie moyenne de 2.13 et 4.08 MeV respectivement). La moyenne des efficacités de détection mesurées pour les neutrons produits par les sources 252C f et 241AmBe a été calculée pour les convertisseurs 6LiF et PE et donnent (0.8580 ± 0.1490)% et (0.0254 ± 0.0031)% pour LiF et (0.0510 ± 0.0061)% et
(0.0591 ± 0.0063)% pour PE à bas et à haut seuil d’énergie respectivement. Une simulation du calcul de l’efficacité de détection des neutrons dans le détecteur MPX a été réalisée avec le logiciel GEANT4. Des données MPX correspondant aux collisions proton-proton à 2.4 TeV et à 7 TeV dans le centre de masse ont été analysées. Les flux détectés d’électrons et de photons sont particulièrement élevés dans les détecteurs MPX01 et MPX14 car ils sont plus près du point de collision. Des flux de neutrons ont été estimés en utilisant les efficacités de détection mesurées. Une corrélation avec la luminosité du LHC a été établie et on prédit que pour les collisions à 14 TeV dans le centre de masse et avec une luminosité de 10^34 cm-1*s-1 il y aura environ 5.1x10^8 ± 1.5x10^7 et 1.6x10^9 ± 6.3x10^7 particules détectées par les détecteurs MPX01 et MPX14 respectivement. / The sixteen detectors forming the ATLAS-MPX network have been placed in different positions inside the ATLAS detector and its cavern at CERN in order to measure, in real time, the radiation fields produced by primary particles (beam protons) and secondary particles (kaons, pions, photons, protons) resulting from the proton-proton collisions. Films of polyethylene (PE) and lithium fluoride (6LiF) cover the detectors so as to increase their sensitivity to neutrons produced by the primary and secondary particles interacting with the materials present in the ATLAS environment. The tracks identification
in an ATLAS-MPX detector is obtained with the algorithms of the MAFalda software (Medipix Analysis Framework) based on the libraries and data-analysis software ROOT. A study on the mistag rate and blob overlap was made by reconstructing the activities of 106Ru and 137Cs sources. The fast neutron detection efficiency was measured with the help of 252C f and 241AmBe sources (neutrons with an average energy of 2.13 and 4.08 MeV, respectively). The detection efficiency measured for neutrons produced by 252Cf et 241AmBe sources was calculated for the 6LiF and PE converters. It averaged at low and high energy respectively (0.8580 ± 0.1490)% and (0.0254 ± 0.0031)% for LiF and (0.0510 ± 0.0061)% and (0.0591 ± 0.0063)% for PE. A simulation of the neutron detection efficiency calculation in the MPX detector was carried out with the GEANT4 software. MPX data corresponding to the proton-proton collisions at 2.4 TeV and 7 TeV at the center of mass were analyzed. The detected flux of electrons and photons are particularly high in the MPX01 and MPX14 detectors because they are closer to the point of collision. Fluxes of neutrons were estimated using the measured detection efficiencies. A correlation with the luminosity of the LHC was established. We predict that for 14 TeV collisions at the center of mass, with a luminosity of 1034 cm^2*s^1, the number of particle detected by MPX01 and MPX14 respectively will be about 5.1x10^8 ± 1.5x10^7 and 1.6x10^9 ± 6.3x10^7.
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