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Efficient Search for New Physics Using Active Learning in the ATLAS Experiment

Searches for new physics set exclusion limits in parameter spaces of typically up to 2 dimensions. However, the relevant theory parameter space is usually of a higher dimension but only a subspace is covered due to the computing time requirements of signal process simulations. An Active Learning app...

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Autores principales: Bhatti, Zubair, Espejo Morales, Irina, Rieck, Patrick, Heinrich, Lukas Alexander, Cranmer, Kyle Stuart, Gadow, Philipp, Von Ahnen, Janik
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2871281
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author Bhatti, Zubair
Espejo Morales, Irina
Rieck, Patrick
Heinrich, Lukas Alexander
Cranmer, Kyle Stuart
Gadow, Philipp
Von Ahnen, Janik
author_facet Bhatti, Zubair
Espejo Morales, Irina
Rieck, Patrick
Heinrich, Lukas Alexander
Cranmer, Kyle Stuart
Gadow, Philipp
Von Ahnen, Janik
author_sort Bhatti, Zubair
collection CERN
description Searches for new physics set exclusion limits in parameter spaces of typically up to 2 dimensions. However, the relevant theory parameter space is usually of a higher dimension but only a subspace is covered due to the computing time requirements of signal process simulations. An Active Learning approach is presented to address this limitation. Compared to the usual grid sampling, it reduces the number of parameter space points for which exclusion limits need to be determined. Hence it allows to extend interpretations of searches to higher dimensional parameter spaces and therefore to raise their value, e.g. via the identification of barely excluded subspaces which motivate dedicated new searches. In an iterative procedure, a Gaussian Process is fit to excluded signal cross-sections. Within the region close to the exclusion contour predicted by the Gaussian Process, Poisson disc sampling is used to determine further parameter space points for which the cross-section limits are determined. The procedure is aided by a warm-start phase based on computationally inexpensive, approximate limit estimates such as total signal cross-sections. The procedure is applied to a dark matter search performed by the ATLAS experiment, extending its interpretation from a 2 to a 4-dimensional parameter space while keeping the computational effort at a low level. The result is published in two formats: on one hand there is a publication of the Gaussian Process model. On the other hand, a visualization of the full 4-dimensional contour is presented as a collection of 2-dimensional exclusion contours where the 2 remaining parameters are chosen by the user.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2023
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spelling cern-28712812023-09-14T20:23:37Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2871281engBhatti, ZubairEspejo Morales, IrinaRieck, PatrickHeinrich, Lukas AlexanderCranmer, Kyle StuartGadow, PhilippVon Ahnen, JanikEfficient Search for New Physics Using Active Learning in the ATLAS ExperimentParticle Physics - ExperimentSearches for new physics set exclusion limits in parameter spaces of typically up to 2 dimensions. However, the relevant theory parameter space is usually of a higher dimension but only a subspace is covered due to the computing time requirements of signal process simulations. An Active Learning approach is presented to address this limitation. Compared to the usual grid sampling, it reduces the number of parameter space points for which exclusion limits need to be determined. Hence it allows to extend interpretations of searches to higher dimensional parameter spaces and therefore to raise their value, e.g. via the identification of barely excluded subspaces which motivate dedicated new searches. In an iterative procedure, a Gaussian Process is fit to excluded signal cross-sections. Within the region close to the exclusion contour predicted by the Gaussian Process, Poisson disc sampling is used to determine further parameter space points for which the cross-section limits are determined. The procedure is aided by a warm-start phase based on computationally inexpensive, approximate limit estimates such as total signal cross-sections. The procedure is applied to a dark matter search performed by the ATLAS experiment, extending its interpretation from a 2 to a 4-dimensional parameter space while keeping the computational effort at a low level. The result is published in two formats: on one hand there is a publication of the Gaussian Process model. On the other hand, a visualization of the full 4-dimensional contour is presented as a collection of 2-dimensional exclusion contours where the 2 remaining parameters are chosen by the user.ATL-SOFT-PROC-2023-030oai:cds.cern.ch:28712812023-09-14
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Bhatti, Zubair
Espejo Morales, Irina
Rieck, Patrick
Heinrich, Lukas Alexander
Cranmer, Kyle Stuart
Gadow, Philipp
Von Ahnen, Janik
Efficient Search for New Physics Using Active Learning in the ATLAS Experiment
title Efficient Search for New Physics Using Active Learning in the ATLAS Experiment
title_full Efficient Search for New Physics Using Active Learning in the ATLAS Experiment
title_fullStr Efficient Search for New Physics Using Active Learning in the ATLAS Experiment
title_full_unstemmed Efficient Search for New Physics Using Active Learning in the ATLAS Experiment
title_short Efficient Search for New Physics Using Active Learning in the ATLAS Experiment
title_sort efficient search for new physics using active learning in the atlas experiment
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2871281
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