Measurement of the W Boson Mass - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

Measurement of the W Boson Mass

Description:

Measurement of the W Boson Mass Yu Zeng Supervisor: Prof. Kotwal Duke University – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:252
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: YuZ84
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Measurement of the W Boson Mass


1
Measurement of the W Boson Mass
  • Yu Zeng
  • Supervisor Prof. Kotwal
  • Duke University

2
Outline
  • Introduction to the Standard Model
  • Motivation of W mass measurement
  • Method (calibration, simulation )
  • Result and discussion
  • Future prospects

3
The Standard Model (SM)
  • It is a special relativity quantum field theory
    in which the dynamics is generated from the
    assumption of local gauge invariances.
  • It is renormalizable (divergences can be absorbed
    into parameters such as masses and coupling
    strengths.)
  • Encompasses Electroweak theory and QCD
  • The only elementary particle theory that has been
    verified experimentally.

4
The Standard Model (SM)
  • Number of elementary particles in SM

12 leptons 36 quarks 12 mediators 1 Higgs
61
  • Parameters needed to SM completely predictive

Physical Quantity No.
Mass of quark 6
Mass of lepton 3
Masses of W,Z, Higgs 3
Coupling strength 2
Quark EWK mixing parameter 4
Strong CP violation 1
Neutrino mass 3
Neutrino mixing parameter 4
5
Motivation
  • W mass is a fundamental parameter in SM.
  • Precise W mass and top quark mass values
    constrain the mass of undiscovered Higgs.

(Higher order radiative corrections from loop
diagrams involving other particles contribute to
the observed W boson mass)
  • With ultimate precision can set limits on new
    particles in loops

6
Radiative Corrections
  • Top quark mass and the Higgs boson mass dominate
    radiative corrections

13 MeV shift to Mass of W if ?M_t2.1GeV
Arouse few MeV shift to Mass of W
  • Currently W mass uncertainty dominates the above
    relationship

7
Motivation contd
  • Example Relations among the masses of W, t and
    Higgs
  • Loop effects of the masses of W and t to that of
    Higgs are quite different in size. W mass
    uncertainty dominates.

http//acfahep.kek.jp/acfareport/node181.html
8
History of W Boson Study
  • Experimental effort

1983 Discovery of the W at CERNs proton-antiproton collider by UA1 UA2 collaborations 1996 CERNs ee- collider LEP increased its c.m. energy above 161 GeV which is threshold for W pair production
1985 Tevatron, the second proton-antiproton collider, was commissioned at Fermilab 2000 four LEP experiments (ALEPH, DELPHI, L3, OPAL) ceased data taking
1987 Fermilab observed its first W candidate Now CDF and D0 at Fermilab are still running
W boson mass has been measured with increasing
precision by those experiments
9
Collider Detector at Fermilab (CDF)
Muon Detector
Central Hadronic Calorimeter
Central Outer Tracker
10
The CDF Detector
11
The CDF Detector (Quadrant)
12
Particle Identification
  • Particle detectors measure long-lived particles
    produced from high energy collisions electrons,
    muons, photons and stable hadrons (protons,
    kaons, pions)
  • Quarks and gluons do not appear as free
    particles, they hadronize into a jet.

13
W Boson Production
  • Process a) dominates (80), Process b) implies
    the existence of net transverse momentum.

Lepton Pt carries most information of W mass
14
W Mass Measurement (1)
  • Invariant mass of lepton-neutrino cannot be
    reconstructed since neutrino momentum in beam
    direction is unknown. However, we can use
    transverse mass

Features of transverse mass spectrum
1). Relatively insensitive to the production
dynamics of W.
2). Sensitive to detector response to recoil
particles.
15
W Mass Measurement (2)
  • Another way is to use transverse momentum
    spectrum of lepton

16
W Mass Measurement (3)
Source A. Kotwal 2007 Aspen talk
17
W Mass Measurement Strategy
  • Detector Calibration

Data
  • Fast Simulation

Binned Likelihood Fit
W boson mass
NLO event generator Detector response
simulation Hadronic recoil modelling

Backgrounds
W mass templates, bule for 80 GeV, red for 81 GeV
18
Event Selection for W Z
  • Select clean W and Z samples to get maximum ratio
    of S/N.

