2,390 research outputs found

    Mass production of event simulations for the BaBar experiment using the Grid

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    The BaBar experiment has been taking data since 1999, investigating the violation of charge and parity (CP) symmetry in the field of High Energy Physics. Event simulation is an intensive computing task, due to the complexity of the algorithm based on the Monte Carlo method implemented using the GEANT engine. The simulation input data are stored in ROOT format, they are classified into two categories: conditions data for describing the detector status when data are recorded, and background triggers data for including the noise signal necessary to obtain a realistic simulation. In order to satisfy these requirements, in the traditional BaBar computing model events are distributed over several sites involved in the collaboration where each site manager centrally manages a private farm dedicated to simulation production. The new grid approach applied to the BaBar production framework is discussed along with the schema adopted for data deployment via Xrootd/Scalla servers, including data management using grid middleware on distributed storage facilities spread over the INFN-GRID network. A comparison between the two models is provided, describing also the custom applications developed for performing the whole production task on the grid and showing the results achieved

    Indoor Calibration using Segment Chains

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    International audienceIn this paper, we present a new method for line segments matching for indoor reconstruction. Instead of matching individual seg- ments via a descriptor like most methods do, we match segment chains that have a distinctive topology using a dynamic programing formulation. Our method relies solely on the geometric layout of the segment chain and not on photometric or color profiles. Our tests showed that the presented method is robust and manages to produce calibration information even under a drastic change of viewpoint

    A-Contrario Horizon-First Vanishing Point Detection Using Second-Order Grouping Laws

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    International audienceWe show that, in images of man-made environments, the horizon line can usually be hypothesized based on a-contrario detections of second-order grouping events. This allows constraining the extraction of the horizontal vanishing points on that line, thus reducing false detections. Experiments made on three datasets show that our method, not only achieves state-of-the-art performance w.r.t. horizon line detection on two datasets, but also yields much less spurious vanishing points than the previous top-ranked methods

    Energy scan of the e+ehb(nP)π+πe^+e^- \to h_b(nP)\pi^+\pi^- (n=1,2)(n=1,2) cross sections and evidence for Υ(11020)\Upsilon(11020) decays into charged bottomonium-like states

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    Using data collected with the Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy e+ee^+e^- collider, we measure the energy dependence of the e+ehb(nP)π+πe^+e^- \to h_b(nP)\pi^+\pi^- (n=1,2)(n=1,2) cross sections from thresholds up to 11.0211.02\,GeV. We find clear Υ(10860)\Upsilon(10860) and Υ(11020)\Upsilon(11020) peaks with little or no continuum contribution. We study the resonant substructure of the Υ(11020)hb(nP)π+π\Upsilon(11020) \to h_b(nP)\pi^+\pi^- transitions and find evidence that they proceed entirely via the intermediate isovector states Zb(10610)Z_b(10610) and Zb(10650)Z_b(10650). The relative fraction of these states is loosely constrained by the current data: the hypothesis that only Zb(10610)Z_b(10610) is produced is excluded at the level of 3.3 standard deviations, while the hypothesis that only Zb(10650)Z_b(10650) is produced is not excluded at a significant level.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter

    Search for Λc+ϕpπ0\Lambda_c^+\to\phi p \pi^0 and branching fraction measurement of Λc+Kπ+pπ0\Lambda_c^+\to K^-\pi^+ p \pi^0

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    We have searched for the Cabibbo-suppressed decay Λc+ϕpπ0\Lambda_c^+\to\phi p\pi^0 in e+ee^+e^- collisions using a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 915 fb1\rm fb^{-1}. The data were collected by the Belle experiment at the KEKB e+ee^+e^- asymmetric-energy collider running at or near the Υ(4S)\Upsilon(4S) and Υ(5S)\Upsilon(5S) resonances. No significant signal is observed, and we set an upper limit on the branching fraction of B(Λc+ϕpπ0)<15.3×105\mathcal{B}(\Lambda_c^+\to \phi p\pi^0) <15.3\times10^{-5} at 90% confidence level. The contribution for nonresonant Λc+K+Kpπ0\Lambda_c^+\to K^+K^- p\pi^0 decays is found to be consistent with zero and the corresponding upper limit on its branching fraction is set to be B(Λc+K+Kpπ0)NR<6.3×105\mathcal{B}(\Lambda_c^+\to K^+K^-p\pi^0)_{\rm NR} <6.3\times10^{-5} at 90% confidence level. We also measure the branching fraction for the Cabibbo-favored decay Λc+Kπ+pπ0\Lambda_c^+\to K^-\pi^+p\pi^0; the result is B(Λc+Kπ+pπ0)=(4.42±0.05(stat.)±0.12(syst.)±0.16(BNorm))%\mathcal{B}(\Lambda_c^+\to K^-\pi^+p\pi^0)= (4.42\pm0.05\, (\rm stat.) \pm 0.12\, (\rm syst.) \pm 0.16\, (\mathcal{B}_{\rm Norm}))\%, which is the most precise measurement to date. Finally, we have searched for an intermediate hidden-strangeness pentaquark decay Ps+ϕpP^+_s\to\phi p. We see no evidence for this intermediate decay and set an upper limit on the product branching fraction of B(Λc+Ps+π0)×B(Ps+ϕp)<8.3×105{\cal B}(\Lambda_c^+\to P^+_s \pi^0)\times {\cal B}(P^+_s\to\phi p) <8.3\times 10^{-5} at 90% confidence level.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, minor text change in version
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