Towards Global Interpretation of LHC Data


Book Description

This book presents the first global interpretation of measurements of jet and top quark production at the Large Hadron Collider, including a simultaneous extraction of the standard model parameters together with constraints on new physics, unbiased from the assumptions on the standard model parameters. As a long-standing problem, any hadron collider search for new physics depends on parton distribution functions, which cannot be predicted but are extracted experimentally. However, performing the extraction in the same kinematic region where physics beyond the standard model is expected to manifest causes the risk of absorbing the new physics effects into the parton distributions. In this book, the issue is addressed by extending the standard model by effective contributions from quark contact interactions describing new physics and extracting the parton distributions and standard model parameters simultaneously with setting limits on the contact interactions. In the process, the most precise single measurement of the strong coupling constant at the LHC is performed, to date. Furthermore, the book details the first investigation of the mass renormalization scale dependence of the top quark mass, highlighting the importance of a proper scale choice for obtaining robust predictions and improving the precision of experimental analyses. The initial chapters provide the reader with a succinct yet accessible introduction to the relevant theoretical and experimental topics. The presented investigations are at the edge of precision in the phenomenology of high-energy physics and serve to pave the road toward a global interpretation of LHC data.




Future Of The Large Hadron Collider, The: A Super-accelerator With Multiple Possible Lives


Book Description

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the highest energy collider ever built. It resides near Geneva in a tunnel 3.8m wide, with a circumference of 26.7km, which was excavated in 1983-1988 to initially house the electron-positron collider LEP. The LHC was approved in 1995, and it took until 2010 for reliable operation. By now, a larger set of larger integrated luminosities have been accumulated for physics analyses in the four collider experiments: ATLAS, CMS, LHCb and ALICE.The LHC operates with an extended cryogenic plant, using a multi-stage injection system comprising the PS and SPS accelerators (still in use for particle physics experiments at lower energies). The beams are guided by 1232 superconducting high field dipole magnets.Intense works are underway in preparation of the High Luminosity LHC, aimed at upgrading the LHC and detectors for collecting ten times more luminosity, and extending the collider life to the early 2040's. So far, the (HL-)LHC project represents a cumulation of around one hundred thousand person-years of innovative work by technicians, engineers, and physicists from all over the world; probably the largest scientific effort ever in the history of humanity. The book is driven by the realisation of the unique value of this accelerator complex and by the recognition of the status of high energy physics, described by a Standard Model — which still leaves too many questions unanswered to be the appropriate theory of elementary particles and their interactions.Following the Introduction are: three chapters which focus on the initial decade of operation, leading to the celebrated discovery of the Higgs Boson, on the techniques and physics of the luminosity upgrade, and finally on major options - of using the LHC in a concurrent, power economic, electron-hadron scattering mode, when upgraded to higher energies or eventually as an injector for the next big machine. The various technical and physics chapters, provided by 61 authors, characterise the fascinating opportunities the LHC offers for the next two decades ahead (possibly longer), with the goal to substantially advance our understanding of nature.




Measurement of Quarkonium Polarization to Probe QCD at the LHC


Book Description

This thesis discusses in detail the measurement of the polarizations of all S-wave vector quarkonium states in LHC proton-proton collisions with the CMS detector. Heavy quarkonium states constitute an ideal laboratory to study non-perturbative effects of quantum chromodynamics and to understand how quarks bind into hadrons. The experimental results are interpreted through an original phenomenological approach, which leads to a coherent picture of quarkonium production cross sections and polarizations within a simple model, dominated by one single color-octet production mechanism. These findings provide new insights into the dynamics of heavy quarkonium production at the LHC, an important step towards a satisfactory understanding of hadron formation within the standard model of particle physics.







Status Of Theoretical Understanding And Of Experimental Power For Lhc Physics And Beyond - 50th Anniversary Celebration Of The Quark - Proceedings Of The International School Of Subnuclear Physics


Book Description

Proceedings of the International School of Subnuclear Physics, ISSP 2014, 52nd Course, ERICE, Erice, 24 June - 3 July 2014.




Searches for New Physics Using Innovative Data Acquisition, Analysis, and Compression Techniques


Book Description

The high event rate delivered by the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) provides experiments with opportunities for new discoveries as well as challenges related to the large amounts of data recorded. Overcoming this requires innovative techniques in the three topics of this thesis: Data acquisition, data analysis, and data compression. In the data taking period of 2015-2018, the ATLAS experiment received 10-70 simultaneous proton-proton collision events every 25 ns. At these high event rates, the experiment relies on trigger methods which only process the interesting collision events and keep detector readout and data storage within bandwidth constraints. The Trigger Level Analysis (TLA) presented in this thesis circumvents these bandwidth constraints by using the smaller event objects reconstructed at the trigger level as input to the analysis. The trigger level objects require custom calibration schemes, one of these was developed as part of this thesis to be used in the current and next iterations of the analysis. The LHC is scheduled to be upgraded to the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) and deliver 200 simultaneous proton-proton collision events. To provide the necessary resolution, readout speed, and radiation hardness, the ATLAS Inner Detector will be upgraded to the new fully silicon-based Inner Tracker (ITk). This thesis presents the work performed in developing, manufacturing, and delivering an automated quality control system for the new detector modules. Quality testing of the detector modules using this system is currently ongoing at multiple international institutes. The large amount of simultaneous events provided by the HL-LHC will also be challenging for data storage, where the amount of ATLAS generated data is projected to be 5 times larger than the storage resources. As the data are already highly compressed using lossless methods, the work in this thesis presents proof-of-principle studies using machine learning-based methods to derive lossy compression algorithms tailored to a variety of datasets. The tool developed for this purpose is made available as an open-source project called "Baler".




High Energy Physics


Book Description




Proceedings of 4th International Conference on BigData Analysis and Data Mining 2017


Book Description

September 07-08, 2017 Paris, France Key Topics : Cloud computing, Forecasting from Big Data, Optimization and Big Data, New visualization techniques, Social network analysis, Search and data mining, Complexity and Algorithms, Open Data, ETL (Extract, Transform and Load), OLAP Technologies, Big Data Algorithm, Data Mining Analysis, Kernel Methods, Frequent Pattern Mining, Clustering, Data Privacy and Ethics, Big Data Technologies, Business Analytics, Data Mining Methods and Algorithms, Data Mining Tasks and Processes, Data Mining Applications in Science, Engineering, Healthcare and Medicine, Big Data Applications, Data Mining Tools and Software, Data Warehousing, Artificial Intelligence,




The Large Hadron Collider


Book Description

This comprehensive volume summarizes and structures the multitude of results obtained at the LHC in its first running period and draws the grand picture of today’s physics at a hadron collider. Topics covered are Standard Model measurements, Higgs and top-quark physics, flavour physics, heavy-ion physics, and searches for supersymmetry and other extensions of the Standard Model. Emphasis is placed on overview and presentation of the lessons learned. Chapters on detectors and the LHC machine and a thorough outlook into the future complement the book. The individual chapters are written by teams of expert authors working at the forefront of LHC research.




Symmetry


Book Description