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Featured researches published by T. Aaltonen.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013

Operational experience, improvements, and performance of the CDF Run II silicon vertex detector

T. Aaltonen; S. Behari; A. Boveia; B. Brau; G. Bolla; D. Bortoletto; C. Calancha; S. Carron; S. Cihangir; M. Corbo; D. Clark; B. Di Ruzza; R. Eusebi; J. P. Fernandez; J. Freeman; J. E. Garcia; M. Garcia-Sciveres; D. Glenzinski; O. González; Sebastian Grinstein; M. Hartz; M. Herndon; Christopher Hill; A. Hocker; U. Husemann; J. Incandela; C. Issever; S. Jindariani; T. R. Junk; K. Knoepfel

The Collider Detector at Fermilab (CDF) pursues a broad physics program at Fermilabs Tevatron collider. Between Run II commissioning in early 2001 and the end of operations in September 2011, the Tevatron delivered 12 fb-1 of integrated luminosity of pp collisions at s=1.96TeV. The physics at CDF includes precise measurements of the masses of the top quark and W boson, measurement of CP violation and Bs mixing, and searches for Higgs bosons and new physics signatures, all of which require heavy flavor tagging with large charged particle tracking acceptance. To realize these goals, in 2001 CDF installed eight layers of silicon microstrip detectors around its interaction region. These detectors were designed for 2-5 years of operation, radiation doses up to 2 Mrad (0.02 Gy), and were expected to be replaced in 2004. The sensors were not replaced, and the Tevatron run was extended for several years beyond its design, exposing the sensors and electronics to much higher radiation doses than anticipated. In this paper we describe the operational challenges encountered over the past 10 years of running the CDF silicon detectors, the preventive measures undertaken, and the improvements made along the way to ensure their optimal performance for collecting high quality physics data. In addition, we describe the quantities and methods used to monitor radiation damage in the sensors for optimal performance and summarize the detector performance quantities important to CDFs physics program, including vertex resolution, heavy flavor tagging, and silicon vertex trigger performance.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Search for Supersymmetry with Like-Sign Lepton-Tau Events at CDF

T. Aaltonen; Jesus Manuel Vizan Garcia

We present a search for chargino-neutralino associated production using like electric charge dilepton events collected by the CDF II detector at the Fermilab Tevatron in proton-antiproton collisions at sqrt[s] = 1.96 TeV. One lepton is identified as the hadronic decay of a tau lepton, while the other is an electron or muon. In data corresponding to 6.0 fb(-1) of integrated luminosity, we obtain good agreement with standard model predictions and set limits on the chargino-neutralino production cross section for simplified gravity- and gauge-mediated models. As an example, assuming that the chargino and neutralino decays to taus dominate, in the simplified gauge-mediated model we exclude cross sections greater than 300 fb at 95% credibility level for chargino and neutralino masses of 225 GeV/c(2). This analysis is the first to extend the LHC searches for electroweak supersymmetric production of gauginos to high tanβ and slepton next-to-lightest supersymmetric particle scenarios.

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S. Behari

Johns Hopkins University

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A. Boveia

Ohio State University

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B. Brau

University of California

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B. Di Ruzza

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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C. Calancha

University of Michigan

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