10,017 research outputs found
Complementary strategy of New Physics searches in B-sector
We discuss a possible strategy for studies of a particular next-to-minimal
flavor violation New Physics (NP) scenario at LHC. Our analysis is based on
comparison of particular CKM matrix elements, which can be obtained from the
processes dominated by diagrams of different topology (tree, penguin and box).
We argue that the standard formalism of the overall unitarity triangle fit is
not suitable for searches of the chosen NP. We also stress the importance of
lattice computations of some relevant hadronic inputs.Comment: LaTeX, 23 pages, 4 eps figure
The decay b -> s g at NLL in the Standard Model
I present the Standard Model calculation of the decay rate for b -> s g (g
denotes a gluon) at next-to-leading logarithms (NLL). In order to get a
meaningful physical result, the decay b -> s g g and certain contributions of b
-> s \bar{f} f (where f are the light quark flavours u, d and s) have to be
included as well. Numerically we get BR^(NLL) = (5.0 +/- 1.0) * 10^{-3} which
is more than a factor 2 larger than the leading logarithmic result BR^(LL) =
(2.2 +/- 0.8) * 10^{-3}. Further, I consider the impact of this contribution on
the charmless hadronic branching ratio BRc, which could be used to extract the
CKM-ratio |V_(ub)/V_(cb)| with more accuracy. Finally, I have a short look at
BRc in scenarios where the Wilson coefficient C_8 is enhanced by new physics.Comment: 7 pages including 5 postscript figures; uses epsfi
Proposal to Search for Heavy Neutral Leptons at the SPS
A new fixed-target experiment at the CERN SPS accelerator is proposed that
will use decays of charm mesons to search for Heavy Neutral Leptons (HNLs),
which are right-handed partners of the Standard Model neutrinos. The existence
of such particles is strongly motivated by theory, as they can simultaneously
explain the baryon asymmetry of the Universe, account for the pattern of
neutrino masses and oscillations and provide a Dark Matter candidate.
Cosmological constraints on the properties of HNLs now indicate that the
majority of the interesting parameter space for such particles was beyond the
reach of the previous searches at the PS191, BEBC, CHARM, CCFR and NuTeV
experiments. For HNLs with mass below 2 GeV, the proposed experiment will
improve on the sensitivity of previous searches by four orders of magnitude and
will cover a major fraction of the parameter space favoured by theoretical
models.
The experiment requires a 400 GeV proton beam from the SPS with a total of
2x10^20 protons on target, achievable within five years of data taking. The
proposed detector will reconstruct exclusive HNL decays and measure the HNL
mass. The apparatus is based on existing technologies and consists of a target,
a hadron absorber, a muon shield, a decay volume and two magnetic
spectrometers, each of which has a 0.5 Tm magnet, a calorimeter and a muon
detector. The detector has a total length of about 100 m with a 5 m diameter.
The complete experimental set-up could be accommodated in CERN's North Area.
The discovery of a HNL would have a great impact on our understanding of
nature and open a new area for future research
Physics Opportunities with the FCC-hh Injectors
In this chapter we explore a few examples of physics opportunities using the
existing chain of accelerators at CERN, including potential upgrades. In this
context the LHC ring is also considered as a part of the injector system. The
objective is to find examples that constitute sensitive probes of New Physics
that ideally cannot be done elsewhere or can be done significantly better at
theCERN accelerator complex. Some of these physics opportunities may require a
more flexible injector complex with additional functionality than that just
needed to inject protons into the FCC-hh at the right energy, intensity and
bunch structure. Therefore it is timely to discuss these options concurrently
with the conceptual design of the FCC-hh injector system.Comment: 13 pages, chapter 5 in Physics at the FCC-hh, a 100 TeV pp collide
The DL Advocate: playing the devil’s advocate with hidden systematic uncertainties
We propose a new method based on machine learning to play the devil’s advocate and investigate the impact of unknown systematic effects in a quantitative way. This method proceeds by reversing the measurement process and using the physics results to interpret systematic effects under the Standard Model hypothesis. We explore this idea with two alternative approaches: the first one relies on a combination of gradient descent and optimisation techniques, its application and potentiality is illustrated with an example that studies the branching fraction measurement of a heavy-flavour decay. The second method employs reinforcement learning and it is applied to the determination of the angular observable in decays. We find that for the former, the size of a hypothetical hidden systematic uncertainty strongly depends on the kinematic overlap between the signal and normalisation channel, while the latter is very robust against possible mismodellings of the efficiency
The DL Advocate: Playing the devil's advocate with hidden systematic uncertainties
We propose a new method based on machine learning to play the devil's
advocate and investigate the impact of unknown systematic effects in a
quantitative way. This method proceeds by reversing the measurement process and
using the physics results to interpret systematic effects under the Standard
Model hypothesis. We explore this idea with two alternative approaches, one
relies on a combination of gradient descent and optimisation techniques, the
other employs reinforcement learning. We illustrate the potentiality of the
presented method by considering two examples, firstly the case of a branching
fraction measurement of a particle decay and secondly the determination of the
angular observable in decays. We find
that for the former, the size of a hypothetical hidden systematic uncertainty
strongly depends on the kinematic overlap between the signal and normalisation
channel, while the latter is very robust against possible mismodellings of the
efficiency.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Search for ADD Extra Dimensional Gravity in Dimuon Channel with the CMS Detector
In this work a possibility to observe TeV-scale gravity signals at the LHC is discussed. The ADD scenario with large extra dimensions and KK-modes virtual contribution into Drell-Yan processes are considered. A full simulation and reconstruction analysis was carried out to derive the CMS discovery potential for ADD virtual production by studying muon pairs with large invariant masses
Study of Drell-Yan Di-muon Production with the CMS Detector
The potential of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment to measure Drell-Yan muon pairs is studied. The efficiency of Level-1 and High Level Triggers to these events is investigated. Muon pairs can be explored by CMS with high precision up to very high invariant masses. Systematic errors are considered. The possibility of performing precise measurements of the forward-backward asymmetry is discussed
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