N. V. Tran
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Featured researches published by N. V. Tran.
European Physical Journal C | 2014
A. Altheimer; A. T. H. Arce; L. Asquith; J. Backus Mayes; E. Bergeaas Kuutmann; J. Berger; David Martin Bjergaard; L. Bryngemark; A. G. Buckley; J. M. Butterworth; M. Cacciari; M. Campanelli; T. Carli; Mikael Chala; B. Chapleau; C. Chen; John Paul Chou; Th. Cornelissen; David Curtin; Mrinal Dasgupta; A. R. Davison; F. de Almeida Dias; A. De Cosa; A. De Roeck; C. Debenedetti; C. Doglioni; Stephen D. Ellis; F. Fassi; J. Ferrando; S. Fleischmann
This report of the BOOST2012 workshop presents the results of four working groups that studied key aspects of jet substructure. We discuss the potential of first-principle QCD calculations to yield a precise description of the substructure of jets and study the accuracy of state-of-the-art Monte Carlo tools. Limitations of the experiments’ ability to resolve substructure are evaluated, with a focus on the impact of additional (pile-up) proton proton collisions on jet substructure performance in future LHC operating scenarios. A final section summarizes the lessons learnt from jet substructure analyses in searches for new physics in the production of boosted top quarks.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2014
Daniele Bertolini; P. Harris; Matthew Low; N. V. Tran
A bstractWe propose a new method for pileup mitigation by implementing “pileup per particle identification” (PUPPI). For each particle we first define a local shape α which probes the collinear versus soft diffuse structure in the neighborhood of the particle. The former is indicative of particles originating from the hard scatter and the latter of particles originating from pileup interactions. The distribution of α for charged pileup, assumed as a proxy for all pileup, is used on an event-by-event basis to calculate a weight for each particle. The weights describe the degree to which particles are pileup-like and are used to rescale their four-momenta, superseding the need for jet-based corrections. Furthermore, the algorithm flexibly allows combination with other, possibly experimental, probabilistic information associated with particles such as vertexing and timing performance. We demonstrate the algorithm improves over existing methods by looking at jet pT and jet mass. We also find an improvement on non-jet quantities like missing transverse energy.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2013
Yi Chen; N. V. Tran; Roberto Vega-Morales
A bstractKinematic distributions in the decays of the newly discovered resonance to four leptons are a powerful probe of the tensor structure of its couplings to electroweak gauge bosons. We present analytic calculations for both signal and background of the fully differential cross section for the ‘Golden Channel’ e+e−μ+μ− final state. We include all interference effects between intermediate gauge bosons and allow them to be on- or off-shell. For the signal we compute the fully differential decay width for general scalar couplings to ZZ,γγ,andZγ. For the background we compute the leading order fully differential cross section for q q annihilation into Z and γ gauge bosons, including the contribution from the resonant Z → 2e2μ process. We also present singly and doubly differential projections and study the interference effects on the differential spectra. These expressions can be used in a variety of ways to uncover the nature of the newly discovered resonance or any new scalars decaying to neutral gauge bosons which might be discovered in the future.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2016
J. Dolen; P. Harris; Simone Marzani; S. Rappoccio; N. V. Tran
A bstractWe explore the scale-dependence and correlations of jet substructure observables to improve upon existing techniques in the identification of highly Lorentz-boosted objects. Modified observables are designed to remove correlations from existing theoretically well-understood observables, providing practical advantages for experimental measurements and searches for new phenomena. We study such observables in W jet tagging and provide recommendations for observables based on considerations beyond signal and background efficiencies.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2016
Timothy Cohen; Matthew J. Dolan; Sonia El Hedri; J. Hirschauer; N. V. Tran; Andrew Whitbeck
