3,017 research outputs found

    Identification of Long-lived Charged Particles using Time-Of-Flight Systems at the Upgraded LHC detectors

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    We study the impact of picosecond precision timing detection systems on the LHC experiments' long-lived particle search program during the HL-LHC era. We develop algorithms that allow us to reconstruct the mass of such charged particles and perform particle identification using the time-of-flight measurement. We investigate the reach for benchmark scenarios as a function of the timing resolution, and find sensitivity improvement of up to a factor of ten, depending on the new heavy particle mass.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figure

    Collider Experiment: Strings, Branes and Extra Dimensions

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    Selected topics showcasing the exploration for new physics using colliders; presented at TASI 2001.Comment: latex, 46 pages, TASI proceeding

    Super-Razor and Searches for Sleptons and Charginos at the LHC

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    Direct searches for electroweak pair production of new particles at the LHC are a difficult proposition, due to the large background and low signal cross sections. We demonstrate how these searches can be improved by a combination of new razor variables and shape analysis of signal and background kinematics. We assume that the pair-produced particles decay to charged leptons and missing energy, either directly or through a W boson. In both cases the final state is a pair of opposite sign leptons plus missing transverse energy. We estimate exclusion reach in terms of sleptons and charginos as realized in minimal supersymmetry. We compare this super-razor approach in detail to analyses based on other kinematic variables, showing how the super-razor uses more of the relevant kinematic information while achieving higher selection efficiency on signals, including cases with compressed spectra.Comment: 33 pages, 33 figure

    Golden Probe of Electroweak Symmetry Breaking

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    The ratio of the Higgs couplings to WWWW and ZZZZ pairs, λWZ\lambda_{WZ}, is a fundamental parameter in electroweak symmetry breaking as well as a measure of the (approximate) custodial symmetry possessed by the gauge boson mass matrix. We show that Higgs decays to four leptons are sensitive, via tree level/1-loop interference effects, to both the magnitude and, in particular, overall sign of λWZ\lambda_{WZ}. Determining this sign requires interference effects, as it is nearly impossible to measure with rate information. Furthermore, simply determining the sign effectively establishes the custodial representation of the Higgs boson. We find that h→4ℓh\to4\ell (4ℓ≡2e2μ,4e,4μ4\ell \equiv 2e2\mu, 4e, 4\mu) decays have excellent prospects of directly establishing the overall sign at a high luminosity 13 TeV LHC. We also examine the ultimate LHC sensitivity in h→4ℓh\to4\ell to the magnitude of λWZ\lambda_{WZ}. Our results are independent of other measurements of the Higgs boson couplings and, in particular, largely free of assumptions about the top quark Yukawa couplings which also enter at 1-loop. This makes h→4ℓh\to4\ell a unique and independent probe of the electroweak symmetry breaking mechanism and custodial symmetry.Comment: 8 page

    Variational Autoencoders for New Physics Mining at the Large Hadron Collider

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    Using variational autoencoders trained on known physics processes, we develop a one-sided threshold test to isolate previously unseen processes as outlier events. Since the autoencoder training does not depend on any specific new physics signature, the proposed procedure doesn't make specific assumptions on the nature of new physics. An event selection based on this algorithm would be complementary to classic LHC searches, typically based on model-dependent hypothesis testing. Such an algorithm would deliver a list of anomalous events, that the experimental collaborations could further scrutinize and even release as a catalog, similarly to what is typically done in other scientific domains. Event topologies repeating in this dataset could inspire new-physics model building and new experimental searches. Running in the trigger system of the LHC experiments, such an application could identify anomalous events that would be otherwise lost, extending the scientific reach of the LHC.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures, 5 table
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