3,772 research outputs found
Development of planar pixel modules for the ATLAS high luminosity LHC tracker upgrade
The high-luminosity LHC will present significant challenges for tracking systems. ATLAS is preparing to upgrade the entire tracking system, which will include a significantly larger pixel detector. This paper reports on the development of large area planar detectors for the outer pixel layers and the pixel endcaps. Large area sensors have been fabricated and mounted onto 4 FE-I4 readout ASICs, the so-called quad-modules, and their performance evaluated in the laboratory and testbeam. Results from characterisation of sensors prior to assembly, experience with module assembly, including bump-bonding and results from laboratory and testbeam studies are presented
Dispelling the N^3 myth for the Kt jet-finder
At high-energy colliders, jets of hadrons are the observable counterparts of
the perturbative concepts of quarks and gluons. Good procedures for identifying
jets are central to experimental analyses and comparisons with theory. The Kt
family of successive recombination jet finders has been widely advocated
because of its conceptual simplicity and flexibility and its unique ability to
approximately reconstruct the partonic branching sequence in an event. Until
now however, it had been believed that for an ensemble of N particles the
algorithmic complexity of the Kt jet finder scaled as N^3, a severe issue in
the high multiplicity environments of LHC and heavy-ion colliders. We here show
that the computationally complex part of Kt jet-clustering can be reduced to
two-dimensional nearest neighbour location for a dynamic set of points.
Borrowing techniques developed for this extensively studied problem in
computational geometry, Kt jet-finding can then be performed in N ln N time.
Code based on these ideas is found to run faster than all other jet finders in
current use.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures; v2, to appear in Phys.Lett.B, includes an extra
section briefly discussing the issues of jet areas and pileup subtraction,
and also the Cambridge/Aachen jet finde
Discovering Higgs bosons of the MSSM using jet substructure
We present a qualitatively new approach to discover Higgs bosons of the MSSM
at the LHC using jet substructure techniques applied to boosted Higgs decays.
These techniques are ideally suited to the MSSM, since the lightest Higgs boson
overwhelmingly decays to throughout the entire parameter space,
while the heavier neutral Higgs bosons, if light enough to be produced in a
cascade, also predominantly decay to . The Higgs production we
consider arises from superpartner production where superpartners cascade decay
into Higgs bosons. We study this mode of Higgs production for several
superpartner hierarchies: ; ; and with . In these cascades,
the Higgs bosons are boosted, with GeV a large fraction of the
time. Since Higgs bosons appear in cascades originating from squarks and/or
gluinos, the cross section for events with at least one Higgs boson can be the
same order as squark/gluino production. Given 10 fb of 14 TeV LHC data,
with m_{\tilde{q}} \lsim 1 TeV, and one of the above superpartner mass
hierarchies, our estimate of of the Higgs signal is sufficiently
high that the mode can become the discovery mode of the lightest
Higgs boson of the MSSM.Comment: 16 pages. Figures modified and references added. Submitted to PR
Confronting models on cosmic ray interactions with particle physics at LHC energies
Inelastic pp collisions are dominated by soft (low momentum transfer) physics
where perturbative QCD cannot be fully applied. A deep understanding of both
soft and semi-hard processes is crucial for predictions of minimum bias and
underlying events of the now coming on line pp Large Hadron Collider (LHC).
Moreover, the interaction of cosmic ray particles entering in the atmosphere is
extremely sensitive to these soft processes and consequently cannot be
formulated from first principles. Because of this, air shower analyses strongly
rely on hadronic interaction models, which extrapolate collider data several
orders of magnitude. A comparative study of Monte Carlo simulations of pp
collisions (at the LHC center-of-mass energy ~ 14 TeV) using the most popular
hadronic interaction models for ultrahigh energy cosmic ray (SIBYLL and QGSJET)
and for collider physics (the PYTHIA multiparton model) is presented. The most
relevant distributions are studied including those observables from diffractive
events with the aim of discriminating between the different models.Comment: 8 pages revtex, 8 figures, added reference
Scalar and pseudoscalar Higgs production in association with a top-antitop pair
We present the calculation of scalar and pseudoscalar Higgs production in
association with a top-antitop pair to the next-to-leading order (NLO) accuracy
in QCD, interfaced with parton showers according to the MC@NLO formalism. We
apply our results to the cases of light and very light Higgs boson production
at the LHC, giving results for total rates as well as for sample differential
distributions, relevant to the Higgs, to the top quarks, and to their decay
products. This work constitutes the first phenomenological application of
aMC@NLO, a fully automated approach to complete event generation at NLO in QCD.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, published version. (2 references added, improved
description of the decay of the top and Higgs bosons
MadGraph/MadEvent v4: The New Web Generation
We present the latest developments of the MadGraph/MadEvent Monte Carlo event
generator and several applications to hadron collider physics. In the current
version events at the parton, hadron and detector level can be generated
directly from a web interface, for arbitrary processes in the Standard Model
and in several physics scenarios beyond it (HEFT, MSSM, 2HDM). The most
important additions are: a new framework for implementing user-defined new
physics models; a standalone running mode for creating and testing matrix
elements; generation of events corresponding to different processes, such as
signal(s) and backgrounds, in the same run; two platforms for data analysis,
where events are accessible at the parton, hadron and detector level; and the
generation of inclusive multi-jet samples by combining parton-level events with
parton showers. To illustrate the new capabilities of the package some
applications to hadron collider physics are presented:
1) Higgs search in pp \to H \to W^+W^-: signal and backgrounds.
