3,773 research outputs found
Measurements of the Production, Decay and Properties of the Top Quark: A Review
With the full Tevatron Run II and early LHC data samples, the opportunity for
furthering our understanding of the properties of the top quark has never been
more promising. Although the current knowledge of the top quark comes largely
from Tevatron measurements, the experiments at the LHC are poised to probe
top-quark production and decay in unprecedented regimes. Although no current
top quark measurements conclusively contradict predictions from the standard
model, the precision of most measurements remains statistically limited.
Additionally, some measurements, most notably the forward-backward asymmetry in
top quark pair production, show tantalizing hints of beyond-the-Standard-Model
dynamics. The top quark sample is growing rapidly at the LHC, with initial
results now public. This review examines the current status of top quark
measurements in the particular light of searching for evidence of new physics,
either through direct searches for beyond the standard model phenomena or
indirectly via precise measurements of standard model top quark properties
Searches for Physics Beyond the Standard Model at Colliders
All experimental measurements of particle physics today are beautifully
described by the Standard Model. However, there are good reasons to believe
that new physics may be just around the corner at the TeV energy scale. This
energy range is currently probed by the Tevatron and HERA accelerators and
selected results of searches for physics beyond the Standard Model are
presented here. No signals for new physics have been found and limits are
placed on the allowed parameter space for a variety of different particles.Comment: Proceedings for 2007 Europhysics Conference on High Energy Physics,
Manchester, July 200
Taking a Razor to Dark Matter Parameter Space at the LHC
Dark matter (DM) has been searched for at colliders in a largely model
independent fashion by looking for an excess number of events involving a
single jet, or photon, and missing energy. We investigate the possibility of
looking for excesses in more inclusive jet channels. Events with multiple jets
contain more information and thus more handles to increase the signal to
background ratio. In particular, we adapt the recent CMS "razor" analysis from
a search for supersymmetry to a search for DM. We consider simplified models
where DM is a Dirac fermion that couples to the quarks of the Standard Model
(SM) through exchange of vector or axial-vector mediators or to gluons through
scalar exchange. We consider both light and heavy (leading to effective contact
interactions) mediators. Since the razor analysis requires multiple jets in the
final state, the data set is complementary to that used for the monojet search
and thus the bounds can be combined.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures; v2 published version; v3 removes duplication of
manuscript in pd
A Fast Track towards the `Higgs' Spin and Parity
The LHC experiments ATLAS and CMS have discovered a new boson that resembles
the long-sought Higgs boson: it cannot have spin one, and has couplings to
other particles that increase with their masses, but the spin and parity remain
to be determined. We show here that the `Higgs' + gauge boson invariant-mass
distribution in `Higgs'-strahlung events at the Tevatron or the LHC would be
very different under the J^P = 0+, 0- and 2+ hypotheses, and could provide a
fast-track indicator of the `Higgs' spin and parity. Our analysis is based on
simulations of the experimental event selections and cuts using PYTHIA and
Delphes, and incorporates statistical samples of `toy' experiments.Comment: 18 pages, 9 pdf figure
Model-independent extraction of matrix elements from top-quark measurements at hadron colliders
Current methods to extract the quark-mixing matrix element from
single-top production measurements assume that : top quarks decay into quarks with 100% branching fraction,
s-channel single-top production is always accompanied by a quark and
initial-state contributions from and quarks in the -channel
production of single top quarks are neglected. Triggered by a recent
measurement of the ratio
performed by the D0 collaboration, we consider a extraction method
that takes into account non zero d- and s-quark contributions both in
production and decay. We propose a strategy that allows to extract consistently
and in a model-independent way the quark mixing matrix elements ,
, and from the measurement of and from single-top
measured event yields. As an illustration, we apply our method to the Tevatron
data using a CDF analysis of the measured single-top event yield with two jets
in the final state one of which is identified as a -quark jet. We constrain
the matrix elements within a four-generation scenario by combining
the results with those obtained from direct measurements in flavor physics and
determine the preferred range for the top-quark decay width within different
scenarios.Comment: 36 pages, 17 figure
Phenomenology of the Heavy Flavored spin 3/2 Baryons in Light Cone QCD
Motivated by the results of the recent experimental discoveries for charm and
bottom baryons, the masses and magnetic moments of the heavy baryons with
containing a single heavy quark are studied within light cone QCD
sum rules method. Our results on the masses of heavy baryons are in good
agreement with predictions of other approaches, as well as with the existing
experimental data.Comment: 12 Pages, 18 Figures and 3 Tables. Based on: arXiv:0807.3481v2
[hep-ph](Nucl.Phys.B808:137-154,2009). To be Published in the Proceeding of
the International Conference on New Trends in High Energy Physics, 27 Sept.-4
Oct. 2008, Yalta, Crimea, Ukrain
Precision measurements of the top quark mass from the Tevatron in the pre-LHC era
The top quark is the heaviest of the six quarks of the Standard Model.
