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Dive into the research topics where L. V. Kalinovskaya is active.

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Featured researches published by L. V. Kalinovskaya.


European Physical Journal C | 2008

One-loop corrections to the Drell–Yan process in SANC

A. B. Arbuzov; D. Y. Bardin; S. Bondarenko; Pena Christova; L. V. Kalinovskaya; G. Nanava; R. Sadykov

Radiative corrections to the neutral current Drell–Yan-like processes are considered. Complete one-loop electroweak corrections are calculated within the SANC system. Theoretical uncertainties are discussed. Numerical results are presented for typical conditions of LHC experiments.


European Physical Journal C | 2016

Precision studies of observables in pp → W → lνl and pp → γ , Z → l+l− processes at the LHC.

Simone Alioli; A. B. Arbuzov; D. Y. Bardin; L. Barzè; C. Bernaciak; S.G. Bondarenko; C. M. Carloni Calame; M. Chiesa; Stefan Dittmaier; G. Ferrera; Daniel de Florian; Massimiliano Grazzini; S. Höche; Alexander Huss; S. Jadach; L. V. Kalinovskaya; A. Karlberg; Frank Krauss; Y. Li; H. Martinez; G. Montagna; Alexander Mück; Paolo Nason; O. Nicrosini; Frank Petriello; F. Piccinini; W. Placzek; S. Prestel; E. Re; A. Sapronov

This report was prepared in the context of the LPCC Electroweak Precision Measurements at the LHC WG (https://lpcc.web.cern.ch/lpcc/index.php?page=electroweak_wg) and summarizes the activity of a subgroup dedicated to the systematic comparison of public Monte Carlo codes, which describe the Drell–Yan processes at hadron colliders, in particular at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This work represents an important step towards the definition of an accurate simulation framework necessary for very high-precision measurements of electroweak (EW) observables such as the W boson mass and the weak mixing angle. All the codes considered in this report share at least next-to-leading-order (NLO) accuracy in the prediction of the total cross sections in an expansion either in the strong or in the EW coupling constant. The NLO fixed-order predictions have been scrutinized at the technical level, using exactly the same inputs, setup and perturbative accuracy, in order to quantify the level of agreement of different implementations of the same calculation. A dedicated comparison, again at the technical level, of three codes that reach next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) accuracy in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) for the total cross section has also been performed. These fixed-order results are a well-defined reference that allows a classification of the impact of higher-order sets of radiative corrections. Several examples of higher-order effects due to the strong or the EW interaction are discussed in this common framework. Also the combination of QCD and EW corrections is discussed, together with the ambiguities that affect the final result, due to the choice of a specific combination recipe. All the codes considered in this report have been run by the respective authors, and the results presented here constitute a benchmark that should be always checked/reproduced before any high-precision analysis is conducted based on these codes. In order to simplify these benchmarking procedures, the codes used in this report, together with the relevant input files and running instructions, can be found in a repository at https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/Main/DrellYanComparison.


arXiv: High Energy Physics - Phenomenology | 2007

The three channels of the process f_1 bar-f_1 H A --> 0 in the SANC framework

D. Y. Bardin; S. Bondarenko; L. V. Kalinovskaya; G. Nanava; L. Rumyantsev

In this paper we describe the implementation of the complete next-to-leading order electroweak calculations for the various cross channels of the process f1f̄1HA→0 in the framework of the SANC system. Here A stands for a photon and f1 for a fermion whose mass is neglected everywhere besides arguments of logarithmic functions. The symbol →0 means that all 4-momenta of the external particles flow inwards. The derived one-loop scalar form factors can be used for any cross channel after an appropriate permutation of their arguments s,t,u. We present the complete analytical results for the covariant and helicity amplitudes for three cross channels: f1f̄1→Hγ, H→f1f̄1γ and f1γ→f1H. For checking of the correctness of the results first of all we observe the independence of the scalar form factors on the gauge parameters and the validity of the Ward identity (external photon transversality), and, secondly, we make an extensive comparison of our numerical results with other independent calculations.In this paper we describe the implementation of the processes f_1 bar-f_1 H A --> 0 into the framework of SANC system. Here A stands for a photon and f_1 -- for a massless fermion whose mass is neglected everywhere besides arguments of logarithmic functions. The symbol --> 0 means that all 4-momenta flow inwards. The derived one-loop scalar form factors can be used for any cross channel after an appropriate permutation of their arguments s,t,u. We present the covariant and helicity amplitudes for all three possible cross channels. For checking of the correctness of the results first of all we observe the independence on the gauge parameters and the validity of Ward identity (external photon transversality), and, secondly, we make an extensive comparison with the other independent calculations.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2016

