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Long-Lived Particle Reconstruction at CLIC
Several Beyond Standard Model theories predict the existence of particles whose lifetime is at the millimeter scale. If generated in a high energy collider, these particles could live long enough to travel in the detector tracking system for a few centimeters. Before decaying, they could leave sever...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2019
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2700254 |
Sumario: | Several Beyond Standard Model theories predict the existence of particles whose lifetime is at the millimeter scale. If generated in a high energy collider, these particles could live long enough to travel in the detector tracking system for a few centimeters. Before decaying, they could leave several detectable hits, that can be clustered by the algorithms into a stub track. Hence, the search of long-lived particles (LLPs) is very well-motivated in high energy colliders with high-resolution tracking detectors and robust reconstruction algorithms. The proposed future e+ e− linear collider CLIC provides the perfect environment for the search of these particles, thanks to the lack of QCD-background and its detector low material budget. The presented work tested the CLIC third stage (√s = 3 TeV) reconstruction performances, analyzing simulated stub tracks originating from LLP pair production. In particular, the particles involved were charginos with lifetime cτ ≈600 mm and mass m≈1.5 TeV. LLP tracks were found to be reconstructable in more than 90% of the cases in the detector central region. |
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