Precise knowledge of its mass is important for imposing constraints on a number
of physics processes, including interactions of the as yet unobserved Higgs
boson. The Higgs boson is the only missing particle of the Standard Model,
central to the electroweak symmetry breaking mechanism and generation of
particle masses. In this Review, experimental measurements of the top quark
mass accomplished at the Tevatron, a proton-antiproton collider located at the
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, are described. Topologies of top quark
events and methods used to separate signal events from background sources are
discussed. Data analysis techniques used to extract information about the top
mass value are reviewed. The combination of several most precise measurements
performed with the two Tevatron particle detectors, CDF and \D0, yields a value
of \Mt = 173.2 \pm 0.9 GeV/.Comment: This version contains the most up-to-date top quark mass averag
Probing Top Anomalous Couplings at the Tevatron and the Large Hadron Collider
Chromomagnetic and chromoelectric dipole interactions of the top quark are
studied in a model independent framework. Limits are set on the scale of new
physics that might lead to such contributions using available Tevatron data.
Prospects at the LHC are reviewed.Comment: Version published in Praman
Z' Bosons at Colliders: a Bayesian Viewpoint
We revisit the CDF data on di-muon production to impose constraints on a
large class of Z' bosons occurring in a variety of E_6 GUT based models. We
analyze the dependence of these limits on various factors contributing to the
production cross-section, showing that currently systematic and theoretical
uncertainties play a relatively minor role. Driven by this observation, we
emphasize the use of the Bayesian statistical method, which allows us to
straightforwardly (i) vary the gauge coupling strength, g', of the underlying
U(1)'; (ii) include interference effects with the Z' amplitude (which are
especially important for large g'); (iii) smoothly vary the U(1)' charges; (iv)
combine these data with the electroweak precision constraints as well as with
other observables obtained from colliders such as LEP 2 and the LHC; and (v)
find preferred regions in parameter space once an excess is seen. We adopt this
method as a complementary approach for a couple of sample models and find
limits on the Z' mass, generally differing by only a few percent from the
corresponding CDF ones when we follow their approach. Another general result is
that the interference effects are quite relevant if one aims at discriminating
between models. Finally, the Bayesian approach frees us of any ad hoc
assumptions about the number of events needed to constitute a signal or
exclusion limit for various actual and hypothetical reference energies and
luminosities at the Tevatron and the LHC.Comment: PDFLaTeX, 24 pages, 7 figures. Version with improved tables and
figure
Matching Tree-Level Matrix Elements with Interleaved Showers
We present an implementation of the so-called CKKW-L merging scheme for
combining multi-jet tree-level matrix elements with parton showers. The
implementation uses the transverse-momentum-ordered shower with interleaved
multiple interactions as implemented in PYTHIA8. We validate our procedure
using e+e--annihilation into jets and vector boson production in hadronic
collisions, with special attention to details in the algorithm which are
formally sub-leading in character, but may have visible effects in some
observables. We find substantial merging scale dependencies induced by the
enforced rapidity ordering in the default PYTHIA8 shower. If this rapidity
ordering is removed the merging scale dependence is almost negligible. We then
also find that the shower does a surprisingly good job of describing the
hardness of multi-jet events, as long as the hardest couple of jets are given
by the matrix elements. The effects of using interleaved multiple interactions
as compared to more simplistic ways of adding underlying-event effects in
vector boson production are shown to be negligible except in a few sensitive
observables. To illustrate the generality of our implementation, we also give
some example results from di-boson production and pure QCD jet production in
hadronic collisions.Comment: 44 pages, 23 figures, as published in JHEP, including all changes
recommended by the refere
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