807 research outputs found
Independent measurement of the top quark mass and the light- and bottom-jet energy scales at hadron colliders
A method for the simultaneous determination of the energy scales for b-quark
jets and light jets, the jet energy resolution, and the top quark mass at
hadron colliders is presented. The method exploits the unique kinematics of
events with top-antitop pair production, where one of the top quarks involves a
leptonic and one a hadronic W boson decay. The paper shows a feasibility study
of how this simultaneous measurement can be performed at the upcoming LHC
experiments ATLAS and CMS.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Measurement of spin correlation between top and antitop quarks produced in at √s = 1.96 TeV
We present a measurement of the correlation between the spins of t and ¯t quarks produced in proton– antiproton collisions at the Tevatron Collider at a center-of-mass energy of 1.96TeV. We apply a matrix element technique to dilepton and single-lepton+jets final states in data accumulated with the D0 de-tector that correspond to an integrated luminosity of 9.7 fb−1. The measured value of the correlation coefficient in the off-diagonal basis, Ooff = 0.89 ± 0.22 (stat + syst), is in agreement with the standard model prediction, and represents evidence for a top–antitop quark spin correlation difference from zero at a level of 4.2 standard deviations
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
Properties of the Top Quark
The top quark was discoverd at the CDF and D0 experiments in 1995. As the
partner of the bottom quark its properties within the Standard Model are fully
defined. Only the mass is a free parameter. The measurement of the top quark
mass and the verification of the expected properties have been an important
topic of experimental top quark physics since. In this review the recent
results on top quark properties obtained by the Tevatron experiments CDF and D0
are summarised. At the advent of the LHC special emphasis is given to the basic
measurement methods and the dominating systematic uncertainties.Comment: Habilitation thesis, revised and updated for publication in EPJ
Charge asymmetry ratio as a probe of quark flavour couplings of resonant particles at the LHC
We show how a precise knowledge of parton distribution functions, in
particular those of the u and d quarks, can be used to constrain a certain
class of New Physics models in which new heavy charged resonances couple to
quarks and leptons. We illustrate the method by considering a left-right
symmetric model with a W' from a SU(2)_R gauge sector produced in
quark-antiquark annihilation and decaying into a charged lepton and a heavy
Majorana neutrino. We discuss a number of quark and lepton mixing scenarios,
and simulate both signals and backgrounds in order to determine the size of the
expected charge asymmetry. We show that various quark-W' mixing scenarios can
indeed be constrained by charge asymmetry measurements at the LHC, particularly
at 14 TeV centre of mass energy.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Optimisation of variables for studying dilepton transverse momentum distributions at hadron colliders
In future measurements of the dilepton () transverse momentum,
\Qt, at both the Tevatron and LHC, the achievable bin widths and the ultimate
precision of the measurements will be limited by experimental resolution rather
than by the available event statistics. In a recent paper the variable \at,
which corresponds to the component of \Qt\ that is transverse to the dilepton
thrust axis, has been studied in this regard. In the region, \Qt\ 30 GeV,
\at\ has been shown to be less susceptible to experimental resolution and
efficiency effects than the \Qt. Extending over all \Qt, we now demonstrate
that dividing \at\ (or \Qt) by the measured dilepton invariant mass further
improves the resolution. In addition, we propose a new variable, \phistarEta,
that is determined exclusively from the measured lepton directions; this is
even more precisely determined experimentally than the above variables and is
similarly sensitive to the \Qt. The greater precision achievable using such
variables will enable more stringent tests of QCD and tighter constraints on
Monte Carlo event generator tunes.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
Evidence for Production of Single Top Quarks and First Direct Measurement of |\u3ci\u3eV\u3c/i\u3e\u3csub\u3e\u3ci\u3etb\u3c/i\u3e\u3c/sub\u3e|
The D0 Collaboration presents first evidence for the production of single top quarks at the Fermilab Tevatron pp̅ collider. Using a 0.9 fb-1 dataset, we apply a multivariate analysis to separate signal from background and measure σ (pp̅ → tb + X, tqb + X) = 4.9 ± 1.4 pb. The probability to measure a cross section at this value or higher in the absence of a signal is 0.035%, corresponding to a 3.4 standard deviation significance. We use the cross section measurement to directly determine the Cabibbo- Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix element that describes the Wtb coupling and find 0.68 \u3c |V tb| ≤ 1 at 95% C.L. within the standard model
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