2,399 research outputs found
Exploring requirements and detector solutions for FCC-ee
Circular colliders have the advantage of delivering collisions to multiple
interaction points, which allow different detector designs to be studied and
optimized - up to four for FCC-ee. On the one hand, the detectors must satisfy
the constraints imposed by the invasive interaction region layout. On the other
hand, the performance of heavy-flavour tagging, of particle identification, of
tracking and particle-flow reconstruction, and of lepton, jet, missing energy
and angular resolution, need to match the physics programme and the exquisite
statistical precision offered by FCC-ee. During the FCC feasibility study
(2021-2025), benchmark physics processes will be used to determine, via
appropriate simulations, the requirements on the detector performance or design
that must be satisfied to ensure that the systematic uncertainties of the
measurements are commensurate with their statistical precision. The usage of
the data themselves, in order to reach the challenging goals on the stability
and on the alignment of the detector, in particular for the programme at and
around the Z peak, will also be studied. In addition, the potential for
discovering very weakly coupled new particles, in decays of Z or Higgs bosons,
could motivate dedicated detector designs that would increase the efficiency
for reconstructing the unusual signatures of such processes. These studies are
a crucial input to the further optimization of the two concepts described in
the Conceptual Design Report, CLD, and IDEA, and to the development of new
concepts which might actually prove to be better adapted to the FCC-ee physics
programme, or parts thereof.Comment: Submitted to EPJ+ special issue: A future Higgs and Electroweak
factory (FCC): Challenges towards discovery, Focus on FCC-e
Investigation of in the full hadronic final state at CDF with a neural network approach
Abstract In this work we present the results of a neural network (NN) approach to the measurement of the t t production cross-section and top mass in the all-hadronic channel, analyzing data collected at the Collider Detector at Fermilab (CDF) experiment. We have used a hardware implementation of a feed forward neural network, TOTEM , the product of a collaboration of INFN (Istituto Nazionale Fisica Nucleare)âIRST (Istituto per la Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica)âUniversity of Trento, Italy. Particular attention has been payed to the evaluation of the systematics specifically related to the NN approach. The results are consistent with those obtained at CDF by conventional data selection techniques
Editorial: Novel ideas for accelerators, particle detection and data challenges at future colliders
Prospective Studies for LEP3 with the CMS Detector
On July 4, 2012, the discovery of a new boson, with mass around 125 GeV/c2
and with properties compatible with those of a standard-model Higgs boson, was
announced at CERN. In this context, a high-luminosity electron-positron
collider ring, operating in the LHC tunnel at a centre-of-mass energy of 240
GeV and called LEP3, becomes an attractive opportunity both from financial and
scientific point of views. The performance and the suitability of the CMS
detector are evaluated, with emphasis on an accurate measurement of the Higgs
boson properties. The precision expected for the Higgs boson couplings is found
to be significantly better than that predicted by Linear Collider studies.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures, 3 tables, Submitted to the European Strategy
Preparatory Group (contribution 171), Companion to arXiV:1208.0504. Version 2
contains several additional Higgs decay channels studied, and numbers for
TLEP as well as for LEP
Tracker Operation and Performance at the Magnet Test and Cosmic Challenge
During summer 2006 a fraction of the CMS silicon strip tracker was operated in a comprehensive slice test called the Magnet Test and Cosmic Challenge (MTCC). At the MTCC, cosmic rays detected in the muon chambers were used to trigger the readout of all CMS sub-detectors in the general data acquisition system and in the presence of the 4 T magnetic field produced by the CMS superconducting solenoid. This document describes the operation of the Tracker hardware and software prior, during and after data taking. The performance of the detector as resulting from the MTCC data analysis is also presented
Focus topics for the ECFA study on Higgs / Top / EW factories
In order to stimulate new engagement and trigger some concrete studies in
areas where further work would be beneficial towards fully understanding the
physics potential of an Higgs / Top / Electroweak factory, we propose
to define a set of focus topics. The general reasoning and the proposed topics
are described in this document.Comment: v3: fixed spelling of two author
Report from Working Group 3: Beyond the standard model physics at the HL-LHC and HE-LHC
This is the third out of five chapters of the final report [1] of the Workshop on Physics at HL-LHC, and perspectives on HE-LHC [2]. It is devoted to the study of the potential, in the search for Beyond the Standard Model (BSM) physics, of the High Luminosity (HL) phase of the LHC, defined as ab of data taken at a centre-of-mass energy of 14 TeV, and of a possible future upgrade, the High Energy (HE) LHC, defined as ab of data at a centre-of-mass energy of 27 TeV. We consider a large variety of new physics models, both in a simplified model fashion and in a more model-dependent one. A long list of contributions from the theory and experimental (ATLAS, CMS, LHCb) communities have been collected and merged together to give a complete, wide, and consistent view of future prospects for BSM physics at the considered colliders. On top of the usual standard candles, such as supersymmetric simplified models and resonances, considered for the evaluation of future collider potentials, this report contains results on dark matter and dark sectors, long lived particles, leptoquarks, sterile neutrinos, axion-like particles, heavy scalars, vector-like quarks, and more. Particular attention is placed, especially in the study of the HL-LHC prospects, to the detector upgrades, the assessment of the future systematic uncertainties, and new experimental techniques. The general conclusion is that the HL-LHC, on top of allowing to extend the present LHC mass and coupling reach by on most new physics scenarios, will also be able to constrain, and potentially discover, new physics that is presently unconstrained. Moreover, compared to the HL-LHC, the reach in most observables will, generally more than double at the HE-LHC, which may represent a good candidate future facility for a final test of TeV-scale new physics
Search for New Particles Decaying to b bbar in p pbar Collisions at sqrt{s}=1.8 TeV
We have used 87 pb^-1 of data collected with the Collider Detector at
Fermilab to search for new particles decaying to b bbar. We present
model-independent upper limits on the cross section for narrow resonances which
excludes the color-octet technirho in the mass interval 350 < M < 440 GeV/c^2.
In addition, we exclude topgluons, predicted in models of topcolor-assisted
technicolor, of width Gamma = 0.3 M in the mass range 280 < M < 670 GeV/c^2, of
width Gamma = 0.5 M in the mass range 340 < M < 640 GeV/c^2, and of width Gamma
= 0.7 M in the mass range 375 < M < 560 GeV/c^2.Comment: 17 pages in a LaTex generated postscript file, with one table and
four figures. Resubmitted to Physical Review Letters. Minor clarifications
were added to the text. The displayed normalization of the resonance models
in Figure 2 was modified to correspond to our 95% CL upper limit on the cross
section (instead of arbitrary normalization which was used previously). All
results are identical to those in the previous submissio
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