Computer system SANC: its development and applications

A. B. Arbuzov; D. Y. Bardin; S. Bondarenko; P. Christova; L. V. Kalinovskaya; R. Sadykov; A. Sapronov; T Riemann

The SANC system is used for systematic calculations of various processes within the Standard Model in the one-loop approximation. QED, electroweak, and QCD corrections are computed to a number of processes being of interest for modern and future high-energy experiments. Several applications for the LHC physics program are presented. Development of the system and the general problems and perspectives for future improvement of the theoretical precision are discussed.


European Physical Journal C | 2017

Precision studies of observables in

Simone Alioli; M. Chiesa; A. Vicini; H. Martinez; C. Bernaciak; Serge Bondarenko; G. Montagna; Giulia Zanderighi; S. Hoeche; L. V. Kalinovskaya; W. Placzek; A. B. Arbuzov; Christian Schwinn; E. Re; A. Sapronov; Frank Petriello; Daniel de Florian; D.Yu. Bardin; Alexander Huss; Stefan Dittmaier; Z. Was; M. Schoenherr; G. Ferrera; Alfred Mueck; A. Karlberg; Stefan Prestel; Frank Krauss; S. Jadach; F. Piccinini; Massimiliano Grazzini

This report was prepared in the context of the LPCC Electroweak Precision Measurements at the LHC WG (https://lpcc.web.cern.ch/lpcc/index.php?page=electroweak_wg) and summarizes the activity of a subgroup dedicated to the systematic comparison of public Monte Carlo codes, which describe the Drell–Yan processes at hadron colliders, in particular at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This work represents an important step towards the definition of an accurate simulation framework necessary for very high-precision measurements of electroweak (EW) observables such as the W boson mass and the weak mixing angle. All the codes considered in this report share at least next-to-leading-order (NLO) accuracy in the prediction of the total cross sections in an expansion either in the strong or in the EW coupling constant. The NLO fixed-order predictions have been scrutinized at the technical level, using exactly the same inputs, setup and perturbative accuracy, in order to quantify the level of agreement of different implementations of the same calculation. A dedicated comparison, again at the technical level, of three codes that reach next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) accuracy in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) for the total cross section has also been performed. These fixed-order results are a well-defined reference that allows a classification of the impact of higher-order sets of radiative corrections. Several examples of higher-order effects due to the strong or the EW interaction are discussed in this common framework. Also the combination of QCD and EW corrections is discussed, together with the ambiguities that affect the final result, due to the choice of a specific combination recipe. All the codes considered in this report have been run by the respective authors, and the results presented here constitute a benchmark that should be always checked/reproduced before any high-precision analysis is conducted based on these codes. In order to simplify these benchmarking procedures, the codes used in this report, together with the relevant input files and running instructions, can be found in a repository at https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/Main/DrellYanComparison.


European Physical Journal C | 2017

p p ightarrow W ightarrow l u _l

Simone Alioli; A. B. Arbuzov; D.Yu. Bardin; L. Barzè; C. Bernaciak; Serge Bondarenko; C. M. Carloni Calame; M. Chiesa; Stefan Dittmaier; G. Ferrera; Daniel de Florian; Massimiliano Grazzini; Stefan Höche; Alexander Huss; S. Jadach; L. V. Kalinovskaya; A. Karlberg; Frank Krauss; Y. Li; H. Martinez; G. Montagna; Alexander Mück; Paolo Nason; O. Nicrosini; Frank Petriello; F. Piccinini; W. Placzek; Stefan Prestel; E. Re; A. Sapronov

