Jin Zhang, Hongling Zou, Q. Qing et al.
Hasil untuk "q-fin.RM"
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U. Bhawandeep, V. Khachatryan, A. Sirunyan et al.
The CMS trigger system must reduce an input data rate from the LHC bunch-crossing frequency of 40 MHz to a rate which will be written to permanent storage. A detailed study has recently been made of the performance of this system. This paper presents key elements of the results obtained and gives details of a draft “trigger table” for the Level-1 Trigger and the High-Level Trigger selection at a “start-up” luminosity of 2× 1033 cm – 2s – 1. High efficiencies for most physics objects are attainable with a selection that remains inclusive and avoids detailed topological or other requirements on the event.
A. Sirunyan, A. Tumasyan, W. Adam et al.
This work summarizes and puts in an overall perspective studies done within the compact muon solenoid (CMS) concerning the discovery potential for squarks and gluinos, sleptons, charginos and neutralinos, supersymmetric (SUSY) dark matter, lightest Higgs, sparticle mass determination methods and the detector design optimization in view of SUSY searches. It represents the status of our understanding of these subjects as of summer 1997. As a benchmark we used the minimal supergravity-inspired supersymmetric standard model (mSUGRA) with a stable lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP). Discovery of supersymmetry at the large hadron collider should be relatively straightforward. It may occur through the observation of large excesses of events in missing ET plus jets, or with one or more isolated leptons. An excess of trilepton events or isolated dileptons with missing ET, exhibiting a characteristic signature in the l+l− invariant mass distribution, could also be the first manifestation of SUSY production. Squarks and gluinos can be discovered for masses in excess of 2 TeV. Charginos and neutralinos can be discovered from an excess of events in dilepton or trilepton final states. Inclusive searches can give early indications from their copious production in squark and gluino cascade decays. Indirect evidence for sleptons can also be obtained from inclusive dilepton studies. Isolation requirements and a jet veto would allow detection of both the direct chargino/neutralino production and the directly produced sleptons. Squark and gluino production may also represent a copious source of Higgs bosons through cascade decays. The lightest SUSY Higgs h → b may be reconstructed with a signal/background ratio of order 1 thanks to hard cuts on ETmiss justified by escaping LSPs. The LSP of SUSY models with conserved R-parity represents a very good candidate for cosmological dark matter. The region of parameter space where this is true is well covered by our searches, at least for tanβ = 2. If supersymmetry exists at the electroweak scale, it could hardly escape detection in CMS and the study of supersymmetry will form a central part of our physics program.
A. Sirunyan, A. Tumasyan, W. Adam et al.
New sets of CMS underlying-event parameters (“tunes”) are presented for the pythia8 event generator. These tunes use the NNPDF3.1 parton distribution functions (PDFs) at leading (LO), next-to-leading (NLO), or next-to-next-to-leading (NNLO) orders in perturbative quantum chromodynamics, and the strong coupling evolution at LO or NLO. Measurements of charged-particle multiplicity and transverse momentum densities at various hadron collision energies are fit simultaneously to determine the parameters of the tunes. Comparisons of the predictions of the new tunes are provided for observables sensitive to the event shapes at LEP, global underlying event, soft multiparton interactions, and double-parton scattering contributions. In addition, comparisons are made for observables measured in various specific processes, such as multijet, Drell–Yan, and top quark-antiquark pair production including jet substructure observables. The simulation of the underlying event provided by the new tunes is interfaced to a higher-order matrix-element calculation. For the first time, predictions from pythia8 obtained with tunes based on NLO or NNLO PDFs are shown to reliably describe minimum-bias and underlying-event data with a similar level of agreement to predictions from tunes using LO PDF sets.
The Cms, LHCb Collaborations V. Khachatryan, A. Sirunyan et al.
The standard model of particle physics describes the fundamental particles and their interactions via the strong, electromagnetic and weak forces. It provides precise predictions for measurable quantities that can be tested experimentally. The probabilities, or branching fractions, of the strange B meson () and the B0 meson decaying into two oppositely charged muons (μ+ and μ−) are especially interesting because of their sensitivity to theories that extend the standard model. The standard model predicts that the and decays are very rare, with about four of the former occurring for every billion mesons produced, and one of the latter occurring for every ten billion B0 mesons. A difference in the observed branching fractions with respect to the predictions of the standard model would provide a direction in which the standard model should be extended. Before the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN started operating, no evidence for either decay mode had been found. Upper limits on the branching fractions were an order of magnitude above the standard model predictions. The CMS (Compact Muon Solenoid) and LHCb (Large Hadron Collider beauty) collaborations have performed a joint analysis of the data from proton–proton collisions that they collected in 2011 at a centre-of-mass energy of seven teraelectronvolts and in 2012 at eight teraelectronvolts. Here we report the first observation of the µ+µ− decay, with a statistical significance exceeding six standard deviations, and the best measurement so far of its branching fraction. Furthermore, we obtained evidence for the µ+µ− decay with a statistical significance of three standard deviations. Both measurements are statistically compatible with standard model predictions and allow stringent constraints to be placed on theories beyond the standard model. The LHC experiments will resume taking data in 2015, recording proton–proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 teraelectronvolts, which will approximately double the production rates of and B0 mesons and lead to further improvements in the precision of these crucial tests of the standard model.