Trigger info lepton Ptgt18 GeV Central leptons
selection etalt1 Final Analysis lepton Ptgt30
GeV W boson further requires ult15 GeV and
missing Etgt30GeV Z boson two charged leptons
Collected data used (02/2002-09/2003) 1/10 of
data on tape.
Number of W events comparable to 4 LEP
experiments combined.
19
Detector Calibration
  • Tracker calibration

1). Calibration of COT using comic rays 2).
J/psi?mumu- and Upsilon?mumu- are used to scale
COT momentum 3). Using Z?mumu- invariant mass
fit to further check
  • EM Calorimeter calibration

1). Using Ecal/p ratio to scale COT momentum 2).
Using Z?ee- mass fit to further check
calorimeter energy scale
20
Backgrounds
For W?mu nu
  • Largest background comes from Z?mumu-
  • W?tau nu?mu nu nu events
  • Cosmic rays
  • Kaon decays in flight
  • QCD jet events where one jet contains one
    non-isolated muon

For W?e nu
  • Z?ee-
  • W?tau nu?e nu nu
  • QCD

21
Transverse Mass Fitting results
background
background
22
Transverse Mass Uncertainties
Combined electron and muon uncertainty is 48 MeV
23
Other W Mass Fits Lepton Pt (Et)
24
Other W Mass Fits Neutrino Pt
25
Combined Results
  • Combine all 6 fitting results

Best single precise measurement!
26
Implications for Standard Model
  • Uncertainty down from 29 MeV to 25 MeV
  • Central value up from 80392 MeV to 80398 MeV
  • Previous SM Higgs mass prediction from
  • 95 CL upper limit on Higgs mass lowers from
    previous 199 GeV to 189 GeV

27
The Implications for Tevatron
In 2004, the estimated upper limit for Higgs mass
is 250 GeV, however Tevatron only reach upper
limit 170 GeV, people think Tevatron has no
chance to find Higgs.
Now Tevatron is back into the competition.
28
Future Prospects at CDF
For Example
  • Mw uncertainties are dominated by statistics of
    calibration data. Current analysis only used
    1/10th of data on tape.
  • Detailed study of PDFs (Parton Distribution
    Fuction) to reduce systematic uncertainties.
  • Magnetic field within COT is not uniform, need to
    fix that.
  • Calibrate sag of wires in COT due to gravity

Goal Delta_mwlt25 MeV from 1.5 fb-1 of CDF data
29
References
Acknowledgement
  • Prof. Ashutosh Kotwal
  • Ashutosh Kotwal, Aspen Conference on Particle
    Physics (2007)
  • CDF Note 8665
  • http//acfahep.kek.jp/acfareport/node181.html
  • William Trischuk, Collider 2 Cosmic Rays (2007)
  • Oliver Stelzer-Chilton, PhD thesis, University of
    Toronto (2006)
  • Andrew Gordon, PhD thesis, Harvard University
    (1998)
  • Al Goshaw, Phy346 Lecture notes, Duke University
    (2007)

30
Backup Slides
31
Choices of SM Parameters (1)
Physical Quantity No.
Fermion masses (6 quark 3 lepton) 9
Higgs Boson 1
Quark weak mixing parameter 4
Strong CP violation parameter 1
Strong interaction coupling constant 1
Fundamental EWK parameters 3
Neutrino masses 3
Neutrino mixing parameter 4
Can be chosen from
32
Choices of SM Parameters (2)
Choice 1.
Choice 2.
Choice 1.
Follow the pattern that parameters are masses and
coupling constants.
Choose parameters measured most precisely.
33
Motivation
  • The EWK sector of SM is constrained by three
    precisely measured parameters
  • At lowest order, these parameters are related by

34
Blind Analysis Technique
  • A random -100,100 MeV offset is added in the
    likelihood fitter, thus all W mass fits are
    blinded
  • Blinding offset is removed after the analysis was
    frozon.
  • Benefit allowing study data in detail while
    keeping W mass value unknown within 100 MeV.
    Helps to avoid biased analysis.

35
Why two coupling constants
Thus, only two counpling constants
1) ae2/(4phc)1/137 2) aS
for strong coupling
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com