1,454 research outputs found
MACRIB High efficiency - high purity hadron identification for DELPHI
Analysis of the data shows that hadron tags of the two standard DELPHI particle identification packages RIBMEAN and HADSIGN are weakly correlated. This led to the idea of constructing a neural network for both kaon and proton identification using as input the existing tags from RIBMEAN and HADSIGN, as well as preproccessed TPC and RICH detector measurements together with additional dE/dx information from the DELPHI vertex detector. It will be shown in this note that the net output is much more efficient at the same purity than the HADSIGN or RIBMEAN tags alone. We present an easy-to-use routine performing the necessary calculations
A neural network z-vertex trigger for Belle II
We present the concept of a track trigger for the Belle II experiment, based
on a neural network approach, that is able to reconstruct the z (longitudinal)
position of the event vertex within the latency of the first level trigger. The
trigger will thus be able to suppress a large fraction of the dominating
background from events outside of the interaction region. The trigger uses the
drift time information of the hits from the Central Drift Chamber (CDC) of
Belle II within narrow cones in polar and azimuthal angle as well as in
transverse momentum (sectors), and estimates the z-vertex without explicit
track reconstruction. The preprocessing for the track trigger is based on the
track information provided by the standard CDC trigger. It takes input from the
2D () track finder, adds information from the stereo wires of the
CDC, and finds the appropriate sectors in the CDC for each track in a given
event. Within each sector, the z-vertex of the associated track is estimated by
a specialized neural network, with a continuous output corresponding to the
scaled z-vertex. The input values for the neural network are calculated from
the wire hits of the CDC.Comment: Proceedings of the 16th International workshop on Advanced Computing
and Analysis Techniques in physics research (ACAT), Preprint, reviewed
version (only minor corrections
A New Class of Changing-Look LINERs
We report the discovery of six active galactic nuclei (AGN) caught "turning
on" during the first nine months of the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) survey.
The host galaxies were classified as LINERs by weak narrow forbidden line
emission in their archival SDSS spectra, and detected by ZTF as nuclear
transients. In five of the cases, we found via follow-up spectroscopy that they
had transformed into broad-line AGN, reminiscent of the changing-look LINER
iPTF 16bco. In one case, ZTF18aajupnt/AT2018dyk, follow-up HST UV and
ground-based optical spectra revealed the transformation into a narrow-line
Seyfert 1 (NLS1) with strong [Fe VII, X, XIV] and He II 4686 coronal lines.
Swift monitoring observations of this source reveal bright UV emission that
tracks the optical flare, accompanied by a luminous soft X-ray flare that peaks
~60 days later. Spitzer follow-up observations also detect a luminous
mid-infrared flare implying a large covering fraction of dust. Archival light
curves of the entire sample from CRTS, ATLAS, and ASAS-SN constrain the onset
of the optical nuclear flaring from a prolonged quiescent state. Here we
present the systematic selection and follow-up of this new class of
changing-look LINERs, compare their properties to previously reported
changing-look Seyfert galaxies, and conclude that they are a unique class of
transients well-suited to test the uncertain physical processes associated with
the LINER accretion state.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 31 pages, 17 Figures (excluding Appendix due to
file size constraints but will be available in electronic version
Photon polarization in radiative B decays
We study decay distributions in B -> K pi pi gamma, combining contributions
from several overlapping resonances in a K pi pi mass range near 1400 MeV,
(1^+) K_1(1400), (2^+) K^*_2(1430) and (1^-) K^*(1410). A method is proposed
for using these distributions to determine a photon polarization parameter in
the effective radiative weak Hamiltonian. This parameter is measured through an
up-down asymmetry of the photon direction relative to the K pi pi decay plane.
We calculate a dominant up-down asymmetry of 0.33 +- 0.05 from the K1(1400)
resonance, which can be measured with about 10^8 B B-bar pairs, thus providing
a new test for the Standard Model and a probe for some of its extensions.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
The Full Event Interpretation -- An exclusive tagging algorithm for the Belle II experiment
The Full Event Interpretation is presented: a new exclusive tagging algorithm
used by the high-energy physics experiment Belle II. The experimental setup of
Belle II allows the precise measurement of otherwise inaccessible meson
decay-modes. The Full Event Interpretation algorithm enables many of these
measurements. The algorithm relies on machine learning to automatically
identify plausible meson decay chains based on the data recorded by the
detector. Compared to similar algorithms employed by previous experiments, the
Full Event Interpretation provides a greater efficiency, yielding a larger
effective sample size usable in the measurement.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
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