16 research outputs found
Measurement of spin correlation in ttbar production using dilepton final states
We measure the correlation between the spin of the top quark and the spin of
the anti-top quark in (ttbar -> W+ W- b bbar -> l+ nu b l- nubar bbar) final
states produced in ppbar collisions at a center of mass energy sqrt(s)=1.96
TeV, where l is an electron or muon. The data correspond to an integrated
luminosity of 5.4 fb-1 and were collected with the D0 detector at the Fermilab
Tevatron collider. The correlation is extracted from the angles of the two
leptons in the t and tbar rest frames, yielding a correlation strength C=
0.10^{+0.45}_{-0.45}, in agreement with the NLO QCD prediction within two
standard deviations, but also in agreement with the no correlation hypothesis.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PL
Measurement of the ttbar production cross section using dilepton events in ppbar collisions
We present a measurement of the ttbar production cross section sigma(ttbar)
in ppbar collisions at sqrt{s} = 1.96 TeV using 5.4 fb-1 of integrated
luminosity collected with the D0 detector. We consider final states with at
least two jets and two leptons (ee, emu, mumu), and events with one jet for the
the emu final state as well. The measured cross section is sigma(ttbar)= 7.36
+0.90-0.79 (stat + syst) pb. This result combined with the cross section
measurement in the lepton + jets final state yields sigma(ttbar)=7.56
+0.63-0.56 (stat + syst) pb, which agrees with the standard model expectation.
The relative precision of 8% of this measurement is comparable to the latest
theoretical calculations.Comment: 9 pages, published in Phys. Lett.
Updated status of the global electroweak fit and constraints on new physics
We present an update of the Standard Model fit to electroweak precision data.
We include newest experimental results on the top quark mass, the W mass and
width, and the Higgs boson mass bounds from LEP, Tevatron and the LHC. We also
include a new determination of the electromagnetic coupling strength at the Z
pole. We find for the Higgs boson mass (91 +30 -23) GeV and (120 +12 -5) GeV
when not including and including the direct Higgs searches, respectively. From
the latter fit we indirectly determine the W mass to be (80.360 +0.014 -0.013)
GeV. We exploit the data to determine experimental constraints on the oblique
vacuum polarisation parameters, and confront these with predictions from the
Standard Model (SM) and selected SM extensions. By fitting the oblique
parameters to the electroweak data we derive allowed regions in the BSM
parameter spaces. We revisit and consistently update these constraints for a
fourth fourth fermion generation, two Higgs doublet, inert Higgs and littlest
Higgs models, models with large, universal or warped extra dimensions and
technicolour. In most of the models studied a heavy Higgs boson can be made
compatible with the electroweak precision data.Comment: 58 pages, 27 figures, published versio