A bstractSimplified Models are a useful way to characterize new physics scenarios for the LHC. Particle decays are often represented using non-renormalizable operators that involve the minimal number of fields required by symmetries. Generalizing to a wider class of decay operators allows one to model a variety of final states. This approach, which we dub the n-body extension of Simplified Models, provides a unifying treatment of the signal phase space resulting from a variety of signals. In this paper, we present the first application of this framework in the context of multijet plus missing energy searches. The main result of this work is a global performance study with the goal of identifying which set of observables yields the best discriminating power against the largest Standard Model backgrounds for a wide range of signal jet multiplicities. Our analysis compares combinations of one, two and three variables, placing emphasis on the enhanced sensitivity gain resulting from non-trivial correlations. Utilizing boosted decision trees, we compare and classify the performance of missing energy, energy scale and energy structure observables. We demonstrate that including an observable from each of these three classes is required to achieve optimal performance. This work additionally serves to establish the utility of n-body extended Simplified Models as a diagnostic for unpacking the relative merits of different search strategies, thereby motivating their application to new physics signatures beyond jets and missing energy.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2013
D. Menasce; L. Moroni; J. Ngadiuba; L. Uplegger; E. Alagoz; Jeff Andresen; K. Arndt; G. Bolla; D. Bortoletto; J.-M. Brom; Richard Brosius; M. Bubna; John Chramowicz; J. P. Cumalat; M. Dinardo; P. Dini; F. Jensen; A. Krzywda; A. Kumar; S. Kwan; C.M. Lei; M. Obertino; I. Osipenkov; L. Perera; Alan Prosser; R. Rivera; Ada Solano; P. Tan; S. Tentindo; Stefano Terzo
We present a comparative characterization of the performance of a single-crystal and a polycrystalline diamond pixel-detector employing the standard CMS pixel readout chips. Measurements were carried out at the Fermilab Test Beam Facility, FTBF, using protons of momentum 120 GeV/c tracked by a high-resolution pixel telescope. Particular attention was directed to the study of the charge-collection, the charge-sharing among adjacent pixels and the achievable position resolution. The performance of the single-crystal detector was excellent and comparable to the best available silicon pixel-detectors. The measured average detection-efficiency was near unity, e = 0.99860±0.00006, and the position-resolution for shared hits was about 6 μm. On the other hand, the performance of the polycrystalline detector was hampered by its lower charge collection distance and the readout chip threshold. A new readout chip, capable of operating at much lower threshold (around 1 ke−), would be required to fully exploit the potential performance of the polycrystalline diamond pixel-detector.
European Physical Journal C | 2015
D. L. Adams; A. T. H. Arce; L. Asquith; Mihailo Backović; T. Barillari; P. Berta; D. Bertolini; A. G. Buckley; J. M. Butterworth; R. Camacho Toro; J. Caudron; Yang-Ting Chien; J. Cogan; Ben Cooper; David Curtin; C. Debenedetti; J. Dolen; M. Eklund; S. El Hedri; Stephen D. Ellis; T. Embry; D. Ferencek; J. Ferrando; S. Fleischmann; M. Freytsis; M. Giulini; Z. Han; D. Hare; P. Harris; A. Hinzmann
European Physical Journal C | 2015
D. L. Adams; A. T. H. Arce; L. Asquith; Mihailo Backović; T. Barillari; P. Berta; Daniele Bertolini; A. G. Buckley; J. M. Butterworth; R. Camacho Toro; J. Caudron; Yang-Ting Chien; J. Cogan; Ben Cooper; David Curtin; C. Debenedetti; J. Dolen; M. Eklund; S. El Hedri; Stephen D. Ellis; T. Embry; D. Ferencek; J. Ferrando; S. Fleischmann; M. Freytsis; M. Giulini; Z. Han; D. Hare; P. Harris; A. Hinzmann
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2014
A. Krzywda; E. Alagoz; M. Bubna; M. M. Obertino; A. Solano; K. Arndt; L. Uplegger; G.-F. Dalla Betta; M. Boscardin; J. Ngadiuba; R. Rivera; D. Menasce; L. Moroni; S. Terzo; D. Bortoletto; Alan Prosser; J. Adreson; S. Kwan; I. Osipenkov; G. Bolla; C.M. Lei; I. P. J. Shipsey; P. Tan; N. V. Tran; John Chramowicz; J. P. Cumalat; L. Perera; M. Povoli; R. Mendicino; A. Vilela Pereira
arXiv: High Energy Physics - Experiment | 2018
Torsten Åkesson; John Jaros; Giulia Collura; Valentina Dutta; Ruth Pöttgen; Timothy Nelson; Bertrand Echenard; Philip Schuster; Andrew Whitbeck; J. Incandela; Gavin Niendorf; Natalia Toro; N. V. Tran; Takashi Maruyama; Owen Colegrove; Reese Petersen; Gordan Krnjaic; Jeremiah Mans; Robert Johnson; Jeremy McCormick; Nikita Blinov; Joshua Hiltbrand; Asher Berlin; Omar Moreno; David G. Hitlin