This report was prepared in the context of the LPCC Electroweak Precision Measurements at the LHC WG (https://lpcc.web.cern.ch/lpcc/index.php?page=electroweak_wg) and summarizes the activity of a subgroup dedicated to the systematic comparison of public Monte Carlo codes, which describe the Drell–Yan processes at hadron colliders, in particular at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This work represents an important step towards the definition of an accurate simulation framework necessary for very high-precision measurements of electroweak (EW) observables such as the W boson mass and the weak mixing angle. All the codes considered in this report share at least next-to-leading-order (NLO) accuracy in the prediction of the total cross sections in an expansion either in the strong or in the EW coupling constant. The NLO fixed-order predictions have been scrutinized at the technical level, using exactly the same inputs, setup and perturbative accuracy, in order to quantify the level of agreement of different implementations of the same calculation. A dedicated comparison, again at the technical level, of three codes that reach next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) accuracy in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) for the total cross section has also been performed. These fixed-order results are a well-defined reference that allows a classification of the impact of higher-order sets of radiative corrections. Several examples of higher-order effects due to the strong or the EW interaction are discussed in this common framework. Also the combination of QCD and EW corrections is discussed, together with the ambiguities that affect the final result, due to the choice of a specific combination recipe. All the codes considered in this report have been run by the respective authors, and the results presented here constitute a benchmark that should be always checked/reproduced before any high-precision analysis is conducted based on these codes. In order to simplify these benchmarking procedures, the codes used in this report, together with the relevant input files and running instructions, can be found in a repository at https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/Main/DrellYanComparison.


European Physical Journal C | 2017

and

Simone Alioli; A. B. Arbuzov; D.Yu. Bardin; L. Barzè; C. Bernaciak; Serge Bondarenko; C. M. Carloni Calame; M. Chiesa; Stefan Dittmaier; G. Ferrera; Daniel de Florian; Massimiliano Grazzini; Stefan Höche; Alexander Huss; S. Jadach; L. V. Kalinovskaya; A. Karlberg; Frank Krauss; Y. Li; H. Martinez; G. Montagna; Alexander Mück; Paolo Nason; O. Nicrosini; Frank Petriello; F. Piccinini; W. Placzek; Stefan Prestel; E. Re; A. Sapronov

This report was prepared in the context of the LPCC Electroweak Precision Measurements at the LHC WG (https://lpcc.web.cern.ch/lpcc/index.php?page=electroweak_wg) and summarizes the activity of a subgroup dedicated to the systematic comparison of public Monte Carlo codes, which describe the Drell–Yan processes at hadron colliders, in particular at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This work represents an important step towards the definition of an accurate simulation framework necessary for very high-precision measurements of electroweak (EW) observables such as the W boson mass and the weak mixing angle. All the codes considered in this report share at least next-to-leading-order (NLO) accuracy in the prediction of the total cross sections in an expansion either in the strong or in the EW coupling constant. The NLO fixed-order predictions have been scrutinized at the technical level, using exactly the same inputs, setup and perturbative accuracy, in order to quantify the level of agreement of different implementations of the same calculation. A dedicated comparison, again at the technical level, of three codes that reach next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) accuracy in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) for the total cross section has also been performed. These fixed-order results are a well-defined reference that allows a classification of the impact of higher-order sets of radiative corrections. Several examples of higher-order effects due to the strong or the EW interaction are discussed in this common framework. Also the combination of QCD and EW corrections is discussed, together with the ambiguities that affect the final result, due to the choice of a specific combination recipe. All the codes considered in this report have been run by the respective authors, and the results presented here constitute a benchmark that should be always checked/reproduced before any high-precision analysis is conducted based on these codes. In order to simplify these benchmarking procedures, the codes used in this report, together with the relevant input files and running instructions, can be found in a repository at https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/Main/DrellYanComparison.


European Physical Journal C | 2017

pp ightarrow \gamma ,Z ightarrow l^+ l^-

Simone Alioli; A. B. Arbuzov; D.Yu. Bardin; L. Barzè; C. Bernaciak; Serge Bondarenko; C. M. Carloni Calame; M. Chiesa; Stefan Dittmaier; G. Ferrera; Daniel de Florian; Massimiliano Grazzini; Stefan Höche; Alexander Huss; S. Jadach; L. V. Kalinovskaya; A. Karlberg; Frank Krauss; Y. Li; H. Martinez; G. Montagna; Alexander Mück; Paolo Nason; O. Nicrosini; Frank Petriello; F. Piccinini; W. Placzek; Stefan Prestel; E. Re; A. Sapronov

