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ATLAS Electromagnetic Calorimeter performance measurements, search for the Higgs boson in the $H \to Z\gamma$ channel and detector development for position reconstruction of noble liquid scintillation
In this thesis, a method for the recovery of QED Final State Radiation photons emitted from muons at small (collinear, ∆R < 0.15) angles is extended to include photons emitted at larger angles (∆R ≥ 0.15) from both electrons and muons. The method is used in the search for Higgs boson decays to 4-...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2018
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2317329 |
Sumario: | In this thesis, a method for the recovery of QED Final State Radiation
photons emitted from muons at small (collinear, ∆R < 0.15) angles is extended
to include photons emitted at larger angles (∆R ≥ 0.15) from both
electrons and muons. The method is used in the search for Higgs boson
decays to 4-leptons, H → ZZ∗ → 4ℓ, in ATLAS, correcting 3 out of 60
candidate events. It is also applied in the search for Higgs decays to a Z
boson and a photon, H → Zγ, introducing a 2% improvement in the upper
limit set by the analysis, yielding 11 × S M at mH = 125.5 GeV (95% CL).
The method is also used in the measurement of the photon electromagnetic
scale to provide a precision better than 0.5%, reducing the measured
Higgs mass systematic uncertainty obtained from the H → γγ analysis.
Data-Monte Carlo comparisons are performed to ascertain the validity of
the procedure before its application to the different measurements. The
collinear photon selection has an efficiency of 70% and a purity of 85%,
and a collinear photon is found in 4% of Z → µ+µ−events. The noncollinear
selection has an efficiency of 60% and a purity > 95%, and a
photon is found in ∼ 1% of events. The second part of the thesis presents new results from a developed prototype Gaseous Photomultiplier detector based on a cascade of Thick GEM
structures intended for gamma-ray position reconstruction in liquid argon.
The detector has a MgF2 window, transparent to VUV light, and a CsI
photocathode deposited on the first THGEM. A 10 cm2
area is instrumented with four readout channels. A gain of 8 · 105 per photoelectron
and ∼100% photoelectron collection efficiency are measured at stable operation
settings. A ∼100 µm position resolution at 100 kHz readout rate
is demonstrated at room temperature. Structural integrity tests of the detector
and seals are successfully performed at cryogenic temperatures by
immersing the detector in liquid Nitrogen, laying a good foundation for
future operation tests in noble liquids. This new type of device provides a
low cost solution for large-area real-time gamma-ray imaging. |
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