Search for a Higgs Boson in the diphoton final state in pp̄ collisions at √s=1.96TeV
Physical Review Letters 108:1 (2012)
Abstract:
A search for a narrow Higgs boson resonance in the diphoton mass spectrum is presented based on data corresponding to 7.0fb-1 of integrated luminosity from pp̄ collisions at √s=1.96TeV collected by the CDF experiment. No evidence of such a resonance is observed, and upper limits are set on the cross section times branching ratio of the resonant state as a function of Higgs boson mass. The limits are interpreted in the context of the standard model and one fermiophobic benchmark model where the data exclude fermiophobic Higgs bosons with masses below 114GeV/c2 at a 95% Bayesian credibility level. © 2012 American Physical Society.A programmatic view of metadata, metadata services, and metadata flow in ATLAS
Journal of Physics: Conference Series 396:PART 5 (2012)
Abstract:
The volume and diversity of metadata in an experiment of the size and scope of ATLAS are considerable. Even the definition of metadata may seem context-dependent: data that are primary for one purpose may be metadata for another. ATLAS metadata services must integrate and federate information from inhomogeneous sources and repositories, map metadata about logical or physics constructs to deployment and production constructs, provide a means to associate metadata at one level of granularity with processing or decision-making at another, offer a coherent and integrated view to physicists, and support both human use and programmatic access. In this paper we consider ATLAS metadata, metadata services, and metadata flow principally from the illustrative perspective of how disparate metadata are made available to executing jobs and, conversely, how metadata generated by such jobs are returned. We describe how metadata are read, how metadata are cached, and how metadata generated by jobs and the tasks of which they are a part are communicated, associated with data products, and preserved. We also discuss the principles that guide decision-making about metadata storage, replication, and access..ATLAS file and dataset metadata collection and use
Journal of Physics: Conference Series 396:PART 5 (2012)
Abstract:
The ATLAS Metadata Interface ("AMI") was designed as a generic cataloguing system, and as such it has found many uses in the experiment including software release management, tracking of reconstructed event sizes and control of dataset nomenclature. The primary use of AMI is to provide a catalogue of datasets (file collections) which is searchable using physics criteria. In this paper we discuss the various mechanisms used for filling the AMI dataset and file catalogues. By correlating information from different sources we can derive aggregate information which is important for physics analysis; for example the total number of events contained in dataset, and possible reasons for missing events such as a lost file. Finally we will describe some specialized interfaces which were developed for the Data Preparation coordinators. These interfaces manipulate information from both the dataset domain held in AMI, and the run-indexed information held in the ATLAS COMA application (Conditions and Configuration MetadatA)..ATLAS measurements of WW, WZ, and ZZ production
Proceedings of Science 2012-July (2012)
Abstract:
Using data corresponding to 4.6-4.7 fb-1 of integrated luminosity from s = 7 TeV pp collisions at the LHC, the ATLAS Collaboration has measured the production cross section of heavy dibosons (WW, WZ, and ZZ) in the fully leptonic decay channels. A first measurement of ZZ production at s = 8 TeV with data corresponding to 5.8 fb-1 of integrated luminosity has also been performed. Differential cross sections are measured for WZ production, and limits are set on anomalous WWZ and WW? couplings.ATLAS search for a heavy gauge boson decaying to a charged lepton and a neutrino in pp collisions at √s =7 TeV
European Physical Journal C 72:12 (2012)