26 research outputs found
Inclusive production of a Higgs or Z boson in association with heavy quarks
We calculate the cross section for the production of a Z boson in association
with heavy quarks. We suggest that this cross section can be measured using an
inclusive heavy-quark tagging technique. This could be used as a feasibility
study for the search for a Higgs boson produced in association with bottom
quarks. We argue that the best formalism for calculating that cross section is
based on the leading-order process b b -> h, and that it is valid for all Higgs
masses of interest at both the Fermilab Tevatron and the CERN Large Hadron
Collider.Comment: 14 page
Top Pair Forward-Backward Asymmetry from Loops of New Strongly Coupled Quarks
We examine loop-mediated effects of new heavy quarks Q=(t',b') on t tbar
production at hadron colliders, using a phenomenological model with flavor
off-diagonal couplings of charged and neutral scalars phi=(phi^+-,phi^0) to Q.
We show that an invariant-mass-dependent asymmetry, in the t tbar center of
mass, consistent with those recently reported by the CDF collaboration can be
obtained for quark masses around 350-500 GeV, scalar masses of order 100-200
GeV, and modest to strong Yukawa couplings. The requisite strong interactions
suggest a non-perturbative electroweak symmetry breaking mechanism and
composite states at the weak scale. A typical prediction of this framework is
that the new heavy quarks decay dominantly into t phi final states.Comment: 6 pages 6 figures; version published in Physical Review
Choosing the Factorization Scale in Perturbative QCD
We define the collinear factorization scheme, which absorbs only the
collinear physics into the parton distribution functions. In order to isolate
the collinear physics, we introduce a procedure to combine real and virtual
corrections, canceling infrared singularities prior to integration. In the
collinear scheme, the factorization scale has a simple physical
interpretation as a collinear cutoff. We present a method for choosing the
factorization scale and apply it to the Drell-Yan process; we find , where is the vector-boson invariant mass. We show that, for a wide
variety of collision energies and , the radiative corrections are small in
the collinear scheme for this choice of factorization scale.Comment: 25 pages, 18 figure
Grand Unification and Light Color-Octet Scalars at the LHC
We study the properties and production mechanisms of color-octet scalars at
the LHC. We focus on the single production of both charged and neutral members
of an (8,2)_1/2 doublet through bottom quark initial states. These channels
provide a window to the underlying Yukawa structure of the scalar sector.
Color-octet scalars naturally appear in grand unified theories based on the
SU(5) gauge symmetry. In the context of adjoint SU(5) these fields are expected
to be light to satisfy constraints coming from unification and proton decay,
and may have TeV-scale masses. One combination of their couplings is defined by
the relation between the down-quark and charged-lepton Yukawa couplings.
Observation of these states at the LHC gives an upper bound on the proton
lifetime if they truly arise from this grand unified theory. We demonstrate
that TeV-mass scalars can be observed over background at the LHC using boosted
top quark final states, and study how well the scalar Yukawa parameters can be
measured.Comment: 22 pages, LaTeX, 5 figures; typos corrected, references adde
Precocious Diphoton Signals of the Little Radion at Hadron Colliders
In Little Randall-Sundrum models, the bulk couplings of the radion to
massless gauge fields can yield a greatly enhanced diphoton signal at hadron
colliders. We examine the implications of the Tevatron data for the Little
radion and also show that the 7 TeV run at the Large Hadron Collider will have
an impressive reach in this channel. The diphoton signal is crucial in the
search for a light radion, or the dual dilaton, and can potentially probe the
ultraviolet scale of the theory.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Errors in the WW and ZZ branching fraction curves
in Fig.1 and the related numerical results in Fig.2 have been corrected. New
references have been added. Our main conclusions regarding the enhanced
diphoton signal of the Little radion remain qualitatively the same and
quantitatively similar to the previous result
The Radion as a Harbinger of Deca-TeV Physics
Precision data generally require the threshold for physics beyond the
Standard Model to be at the deca-TeV (10 TeV) scale or higher. This raises the
question of whether there are interesting deca-TeV models for which the LHC may
find direct clues. A possible scenario for such physics is a 5D warped model of
fermion masses and mixing, with Kaluza-Klein masses m_KK ~ 10 TeV, allowing it
to avoid tension with stringent constraints, especially from flavor data.
Discovery of a Standard-Model-like Higgs boson, for which there are some hints
at ~125 GeV at the LHC, would also require the KK masses to be at or above 10
TeV. These warped models generically predict the appearance of a much lighter
radion scalar. We find that, in viable warped models of flavor, a radion with a
mass of a few hundred GeV and an inverse coupling of order m_KK ~ 10 TeV could
typically be accessible to the LHC experiments -- with sqrt(s) = 14 TeV and 100
fb^-1 of data. The above statements can be applied, mutatis mutandis, to 4D
dual models, where conformal dynamics and a dilaton replace warping and the
radion, respectively. Detection of such a light and narrow scalar could thus
herald the proximity of a new physical threshold and motivate experiments that
would directly probe the deca-TeV mass scale.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures; version published in Physical Review
Nursing brain drain from India
In response to recent findings regarding migration of health workers out of Africa, we provide data from a survey of Indian nurses suggesting that up to one fifth of the nursing labour force may be lost to wealthier countries through circular migration
QCD Corrections to Scalar Diquark Production at Hadron Colliders
We calculate the next-to-leading order QCD corrections to quark-quark
annihilation to a scalar resonant state ("diquark") in a color representation
of antitriplet or sextet at the Tevatron and LHC energies. At the LHC, we find
the enhancement (K-factor) for the antitriplet diquark is typically about
1.31--1.35, and for the sextet diquark is about 1.22--1.32 for initial-state
valence quarks. The full transverse-momentum spectrum for the diquarks is also
calculated at the LHC by performing the soft gluon resummation to the leading
logarithm and all orders in the strong coupling.Comment: 24 pages, 17 figure
Collinear singularities and the factorization scale in perturbative QCD
We discuss several issues related to collinear singularities and the choice of the factorization scale in perturbative QCD calculations. First, we argue in favor of the use of a bottom-quark distribution function, which sums collinear logarithms, in the calculation of the cross section for Higgs-boson production in association with bottom quarks. As a testing ground for Higgs searches, we propose a measurement of Z-boson production in association with heavy quarks, using an inclusive heavy-quark tagging technique. Next, we present a calculation of the next-to-leading-order QCD corrections to Drell-Yan production of a W boson, regulating the collinear singularities with a nonzero quark mass and the infrared and ultraviolet singularities with dimensional regularization. Finally, we present the collinear factorization scheme, in which only collinear physics is absorbed into the parton distribution functions. We provide
a physically motivated method for choosing the factorization scale in this scheme, and show, for the case of Drell-Yan production of an electroweak gauge boson, that the next-to-leading-order QCD corrections are very small for this choice of factorization scale.U of I OnlyPost 1923. No authorization form