This report was prepared in the context of the LPCC Electroweak Precision Measurements at the LHC WG (https://lpcc.web.cern.ch/lpcc/index.php?page=electroweak_wg) and summarizes the activity of a subgroup dedicated to the systematic comparison of public Monte Carlo codes, which describe the Drell–Yan processes at hadron colliders, in particular at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This work represents an important step towards the definition of an accurate simulation framework necessary for very high-precision measurements of electroweak (EW) observables such as the W boson mass and the weak mixing angle. All the codes considered in this report share at least next-to-leading-order (NLO) accuracy in the prediction of the total cross sections in an expansion either in the strong or in the EW coupling constant. The NLO fixed-order predictions have been scrutinized at the technical level, using exactly the same inputs, setup and perturbative accuracy, in order to quantify the level of agreement of different implementations of the same calculation. A dedicated comparison, again at the technical level, of three codes that reach next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) accuracy in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) for the total cross section has also been performed. These fixed-order results are a well-defined reference that allows a classification of the impact of higher-order sets of radiative corrections. Several examples of higher-order effects due to the strong or the EW interaction are discussed in this common framework. Also the combination of QCD and EW corrections is discussed, together with the ambiguities that affect the final result, due to the choice of a specific combination recipe. All the codes considered in this report have been run by the respective authors, and the results presented here constitute a benchmark that should be always checked/reproduced before any high-precision analysis is conducted based on these codes. In order to simplify these benchmarking procedures, the codes used in this report, together with the relevant input files and running instructions, can be found in a repository at https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/Main/DrellYanComparison.


European Physical Journal C | 2017

processes at the LHC

Simone Alioli; A. B. Arbuzov; D.Yu. Bardin; L. Barzè; C. Bernaciak; Serge Bondarenko; C. M. Carloni Calame; M. Chiesa; Stefan Dittmaier; G. Ferrera; Daniel de Florian; Massimiliano Grazzini; S. Höche; Alexander Huss; S. Jadach; L. V. Kalinovskaya; A. Karlberg; Frank Krauss; Y. Li; H. Martinez; G. Montagna; Alexander Mück; Paolo Nason; O. Nicrosini; Frank Petriello; F. Piccinini; W. Płaczek; Stefan Prestel; E. Re; A. Sapronov

This report was prepared in the context of the LPCC Electroweak Precision Measurements at the LHC WG (https://lpcc.web.cern.ch/lpcc/index.php?page=electroweak_wg) and summarizes the activity of a subgroup dedicated to the systematic comparison of public Monte Carlo codes, which describe the Drell–Yan processes at hadron colliders, in particular at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). This work represents an important step towards the definition of an accurate simulation framework necessary for very high-precision measurements of electroweak (EW) observables such as the W boson mass and the weak mixing angle. All the codes considered in this report share at least next-to-leading-order (NLO) accuracy in the prediction of the total cross sections in an expansion either in the strong or in the EW coupling constant. The NLO fixed-order predictions have been scrutinized at the technical level, using exactly the same inputs, setup and perturbative accuracy, in order to quantify the level of agreement of different implementations of the same calculation. A dedicated comparison, again at the technical level, of three codes that reach next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) accuracy in quantum chromodynamics (QCD) for the total cross section has also been performed. These fixed-order results are a well-defined reference that allows a classification of the impact of higher-order sets of radiative corrections. Several examples of higher-order effects due to the strong or the EW interaction are discussed in this common framework. Also the combination of QCD and EW corrections is discussed, together with the ambiguities that affect the final result, due to the choice of a specific combination recipe. All the codes considered in this report have been run by the respective authors, and the results presented here constitute a benchmark that should be always checked/reproduced before any high-precision analysis is conducted based on these codes. In order to simplify these benchmarking procedures, the codes used in this report, together with the relevant input files and running instructions, can be found in a repository at https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/Main/DrellYanComparison.


European Physical Journal C | 2006

Precision studies of observables in

A. B. Arbuzov; D. Y. Bardin; Serge Bondarenko; P. Christova; L. V. Kalinovskaya; G. Nanava; R. Sadykov

Collaboration


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A. B. Arbuzov

Joint Institute for Nuclear Research

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D. Y. Bardin

Joint Institute for Nuclear Research

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S. Jadach

Polish Academy of Sciences

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F. Piccinini

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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A. Sapronov

Joint Institute for Nuclear Research

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W. Placzek

Jagiellonian University

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S. Bondarenko

Joint Institute for Nuclear Research

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