8,028 research outputs found
Standard Model Higgs boson searches with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider
The investigation of the mechanism responsible for electroweak symmetry
breaking is one of the most important tasks of the scientific program of the
Large Hadron Collider. The experimental results on the search of the Standard
Model Higgs boson with 1 to 2 fb^-1 of proton proton collision data at sqrt s=7
TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector are presented and discussed. No significant
excess of events is found with respect to the expectations from Standard Model
processes, and the production of a Higgs boson is excluded at 95% Confidence
Level for the mass regions 144-232, 256-282 and 296-466 GeV.Comment: Proceedings of the Lepton Photon 2011 Conference, to appear in
"Pramana - journal of phsyics". 11 pages, 13 figure
Searches for phenomena beyond the Standard Model at the LHC with the ATLAS and CMS detectors
The LHC has delivered several fb-1 of data in spring and summer 2011, opening
new windows of opportunity for discovering phenomena beyond the Standard Model.
A summary of the searches conducted by the ATLAS and CMS experiments based on
about 1 fb-1 of data is presented.Comment: Presented at Lepton-Photon 2011, Mumbai, India; 10 pages, 11 figure
ATLAS silicon module assembly and qualification tests at IFIC Valencia
ATLAS experiment, designed to probe the interactions of particles emerging
out of proton proton collisions at energies of up to 14 TeV, will assume
operation at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in 2007. This paper
discusses the assembly and the quality control tests of forward detector
modules for the ATLAS silicon microstrip detector assembled at the Instituto de
Fisica Corpuscular (IFIC) in Valencia. The construction and testing procedures
are outlined and the laboratory equipment is briefly described. Emphasis is
given on the module quality achieved in terms of mechanical and electrical
stability.Comment: 23 pages, 38 EPS figures, uses JINST LaTeX clas
An Empirical Charge Transfer Potential with Correct Dissociation Limits
The empirical valence bond (EVB) method [J. Chem. Phys. 52, 1262 (1970)] has
always embodied charge transfer processes. The mechanism of that behavior is
examined here and recast for use as a new empirical potential energy surface
for large-scale simulations. A two-state model is explored. The main features
of the model are: (1) Explicit decomposition of the total system electron
density is invoked; (2) The charge is defined through the density decomposition
into constituent contributions; (3) The charge transfer behavior is controlled
through the resonance energy matrix elements which cannot be ignored; and (4) A
reference-state approach, similar in spirit to the EVB method, is used to
define the resonance state energy contributions in terms of "knowable"
quantities. With equal validity, the new potential energy can be expressed as a
nonthermal ensemble average with a nonlinear but analytical charge dependence
in the occupation number. Dissociation to neutral species for a gas-phase
process is preserved. A variant of constrained search density functional theory
is advocated as the preferred way to define an energy for a given charge.Comment: Submitted to J. Chem. Phys. 11/12/03. 14 pages, 8 figure
Searching for the Kaluza-Klein Graviton in Bulk RS Models
The best-studied version of the RS1 model has all the Standard Model
particles confined to the TeV brane. However, recent variants have the Standard
Model fermions and gauge bosons located in the bulk five-dimensional spacetime.
We study the potential reach of the LHC in searching for the lightest KK
partner of the graviton in the most promising such models in which the
right-handed top is localized very near the TeV brane and the light fermions
are localized near the Planck brane. We consider both detection and the
establishment of the spin-2 nature of the resonance should it be found.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures - JHEP published version, figures added,
branching ratio correcte
Beam tests of an integrated prototype of the ATLAS Forward Proton detector
The ATLAS Forward Proton (AFP) detector is intended to measure protons scattered at small angles from the ATLAS interaction point. To this end, a combination of 3D Silicon pixel tracking modules and Quartz-Cherenkov time-of-flight (ToF) detectors is installed 210 m away from the interaction point at both sides of ATLAS. Beam tests with an AFP prototype detector combining tracking and timing sub-detectors and a common readout have been performed at the CERN-SPS test-beam facility in November 2014 and September 2015 to complete the system integration and to study the detector performance. The successful tracking-timing integration was demonstrated. Good tracker hit efficiencies above 99.9% at a sensor tilt of 14°, as foreseen for AFP, were observed. Spatial resolutions in the short pixel direction with 50 μm pitch of 5.5 ± 0.5 μm per pixel plane and of 2.8 ± 0.5 μm for the full four-plane tracker at 14° were found, largely surpassing the AFP requirement of 10 μm. The timing detector showed also good hit efficiencies above 99%, and a full-system time resolution of 35±6 ps was found for the ToF prototype detector with two Quartz bars in-line (half the final AFP size) without dedicated optimisation, fulfilling the requirements for initial low-luminosity AFP runs.Peer Reviewe
Cosmological Perturbations from the Standard Model Higgs
We propose that the Standard Model (SM) Higgs is responsible for generating
the cosmological perturbations of the universe by acting as an isocurvature
mode during a de Sitter inflationary stage. In view of the recent ATLAS and CMS
results for the Higgs mass, this can happen if the Hubble rate during inflation
is in the range GeV (depending on the SM parameters).
Implications for the detection of primordial tensor perturbations through the
-mode of CMB polarization via the PLANCK satellite are discussed. For
example, if the Higgs mass value is confirmed to be GeV and are at their central values, our mechanism predicts tensor
perturbations too small to be detected in the near future. On the other hand,
if tensor perturbations will be detected by PLANCK through the -mode of CMB,
then there is a definite relation between the Higgs and top masses, making the
mechanism predictive and falsifiable.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. Minor corrections and references added to match
published versio
Dark matter searches at LHC
Besides Standard Model measurements and other Beyond Standard Model studies,
the ATLAS and CMS experiments at the LHC will search for Supersymmetry, one of
the most attractive explanation for dark matter. The SUSY discovery potential
with early data is presented here together with some first results obtained
with 2010 collision data at 7 TeV. Emphasis is placed on measurements and
parameter determination that can be performed to disentangle the possible SUSY
models and SUSY look-alike and the interpretation of a possible positive
supersymmetric signal as an explanation of dark matter.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, Invited plenary talk given at DISCRETE 2010:
Symposium On Prospects In The Physics Of Discrete Symmetries, 6-11 Dec 2010,
Rome, Ital
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