14 research outputs found
Re-evaluation of the LHC potential for the measurement of Mw
We present a study of the LHC sensitivity to the W boson mass based on
simulation studies. We find that both experimental and phenomenological sources
of systematic uncertainties can be strongly constrained with Z measurements:
the lineshape is robustly predicted, and its analysis provides an accurate
measurement of the detector resolution and absolute scale, while the
differential cross-section analysis absorbs most of the strong interaction
uncertainties. A sensitivity \delta Mw \sim 7 \MeV for each decay channel (W
--> e nu, W --> mu nu), and for an integrated luminosity of 10 fb-1, appears as
a reasonable goal
Low-mass fermiophobic charged Higgs phenomenology in two-Higgs-doublet models
After the recent discovery of a Higgs-like boson, the possibility of an enlarged scalar sector arises as a natural question. Experimental searches for charged scalars have been already performed with negative results. We analyze the phenomenology associated with a fermiophobic charged Higgs (it does not couple to fermions at tree level), in two-Higgs-doublet models. All present experimental bounds are evaded trivially in this case, and one needs to consider other decay and production channels. We study the associated production of a charged Higgs with either a W or a neutral scalar boson, and the relevant decays for a light fermiophobic charged Higgs. The interesting features of this scenario should result encouraging for the LHC collaborations to perform searches for such a particle
On the spin and parity of a single-produced resonance at the LHC
Both LHC experiments, ATLAS and CMS, observed a new narrow resonance near 125 GeV.We demonstrate that the spin, parity, and, more generally, the tensor structure of the boson couplings of this resonance can be obtained by studying mass and angular distributions of events where the resonance decays to pairs of gauge bosons, ZZ, WW and γγ To account for all spin correlations we calculate kinematic distributions analytically and develop a Monte Carlo generator. We also discuss how to use angular and mass distributions of the resonance decay products for optimal background rejection and for distinguishing different signal hypotheses. By the end of the 8 TeV run of the LHC, it might be possible to separate extreme hypotheses of the spin and parity of the new resonance with a confidence level of 99% or better for a wide range of models
The impact of intrinsic charm on the parton distribution functions
In this work, we present a new investigation about the impact of intrinsic
charm (IC) on the physical observables, in particular, on the heavy structure
function . Since IC distribution is dominant at large Bjorken variable
, normally, it is expected that it can be explored only at large . But,
by studying the correlation of the charm density in the proton with , we
are going to show that the IC component can also be effective at low . To
investigate further, we perform three QCD global analyses of parton
distribution functions (PDFs), by including the EMC data that are
recognized as clear evidence for existence of the intrinsic charm in the
proton, and also by considering the IC component. Although the fit of the EMC
data is extremely poor due to the data points with lower values, i.e. 0.05, but these analyses can give us new information about the impact of EMC
data and IC contribution on the behaviour of PDFs.Comment: I withdraw this paper since my supervisor require me to withdraw this
pape
The Voyage of Discovery of the Higgs Boson at the LHC
The journey in search for the Higgs boson started in earnest with the discovery of the W and Z bosons. The LHC accelerator, the ATLAS and CMS experiments were conceived in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and it took two decades to turn the concepts to reality. Novel and innovative technologies needed to be developed and turned into superbly functioning engines for providing proton-proton collisions in the case of the LHC and physics results in the case of the experiments. The most significant discovery so far to emerge from the LHC project is that of a heavy scalar boson, announced on 4th July 2012. The data collected so far point strongly to its properties as those expected for the Higgs boson associated with the Brout-Englert-Higgs mechanism
