2,408 research outputs found
Bard: Interpreting New Frontier Energy Collider Physics
No systematic procedure currently exists for inferring the underlying physics
from discrepancies observed in high energy collider data. We present Bard, an
algorithm designed to facilitate the process of model construction at the
energy frontier. Top-down scans of model parameter space are discarded in favor
of bottom-up diagrammatic explanations of particular discrepancies, an
explanation space that can be exhaustively searched and conveniently tested
with existing analysis tools.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure
Probing Models with Near Degeneracy of the Chargino and LSP at a Linear e+e- Collider
For some choices of soft SUSY--breaking parameters, the LSP is a stable
neutralino, the NLSP is a chargino almost degenerate in mass with the LSP (with
mass difference few GeV), and all other sparticles are
relatively heavy. We discuss the potential of a \sqrt{s}\sim 600\gev
collider for studying such models.Comment: 37 pages, 13 figures; revised version includes additional reference
Technihadron Production and Decay at LEP2
The simple "straw-man" model of low-scale technicolor contains light
color--singlet technihadrons, which mix with the electroweak gauge bosons. We
present lepton collider production rates at the parton level, and show that
experiments at LEP2 may be sensitive to the presence of technirho and
techniomega states with masses 10-20 GeV beyond the center-of-mass energy
because of the mixing. The exact sensitivity depends on several parameters,
such as the technipion mass, the technipion mixing angle, and the charge of the
technifermions. In an appendix, we describe the implementation of the model
into the event generator PYTHIA for particle-level studies at lepton and hadron
colliders.Comment: 18 pages (5 figures) in Latex forma
A Brief Introduction to PYTHIA 8.1
The PYTHIA program is a standard tool for the generation of high-energy
collisions, comprising a coherent set of physics models for the evolution from
a few-body hard process to a complex multihadronic final state. It contains a
library of hard processes and models for initial- and final-state parton
showers, multiple parton-parton interactions, beam remnants, string
fragmentation and particle decays. It also has a set of utilities and
interfaces to external programs. While previous versions were written in
Fortran, PYTHIA 8 represents a complete rewrite in C++. The current release is
the first main one after this transition, and does not yet in every respect
replace the old code. It does contain some new physics aspects, on the other
hand, that should make it an attractive option especially for LHC physics
studies.Comment: 27 page
PYTHIA 6.3 Physics and Manual
The PYTHIA program can be used to generate high-energy-physics `events', i.e.
sets of outgoing particles produced in the interactions between two incoming
particles. The objective is to provide as accurate as possible a representation
of event properties in a wide range of reactions, with emphasis on those where
strong interactions play a role, directly or indirectly, and therefore
multihadronic final states are produced. The physics is then not understood
well enough to give an exact description; instead the program has to be based
on a combination of analytical results and various QCD-based models. This
physics input is summarized here, for areas such as hard subprocesses, initial-
and final-state parton showers, beam remnants and underlying events,
fragmentation and decays, and much more. Furthermore, extensive information is
provided on all program elements: subroutines and functions, switches and
parameters, and particle and process data. This should allow the user to tailor
the generation task to the topics of interest.Comment: 8 + 454 page
Can a light technipion be discovered at the Tevatron if it decays to two gluons?
In multiscale and topcolor-assisted models of walking technicolor, light,
spin-one technihadrons can exist with masses of a few hundred GeV; they are
expected to decay as rho_T -> W pi_T. For technirho masses ~200 GeV and
technipion masses ~100 GeV, the process pbar p -> rho_T -> W pi_T has a cross
section of about a picobarn at the Tevatron. We demonstrate the detectability
of this process with simulations appropriate to Run II conditions, for the
challenging case where the technipion decays dominantly into two gluons.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, including figure
The Matrix Element Method: Past, Present, and Future
The increasing use of multivariate methods, and in particular the Matrix
Element Method (MEM), represents a revolution in experimental particle physics.
With continued exponential growth in computing capabilities, the use of
sophisticated multivariate methods-- already common-- will soon become
ubiquitous and ultimately almost compulsory. While the existence of
sophisticated algorithms for disentangling signal and background might naively
suggest a diminished role for theorists, the use of the MEM, with its inherent
connection to the calculation of differential cross sections will benefit from
collaboration between theorists and experimentalists. In this white paper, we
will briefly describe the MEM and some of its recent uses, note some current
issues and potential resolutions, and speculate about exciting future
opportunities.Comment: 3 pages, no figures. Snowmass white paper. Minor revisions.
References adde
- …