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Detecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in SUSY-like events

We critically examine the classic endpoint method for particle mass determination, focusing on difficult corners of parameter space, where some of the measurements are not independent, while others are adversely affected by the experimental resolution. In such scenarios, mass differences can be meas...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Debnath, Dipsikha, Gainer, James S., Kilic, Can, Kim, Doojin, Matchev, Konstantin T., Yang, Yuan-Pao
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/JHEP06(2017)092
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2232271
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author Debnath, Dipsikha
Gainer, James S.
Kilic, Can
Kim, Doojin
Matchev, Konstantin T.
Yang, Yuan-Pao
author_facet Debnath, Dipsikha
Gainer, James S.
Kilic, Can
Kim, Doojin
Matchev, Konstantin T.
Yang, Yuan-Pao
author_sort Debnath, Dipsikha
collection CERN
description We critically examine the classic endpoint method for particle mass determination, focusing on difficult corners of parameter space, where some of the measurements are not independent, while others are adversely affected by the experimental resolution. In such scenarios, mass differences can be measured relatively well, but the overall mass scale remains poorly constrained. Using the example of the standard SUSY decay chain $\tilde q\to \tilde\chi^0_2\to \tilde \ell \to \tilde \chi^0_1$, we demonstrate that sensitivity to the remaining mass scale parameter can be recovered by measuring the two-dimensional kinematical boundary in the relevant three-dimensional phase space of invariant masses squared. We develop an algorithm for detecting this boundary, which uses the geometric properties of the Voronoi tessellation of the data, and in particular, the relative standard deviation (RSD) of the volumes of the neighbors for each Voronoi cell in the tessellation. We propose a new observable, $\bar\Sigma$, which is the average RSD per unit area, calculated over the hypothesized boundary. We show that the location of the $\bar\Sigma$ maximum correlates very well with the true values of the new particle masses. Our approach represents the natural extension of the one-dimensional kinematic endpoint method to the relevant three dimensions of invariant mass phase space.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2016
record_format invenio
spelling cern-22322712022-03-31T02:27:04Zdoi:10.1007/JHEP06(2017)092http://cds.cern.ch/record/2232271engDebnath, DipsikhaGainer, James S.Kilic, CanKim, DoojinMatchev, Konstantin T.Yang, Yuan-PaoDetecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in SUSY-like eventshep-exParticle Physics - ExperimentNuclear Physics - TheoryWe critically examine the classic endpoint method for particle mass determination, focusing on difficult corners of parameter space, where some of the measurements are not independent, while others are adversely affected by the experimental resolution. In such scenarios, mass differences can be measured relatively well, but the overall mass scale remains poorly constrained. Using the example of the standard SUSY decay chain $\tilde q\to \tilde\chi^0_2\to \tilde \ell \to \tilde \chi^0_1$, we demonstrate that sensitivity to the remaining mass scale parameter can be recovered by measuring the two-dimensional kinematical boundary in the relevant three-dimensional phase space of invariant masses squared. We develop an algorithm for detecting this boundary, which uses the geometric properties of the Voronoi tessellation of the data, and in particular, the relative standard deviation (RSD) of the volumes of the neighbors for each Voronoi cell in the tessellation. We propose a new observable, $\bar\Sigma$, which is the average RSD per unit area, calculated over the hypothesized boundary. We show that the location of the $\bar\Sigma$ maximum correlates very well with the true values of the new particle masses. Our approach represents the natural extension of the one-dimensional kinematic endpoint method to the relevant three dimensions of invariant mass phase space.We critically examine the classic endpoint method for particle mass determination, focusing on difficult corners of parameter space, where some of the measurements are not independent, while others are adversely affected by the experimental resolution. In such scenarios, mass differences can be measured relatively well, but the overall mass scale remains poorly constrained. Using the example of the standard SUSY decay chain $ \tilde{q}\to {\tilde{\chi}}_2^0\to \tilde{\ell}\to {\tilde{\chi}}_1^0 $ , we demonstrate that sensitivity to the remaining mass scale parameter can be recovered by measuring the two-dimensional kinematical boundary in the relevant three-dimensional phase space of invariant masses squared. We develop an algorithm for detecting this boundary, which uses the geometric properties of the Voronoi tessellation of the data, and in particular, the relative standard deviation (RSD) of the volumes of the neighbors for each Voronoi cell in the tessellation. We propose a new observable, $ \overline{\Sigma} $ , which is the average RSD per unit area, calculated over the hypothesized boundary. We show that the location of the $ \overline{\Sigma} $ maximum correlates very well with the true values of the new particle masses. Our approach represents the natural extension of the one-dimensional kinematic endpoint method to the relevant three dimensions of invariant mass phase space.We critically examine the classic endpoint method for particle mass determination, focusing on difficult corners of parameter space, where some of the measurements are not independent, while others are adversely affected by the experimental resolution. In such scenarios, mass differences can be measured relatively well, but the overall mass scale remains poorly constrained. Using the example of the standard SUSY decay chain $\tilde q\to \tilde\chi^0_2\to \tilde \ell \to \tilde \chi^0_1$, we demonstrate that sensitivity to the remaining mass scale parameter can be recovered by measuring the two-dimensional kinematical boundary in the relevant three-dimensional phase space of invariant masses squared. We develop an algorithm for detecting this boundary, which uses the geometric properties of the Voronoi tessellation of the data, and in particular, the relative standard deviation (RSD) of the volumes of the neighbors for each Voronoi cell in the tessellation. We propose a new observable, $\bar\Sigma$, which is the average RSD per unit area, calculated over the hypothesized boundary. We show that the location of the $\bar\Sigma$ maximum correlates very well with the true values of the new particle masses. Our approach represents the natural extension of the one-dimensional kinematic endpoint method to the relevant three dimensions of invariant mass phase space.arXiv:1611.04487CERN-TH-2016-235UTTG-21-16oai:cds.cern.ch:22322712016-11-13
spellingShingle hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
Nuclear Physics - Theory
Debnath, Dipsikha
Gainer, James S.
Kilic, Can
Kim, Doojin
Matchev, Konstantin T.
Yang, Yuan-Pao
Detecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in SUSY-like events
title Detecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in SUSY-like events
title_full Detecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in SUSY-like events
title_fullStr Detecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in SUSY-like events
title_full_unstemmed Detecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in SUSY-like events
title_short Detecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in SUSY-like events
title_sort detecting kinematic boundary surfaces in phase space and particle mass measurements in susy-like events
topic hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
Nuclear Physics - Theory
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/JHEP06(2017)092
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2232271
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