K. Parsons, Agata McCormac, M. Butavicius et al.
A. Sirunyan, A. Tumasyan, W. Adam et al.
Q. Quan, M. Lončar
Photonic crystal nanobeam cavities are versatile platforms of interest for optical communications, optomechanics, optofluidics, cavity QED, etc. In a previous work [Appl. Phys. Lett. 96, 203102 (2010)], we proposed a deterministic method to achieve ultrahigh Q cavities. This follow-up work provides systematic analysis and verifications of the deterministic design recipe and further extends the discussion to air-mode cavities. We demonstrate designs of dielectric-mode and air-mode cavities with Q > 10⁹, as well as dielectric-mode nanobeam cavities with both ultrahigh-Q (> 10⁷) and ultrahigh on-resonance transmissions (T > 95%).
V. Khachatryan, A. Sirunyan, A. Tumasyan et al.
A bstractThe spectra of charged particles produced within the pseudorapidity window |η| 20 GeV, RpA exhibits weak momentum dependence and shows a moderate enhancement above unity.
D. Warburton, V. Jamnik, S. Bredin et al.
R. Haring, M. Ohmacht, T. Fox et al.
Sudarshan Singh, R. Herrmann
S. Porter, G. Czaplicki, J. Mainil et al.
Q fever is an ubiquitous zoonosis caused by an resistant intracellular bacterium, Coxiella burnetii. In certain areas, Q fever can be a severe public health problem, and awareness of the disease must be promoted worldwide. Nevertheless, knowledge of Coxiella burnetii remains limited to this day. Its resistant (intracellular and environmental) and infectious properties have been poorly investigated. Further understanding of the interactions between the infected host and the bacteria is necessary. Domestic ruminants are considered as the main reservoir of bacteria. Infected animals shed highly infectious organisms in milk, feces, urine, vaginal mucus, and, very importantly, birth products. Inhalation is the main route of infection. Frequently asymptomatic in humans and animals, Q fever can cause acute or chronic infections. Financial consequences of infection can be dramatic at herd level. Vaccination with inactive whole-cell bacteria has been performed and proved effective in humans and animals. However, inactive whole-cell vaccines present several defects. Recombinant vaccines have been developed in experimental conditions and have great potential for the future. Q fever is a challenging disease for scientists as significant further investigations are necessary. Great research opportunities are available to reach a better understanding and thus a better prevention and control of the infection.
S. Umarov, C. Tsallis, S. Steinberg
P. Mulders, R. D. Tangerman
We present the results of the tree-level calculation of deep-inelastic leptoproduction, including polarization of target hadron and produced hadron. We also discuss the dependence on transverse momenta of the quarks, which leads to azimuthal asymmetries for the produced hadrons.
Michael Braun, T. Etzion, P. Östergård et al.
Let $\mathbb{F}_{q}^{n}$ be a vector space of dimension $n$ over the finite field $\mathbb{F}_{q}$ . A $q$ -analog of a Steiner system (also known as a $q$ -Steiner system), denoted ${\mathcal{S}}_{q}(t,\!k,\!n)$ , is a set ${\mathcal{S}}$ of $k$ -dimensional subspaces of $\mathbb{F}_{q}^{n}$ such that each $t$ -dimensional subspace of $\mathbb{F}_{q}^{n}$ is contained in exactly one element of ${\mathcal{S}}$ . Presently, $q$ -Steiner systems are known only for $t\,=\,1\!$ , and in the trivial cases $t\,=\,k$ and $k\,=\,n$ . In this paper, the first nontrivial $q$ -Steiner systems with $t\,\geqslant \,2$ are constructed. Specifically, several nonisomorphic $q$ -Steiner systems ${\mathcal{S}}_{2}(2,3,13)$ are found by requiring that their automorphism groups contain the normalizer of a Singer subgroup of $\text{GL}(13,2)$ . This approach leads to an instance of the exact cover problem, which turns out to have many solutions.
V. Bögelein, F. Duzaar, Paolo Marcellini
V. Abazov, B. Abbott, M. Abolins et al.
Ji-Hwan Yang, Sang Jung Kang, Yunho Hong et al.
Jun-Dar Hwang, Din-Han Wu, Sheng-Beng Hwang
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