jet physics at cdf

36
Jet Physics at CDF Sally Seidel University of New Mexico APS’99 24 March 1999

Upload: druce

Post on 02-Feb-2016

41 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Jet Physics at CDF. Sally Seidel University of New Mexico APS’99 24 March 1999. 1. Jets at CDF 2. The Inclusive Jet Cross Section 3. The Dijet Mass Cross Section 4. The Differential Dijet Cross Section. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Jet Physics at CDF

Jet Physics at CDF

Sally SeidelUniversity of New Mexico

APS’99

24 March 1999

Page 2: Jet Physics at CDF

1. Jets at CDF

2. The Inclusive Jet Cross Section

3. The Dijet Mass Cross Section

4. The Differential Dijet Cross Section

Page 3: Jet Physics at CDF

CDF: A multi-purpose detector for studying hadronic collisions

at the Fermilab Tevatron:

TeV 8.1at spp

Page 4: Jet Physics at CDF

The motivation:

Jet distributions at colliders can:

• signal new particles

• test QCD predictions

• check parton distribution functions

Page 5: Jet Physics at CDF

The data:

CDF reconstructs jets using an iterative cone algorithm with cone radius

7.0)()( 22 R

Jet energies are corrected for

• calorimeter non-linearity

• uninstrumented regions

• contributions from spectator partons

Page 6: Jet Physics at CDF

The iterative cone algorithm:

•Examine all calorimeter towers with ET > 1 GeV.

•Form preclusters from continuous groups of towers with monotonically decreasing ET.

•If a tower is outside a window of 7 x 7 towers from the seed of its cluster, start a new precluster with it.

•For each precluster, find the ET-weighted centroid with R = 0.7.

•Define the centroid to be the new cluster axis.

•Save all towers with ET > 100 MeV within R = 0.7 about the new axis.

•Iterate until the tower list is stable.

Page 7: Jet Physics at CDF

The Inclusive Jet Cross Section

• For jet transverse energies in the range 40 < ET < 440 GeV: this probes distances down to 10-17 cm.

• The analysis:– For luminosity (88.8 ± 4.1) pb-1 – Trigger on jet-like events: accept 4

triggers with uncorrected ET thresholds at 20, 50, 70, and 100 GeV; correct for pre-scaling

Page 8: Jet Physics at CDF

– Apply data quality requirements:zvertex< 60 cm to maintain projective

geometry of calorimeter towers

• 0.1 < |detector| < 0.7 for full containment of energy in central barrel

• Etotal < 1800 GeV to reject accelerator loss events

• Define ET = Esin and = missing ET. Require

to reject cosmic rays

– Correct (“unsmear”) observed ET for energy degradation and calorimeter resolution

6

all

T

T

E

ETE

Page 9: Jet Physics at CDF

• Calculate the cross section:

TT E

N

LddE

dd

111

where

N = number of events

L = luminosity

range is 1.2

and ET bins have width 5 - 80 GeV

• Compare to EKS (Ellis, Kunszt, Soper) NLO calculation with CTEQ4M pdf and renormalization/factorization scale = ET

jet/2

Page 10: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 11: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 12: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 13: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 14: Jet Physics at CDF

Systematic uncertainties (all uncorrelated)

on the inclusive jet cross section:

i. Calorimeter response to high-pT charged hadrons

ii. Calorimeter response to low-pT charged hadrons

iii. Energy scale stability (1%)

iv. Jet fragmentation model used in the simulation

v. Energy of the underlying event in the jet cone (30%)

vi. Calorimeter response to electrons + photons

vii. Modelling of the jet energy resolution function

viii. Luminosity (4.1%)

Page 15: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 16: Jet Physics at CDF

The Dijet Mass Cross Section

•Many classes of new particles have a larger branching fraction to just 2 partons than to modes containing a lepton or a W/Z…so this can be a powerful way to search for new particles.

•The analysis:

•For luminosity (85.9 ± 4.1) pb-1

•Trigger on jet-like events

•Select events with 2 jets, both with |event| < 2.