2) Higgs CP properties: pp \to H jj$in the HEFT.
3) Spin of a new resonance from lepton angular distributions.
4) Single-top and Higgs associated production in a generic 2HDM.
5) Comparison of strong SUSY pair production at the SPS points.
6) Inclusive W+jets matched samples: comparison with the Tevatron data.Comment: 38 pages, 15 figure
A double-sided, shield-less stave prototype for the ATLAS upgrade strip tracker for the high luminosity LHC
A detailed description of the integration structures for the barrel region of the silicon strips tracker of the ATLAS Phase-II upgrade for the upgrade of the Large Hadron Collider, the so-called High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC), is presented. This paper focuses on one of the latest demonstrator prototypes recently assembled, with numerous unique features. It consists of a shortened, shield-less, and double sided stave, with two candidate power distributions implemented. Thermal and electrical performances of the prototype are presented, as well as a description of the assembly procedures and tools
HV/HR-CMOS sensors for the ATLAS upgradeâconcepts and test chip results
In order to extend its discovery potential, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will have a major upgrade (Phase II Upgrade) scheduled for 2022. The LHC after the upgrade, called High-Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC), will operate at a nominal leveled instantaneous luminosity of 5Ă 1034 cmâ2 sâ1, more than twice the expected Phase I . The new Inner Tracker needs to cope with this extremely high luminosity. Therefore it requires higher granularity, reduced material budget and increased radiation hardness of all components. A new pixel detector based on High Voltage CMOS (HVCMOS) technology targeting the upgraded ATLAS pixel detector is under study. The main advantages of the HVCMOS technology are its potential for low material budget, use of possible cheaper interconnection technologies, reduced pixel size and lower cost with respect to traditional hybrid pixel detector. Several first prototypes were produced and characterized within ATLAS upgrade R&D effort, to explore the performance and radiation hardness of this technology.
In this paper, an overview of the HVCMOS sensor concepts is given. Laboratory tests and irradiation tests of two technologies, HVCMOS AMS and HVCMOS GF, are also given
Insights into the Research Trends on Bovine Colostrum: Beneficial Health Perspectives with Special Reference to Manufacturing of Functional Foods and Feed Supplements
Bovine colostrum (BC) is the initial mammary secretion after parturition, which is natureâs bountiful source consisting of nutritional and bioactive components present in a highly concentrated low-volume format. All mammalian newborns require colostrum to enhance physiological processes such as lifelong immunity, gastrointestinal development, and resistance to microbial infections. The genetic, environmental, and processing methods can all have an impact on the biochemical contents of BC and its supplements. BC and its derivatives have been intensively researched for their potential use in functional foods, medicines, and animal feed. Evidence from clinical studies suggests that BC products are well-tolerated, nontoxic, and safe for human ingestion. Functional foods, feed, and pharmaceutical formulations based on bovine colostrum are playing noteworthy roles in the development of innovative products for promoting health and the prevention of chronic illnesses. This systematic review sheds light on recent research on (a) the effects of processing techniques on BC components, (b) emerging techniques used in the isolation and identification of novel components, (c) BC-based functional foods for human consumption and animal feed supplements, and (d) the role of BC in current drug delivery, as well as future recommendations.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Radiation-hard active pixel sensors for HL-LHC detector upgrades based on HV-CMOS technology
Luminosity upgrades are discussed for the LHC (HL-LHC) which would make updates to the detectors necessary, requiring in particular new, even more radiation-hard and granular, sensors for the inner detector region.
A proposal for the next generation of inner detectors is based on HV-CMOS: a new family of silicon sensors based on commercial high-voltage CMOS technology, which enables the fabrication of part of the pixel electronics inside the silicon substrate itself.
The main advantages of this technology with respect to the standard silicon sensor technology are: low material budget, fast charge collection time, high radiation tolerance, low cost and operation at room temperature.
A traditional readout chip is still needed to receive and organize the data from the active sensor and to handle high-level functionality such as trigger management. HV-CMOS has been designed to be compatible with both pixel and strip readout.
In this paper an overview of HV2FEI4, a HV-CMOS prototype in 180 nm AMS technology, will be given. Preliminary results after neutron and X-ray irradiation are shown
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