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Search for Exotic Top Partners with the CMS Experiment

This note presents a study of searches for two exotic particles - a heavy top quark partner with a fractional charge of 5/3, $T_{5/3}$, and its partner, the heavy $B$ quark with charge -1/3. These particles decay to a top quark and a $W$ boson, leading to very busy events with multi-leptons and mult...

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Autor principal: CMS Collaboration
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1194505
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author CMS Collaboration
author_facet CMS Collaboration
author_sort CMS Collaboration
collection CERN
description This note presents a study of searches for two exotic particles - a heavy top quark partner with a fractional charge of 5/3, $T_{5/3}$, and its partner, the heavy $B$ quark with charge -1/3. These particles decay to a top quark and a $W$ boson, leading to very busy events with multi-leptons and multi-jets. Processes where same-sign dileptons are produced are considered. The backgrounds are predominantly from $t\overline t$, QCD multi-jets, $Z$+jets, $t\overline t WW$, $t\overline t W$ and multiple-$W$+jets production. The study shows that it is possible to observe these exotic particles during the early running period of the Large Hadron Collider. Approximately $80$~pb$^{-1}$ of data at $\sqrt{s} =10$~TeV would be needed to exclude such heavy new particles up to masses of about 400~GeV and $115$~pb$^{-1}$ would be necessary for a $5\sigma$ observation at the same mass. With $340$~pb$^{-1}$ of integrated luminosity at $\sqrt{s} =10$~TeV, masses of up to 500~GeV can be excluded. At $\sqrt{s} =14$~TeV only about 150~pb$^{-1}$ would be needed for a $5\sigma$ observation at a mass of 500~GeV.
id cern-1194505
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 2009
record_format invenio
spelling cern-11945052019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1194505CMS CollaborationSearch for Exotic Top Partners with the CMS ExperimentParticle Physics - ExperimentThis note presents a study of searches for two exotic particles - a heavy top quark partner with a fractional charge of 5/3, $T_{5/3}$, and its partner, the heavy $B$ quark with charge -1/3. These particles decay to a top quark and a $W$ boson, leading to very busy events with multi-leptons and multi-jets. Processes where same-sign dileptons are produced are considered. The backgrounds are predominantly from $t\overline t$, QCD multi-jets, $Z$+jets, $t\overline t WW$, $t\overline t W$ and multiple-$W$+jets production. The study shows that it is possible to observe these exotic particles during the early running period of the Large Hadron Collider. Approximately $80$~pb$^{-1}$ of data at $\sqrt{s} =10$~TeV would be needed to exclude such heavy new particles up to masses of about 400~GeV and $115$~pb$^{-1}$ would be necessary for a $5\sigma$ observation at the same mass. With $340$~pb$^{-1}$ of integrated luminosity at $\sqrt{s} =10$~TeV, masses of up to 500~GeV can be excluded. At $\sqrt{s} =14$~TeV only about 150~pb$^{-1}$ would be needed for a $5\sigma$ observation at a mass of 500~GeV.CMS-PAS-EXO-08-008oai:cds.cern.ch:11945052009
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
CMS Collaboration
Search for Exotic Top Partners with the CMS Experiment
title Search for Exotic Top Partners with the CMS Experiment
title_full Search for Exotic Top Partners with the CMS Experiment
title_fullStr Search for Exotic Top Partners with the CMS Experiment
title_full_unstemmed Search for Exotic Top Partners with the CMS Experiment
title_short Search for Exotic Top Partners with the CMS Experiment
title_sort search for exotic top partners with the cms experiment
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1194505
work_keys_str_mv AT cmscollaboration searchforexotictoppartnerswiththecmsexperiment