Page 17: Jet Physics at CDF

•Define * (1-2)/2, then require e2|*| < 5. This is the same as |cos*| = |tanh *| < 2/3 where * is the Rutherford scattering angle:

•Apply the data quality cuts.

•Correct for trigger efficiency, |zvertex| cut

efficiency, resolution, and calorimeter effects.

Page 18: Jet Physics at CDF

•Define the dijet mass:

•Calculate the cross section:

where:

N = number of events, corrected for prescaling

L = luminosity

Mjj = 10% mass bins (consistent with detector resolution)

•Compare to JETRAD (Giele, Glover, Kosower) NLO calculation with CTEQ4M + = ET

max/2. Two partons are merged if they are within Rsep = 1.3 R.

jjjj M

N

LdM

d

1

)]cos()[cosh(2

)()(

21

221

221

TT

jj

EE

ppEEM

Page 19: Jet Physics at CDF

The dijet mass cross section compared to JETRAD with

CTEQ4M:

Page 20: Jet Physics at CDF

Compare results to data + JETRAD with other pdf’s:

Changing from 0.5 ETmax to 0.25 ET

max changes the normalization by 25%.

Page 21: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 22: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 23: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 24: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 25: Jet Physics at CDF

Compare CDF and D0 results for CTEQ4M

(D0 examines || < 1 with no requirement on cos*)

Page 26: Jet Physics at CDF

Systematic uncertainties on the dijet mass cross section (17-34%, asymmetric + ET-dependent):

• Absolute energy scale (14-31%):

•Calorimeter calibration: 1.3-1.8% over the ET range

• Jet fragmentation model: 1.2-1.7% over the ET range

•Calorimeter stability: 1% of E

•Energy of the underlying event: 1 GeV

• Unsmearing:

•Parameterization of the resolution function: 1-9% depending on Mjj

•Variation between analytic and MC procedure: ±4%

•Detector simulator energy scale: 2-8%

Page 27: Jet Physics at CDF

•Relative jet energy scale (5-9% depending on Mjj and considering all instrumented regions):

•Other uncertainties:

•luminosity: 4.1%

•prescale factors: 1.7-3.5% depending on trigger used.

•|zvertex| cut efficiency: 1%

•trigger efficiency: < 1% depending on the statistics of the turn-on region of the trigger.

Page 28: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 29: Jet Physics at CDF

The Dijet Differential Cross Section

•The rapidity dependence of the cross section probes the parton momentum fractions.

•The analysis:

•For luminosity (86.0 ± 4.1) pb-1

•Trigger on jet-like events; select events with 2 jets

•Apply data quality cuts

Page 30: Jet Physics at CDF

•Order the jets by ET. Define:

•The “leading jet”: with highest ET. Require that it has 0.1 < |1| < 0.7 and ET1 > 40 GeV.

•The “probe jet”: with second highest ET. Require that it has ET2 > 10 GeV.

•Correct jet energies for calorimeter effects; require ET1 > 35 GeV.

•Classify events according to probe jet , 2:

0.1 < |2| < 0.7

0.7 < |2| < 1.4

1.4 < |2| < 2.1

2.1 < |2| < 3.0

Page 31: Jet Physics at CDF

•Correct (“unsmear”) measured

•Correct for trigger efficiency, prescale, and vertex-finding efficiency

•For events in each of the 4 2 classes, calculate the cross section:

N = number of events, corrected for prescale

L = luminosity

ET1 bins are consistent with detector resolution

•Compare to JETRAD for 3 pdf’s + = ET

max/2

1

1

TT E

N

LdE

d

Page 32: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 33: Jet Physics at CDF
Page 34: Jet Physics at CDF

Sources of systematic errors on the dijet differential cross section:

Same as for inclusive cross section + resolution

Page 35: Jet Physics at CDF

Probing the high-x, high-Q2 regime:

Notice that for a two-body process,

and

so these data examine a range in (x,Q2)

including that where an excess was observed at HERA:

)( 21 ees

Ex T

)tanh1(cosh2

)cos1(2

ˆ

ˆ

**22

*

2

TE

s

tQ

Page 36: Jet Physics at CDF