3,748 research outputs found
Evaluation of the LHCb RICH detectors and a measurement of the CKM angle
The future LHCb experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN will perform precision measurements of CP violation parameters in the neutral B systems. In this thesis the performance of the LHCb RICH system is evaluated, and the feasibility of a measurement of the CP violation parameter #gamma#, using the decays B_d"0 #-># D*"-#pi#"+, B_d"0 #-># D*"-#pi#"+ and their CP conjugates, is investigated. Efficient methods for the reconstruction of B_d"0 #-># D*"-#pi#"+ decays at LHCb are developed. Using the GEANT-based LHCb detector simulation program SICb, the reconstruction efficiencies and signal to background ratios are estimated. It is demonstrated that the decay channel B_d"0 #-># D*"-#pi#"+ can provide a precision in #gamma# of a few degrees after one year of LHCb data taking. A full-scale prototype of the LHCb RICH 2 detector has been tested in a testbeam at CERN in Summer 1998. It is shown to work according to expectation, in particular in the defining aspects of a RICH detector, the photon yield and the Cherenkov angle resolution. These results demonstrate that the LHCb RICH detectors are well understood and give confidence in the model of the RICH system used in the simulation studies for LHCb detector optimisation. In a testbeam in Summer 1999 a RICH prototype was tested using a 3x3 cluster of Multi-anode Photo Multiplier Tubes equipped with lenses. The tubes were read out within the LHC bunch-crossing interval of 25 ns for the first time. It is demonstrated that the MaPMT performs well and is a suitable photodetector for the LHCb RICH. (author)Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:D213936 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
Determining the unitarity triangle angle with a four-body amplitude analysis of decays
We explain how a four-body amplitude analysis of the decay products
in the mode is sensitive to the
unitarity triangle angle . We present results from simulation studies
which show that a precision on of is achievable with 1000
events and assuming a value of 0.10 for the parameter .Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. (This version has bug in equation 4 fixed, and
minor modification to references.
Monte Carlo Independent Lifetime Fitting at LHCb in Lifetime Biased Channels
Lifetime measurements at LHCb will help in detector calibration as well as providing constraints on lifetime differences in the system and other theoretical models. In order to exploit the full range of decays available in LHCb, it is important to have a method for fitting lifetimes in hadronic channels, which are biased by the impact parameter cuts in the trigger. We have investigated a Monte Carlo simulation independent method to take into account the trigger effects. The method is based on calculating event by event acceptance functions from the decay geometry and does not require any external input. This note presents current results with this method for both the full LHCb Monte Carlo for the channel and a toy Monte Carlo for the same channel, including a discussion of the expected statistical precision on lifetime measurements using this method once LHCb is operational
Amplitude analysis of four-body decays using a massively-parallel fitting framework
The GooFit Framework is designed to perform maximum-likelihood fits for
arbitrary functions on various parallel back ends, for example a GPU. We
present an extension to GooFit which adds the functionality to perform
time-dependent amplitude analyses of pseudoscalar mesons decaying into four
pseudoscalar final states. Benchmarks of this functionality show a significant
performance increase when utilizing a GPU compared to a CPU. Furthermore, this
extension is employed to study the sensitivity on the mixing
parameters and in a time-dependent amplitude analysis of the decay . Studying a sample of 50 000 events and setting
the central values to the world average of and , the statistical sensitivities of and are determined
to be and .Comment: Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Computing in High
Energy and Nuclear Physics, CHEP 201
A Monte Carlo simulation free method of measuring lifetimes using event-by-event acceptance functions at LHCb
A set of innovative methods and tools for precision lifetime and lifetime-difference measurements in hadronic B decays at LHCb is presented. All methods are purely data-driven and Monte Carlo simulation independent, a particularly important feature if lifetime measurements are to be made in the early period of LHCb's data taking. The methods and tools are shown to work in detailed simulation studies, including both Toy and Full Monte Carlo simulation studies of possible systematic biases in the measurements
First determination of the content of and updated determination of the contents of and
Quantum-correlated decays collected by the CLEO-c
experiment are used to perform a first measurement of , the
fractional -even content of the self-conjugate decay , obtaining a value of . An important
input to the measurement comes from the use of
and decays to tag the signal mode. This same
technique is applied to the channels and , yielding and
, where the first uncertainty is
statistical and the second systematic. These measurements are consistent with
those of an earlier analysis, based on -eigenstate tags, and can be
combined to give values of and
. The results will enable the three modes to
be included in a model-independent manner in measurements of the unitarity
triangle angle using decays, and in time-dependent
studies of violation and mixing in the system.Comment: Minor revisions following journal acceptanc
LHCb's Potential to Measure Flavour-Specific CP-Asymmetry in Semileptonic and Hadronic Decays
"The CP asymmetry in Bs-Bsbar mixing, denoted as a^s_{fs}, is sensitive to new weak phases in the presence of physics beyond the Standard Model. This can be probed through a measurement of the time-dependent charge asymmetry A^s_{fs}(t) in flavour-specific decays. This note describes the LHCb strategy to measure a^s_{fs} using a time-dependent method, in flavour untagged decays of Bs->Ds mu nu and Bs->Ds pi. We also investigate a measurement of the difference of a^s_{fs} and a^d_{fs} in Bs->Ds mu nu and Bd->Dmu nu decays which allows to control the systematic uncertainty that arise from detection asymmetries.
New determination of the D0→K−π+π0 and D0→K−π+π+π− coherence factors and average strong-phase differences
AbstractMeasurements of the coherence factors (RKππ0 and RK3π) and the average strong-phase differences (δDKππ0 and δDK3π) for the decays D0→K−π+π0 and D0→K−π+π+π− are presented. These parameters are important inputs to the determination of the unitarity triangle angle γ in B∓→DK∓ decays, where D designates a D0 or D¯0 meson decaying to a common final state. The measurements are made using quantum correlated DD¯ decays collected by the CLEO-c experiment at the ψ(3770) resonance, and augment a previously published analysis by the inclusion of new events in which the signal decay is tagged by the mode D→KS0π+π−. The measurements also benefit from improved knowledge of external inputs, namely the D0D¯0 mixing parameters, rDKπ and several D-meson branching fractions. The measured values are RKππ0=0.82±0.07, δDKππ0=(164−14+20)°, RK3π=0.32−0.28+0.20 and δDK3π=(225−78+21)°. Consideration is given to how these measurements can be improved further by using the larger quantum-correlated data set collected by BESIII
Updated Measurement of the Strong Phase in D0 --> K+pi- Decay Using Quantum Correlations in e+e- --> D0 D0bar at CLEO
We analyze a sample of 3 million quantum-correlated D0 D0bar pairs from 818
pb^-1 of e+e- collision data collected with the CLEO-c detector at E_cm = 3.77
GeV, to give an updated measurement of \cos\delta and a first determination of
\sin\delta, where \delta is the relative strong phase between doubly
Cabibbo-suppressed D0 --> K+pi- and Cabibbo-favored D0bar --> K+pi- decay
amplitudes. With no inputs from other experiments, we find \cos\delta = 0.81
+0.22+0.07 -0.18-0.05, \sin\delta = -0.01 +- 0.41 +- 0.04, and |\delta| = 10
+28+13 -53-0 degrees. By including external measurements of mixing parameters,
we find alternative values of \cos\delta = 1.15 +0.19+0.00 -0.17-0.08,
\sin\delta = 0.56 +0.32+0.21 -0.31-0.20, and \delta = (18 +11-17) degrees. Our
results can be used to improve the world average uncertainty on the mixing
parameter y by approximately 10%.Comment: Minor revisions, version accepted by PR
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