1,752 research outputs found
Collinear Subtractions in Hadroproduction of Heavy Quarks
We present a detailed discussion of the collinear subtraction terms needed to
establish a massive variable-flavour-number scheme for the one-particle
inclusive production of heavy quarks in hadronic collisions. The subtraction
terms are computed by convoluting appropriate partonic cross sections with
perturbative parton distribution and fragmentation functions relying on the
method of mass factorization. We find (with one minor exception) complete
agreement with the subtraction terms obtained in a previous publication by
comparing the zero-mass limit of a fixed-order calculation with the genuine
massles results in the MSbar scheme. This presentation will be useful for
extending the massive variable-flavour-number scheme to other processes.Comment: 29 pages, 17 figures include
Measurement of heavy-flavor production in Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC with ALICE
A Large Ion Collider Experiment (ALICE) at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
has been built in order to study the Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) created in
high-energy nuclear collisions. As heavy-flavor quarks are produced at the
early stage of the collision, they serve as sensitive probes for the QGP. The
ALICE detector with its capabilities such as particle identification, secondary
vertexing and tracking in a high multiplicity environment can address, among
other measurements, the heavy-flavor sector in heavy-ion collisions. We present
latest results on the measurement of the nuclear modification factor of open
heavy-flavors as well as on the measurement of open heavy-flavor azimuthal
anisotropy v2 in Pb-Pb collisions at sqrt(s) = 2.76 TeV. Open charmed hadrons
are reconstructed in the hadronic decay channels D0->Kpi, D+->Kpipi, and
D*+->D0pi applying a secondary decay-vertex topology. Complementary
measurements are performed by detecting electrons (muons) from semi-leptonic
decays of open heavy-flavor hadrons in the central (forward) rapidity region.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. Talk given by Robert Grajcarek at the 11th
International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (NN2012), San Antonio,
Texas, USA, May 27-June 1, 2012. To appear in the NN2012 Proceedings in
Journal of Physics: Conference Series (JPCS
Charm Cross Sections for the Tevatron Run II
We present a calculation of the D^{*+}, D^+ and D^0 meson single inclusive
production cross section for the Tevatron Run II. We use the FONLL approach in
perturbative QCD, which, besides including the known next-to-leading order
corrections, also provides for the resummation at the next-to-leading
logarithmic level of terms enhanced at large p_T by powers of log(p_T/m), where
m is the charm mass and p_T is its transverse momentum. Non-perturbative
effects in charm hadronization are extracted, in moment space, from recent
ALEPH data for D^* fragmentation in e^+e^- collisions.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, LaTe
Is There a Significant Excess in Bottom Hadroproduction at the Tevatron?
We discuss the excess in the hadroproduction of B mesons at the Tevatron. We
show that an accurate use of up-to-date information on the B fragmentation
function reduces the observed excess to an acceptable level. Possible
implications for experimental results reporting bottom quark cross sections,
also showing an excess with respect to next-to-leading order theoretical
predictions, are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, Latex, 4 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Jet Trimming
Initial state radiation, multiple interactions, and event pileup can
contaminate jets and degrade event reconstruction. Here we introduce a
procedure, jet trimming, designed to mitigate these sources of contamination in
jets initiated by light partons. This procedure is complimentary to existing
methods developed for boosted heavy particles. We find that jet trimming can
achieve significant improvements in event reconstruction, especially at high
energy/luminosity hadron colliders like the LHC.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables - Minor changes to text/figure
Theoretical predictions for charm and bottom production at the LHC
We present predictions for a variety of single-inclusive observables that
stem from the production of charm and bottom quark pairs at the 7 TeV LHC. They
are obtained within the FONLL semi-analytical framework, and with two "Monte
Carlo + NLO" approaches, MC@NLO and POWHEG. Results are given for final states
and acceptance cuts that are as close as possible to those used by experimental
collaborations and, where feasible, are compared to LHC data.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figure
J/psi Production at the LHC
We firstly examine hadroproduction of prompt J/psi's at the Fermilab Tevatron
in a Monte Carlo Framework by means of the event generator PYTHIA 5.7 in which
those colour-octet matrix elements processes relevant for charmonium production
have been implemented accordingly. We find that colour-octet matrix elements
presented in literature from p-pbar collider data are systematically
overestimated due to overlooking of the effective primordial transverse
momentum of partons (i.e. including higher-order QCD effects). We estimate the
size of these effects using different parton distribution functions. Finally,
after normalization to Tevatron data, we extrapolate up to LHC energies making
a prediction on the expected pt differential cross-section for charmonium.Comment: 4 pages, LaTex, 3 Figures included in the text, Contribution to the
2nd Int. Conference on Hyperons, charm and beauty hadrons (Montreal, Aug
27-30, 1996
Jet Reconstruction in Heavy Ion Collisions
We examine the problem of jet reconstruction at heavy-ion colliders using
jet-area-based background subtraction tools as provided by FastJet. We use
Monte Carlo simulations with and without quenching to study the performance of
several jet algorithms, including the option of filtering, under conditions
corresponding to RHIC and LHC collisions. We find that most standard algorithms
perform well, though the anti-kt and filtered Cambridge/Aachen algorithms have
clear advantages in terms of the reconstructed transverse-momentum offset and
dispersion.Comment: 31 pages, 17 figure
Open Heavy Flavor Production in QCD -- Conceptual Framework and Implementation Issues
Heavy flavor production is an important QCD process both in its own right and
as a key component of precision global QCD analysis. Apparent disagreements
between fixed-flavor scheme calculations of b-production rate with experimental
measurements in hadro-, lepto-, and photo-production provide new impetus to a
thorough examination of the theory and phenomenology of this process. We review
existing methods of calculation, and place them in the context of the general
PQCD framework of Collins. A distinction is drawn between scheme dependence and
implementation issues related to quark mass effects near threshold. We point
out a so far overlooked kinematic constraint on the threshold behavior, which
greatly simplifies the variable flavor number scheme. It obviates the need for
the elaborate existing prescriptions, and leads to robust predictions. It can
facilitate the study of current issues on heavy flavor production as well as
precision global QCD analysis.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, Proceedings of Ringberg Workshop: New Trends in
HERA Physics 2001, Munich, German
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