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Lepton Identification at Hadron Colliders

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Two layers of lead (to start shower) followed by silicon layers (to measure position) ... More detailed isolation and shower shape variables ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lepton Identification at Hadron Colliders


1
Lepton Identification at Hadron Colliders
  • c. mills

2
Introduction Leptons in Physics
  • At hadron colliders, QCD processes prevail
  • Higher cross-section than electroweak
  • Leptons only produced by electroweak processes
  • Flag for these rarer processes
  • Used in triggers and offline selection
  • Look for W, Z, top (strong production, weak
    decay), and ?
  • Start with general idea, then move to actual
    implementation

3
Leptons in a Generic Detector
  • Nature 3 leptons
  • e (stable)
  • m (2.2 x 10-6 s)
  • Even a 10 GeV muon has a 99.99 chance of
    escaping the detector (5 m radius) without
    decaying
  • t (2.9 x 10-13 s)
  • Even a 1 TeV tau has an immeasurably small (1
    part in 1045) chance to escape the detector
  • Jargon lepton e or m

Decays inside detector, usually hadronically,
into a jet of particles
4
A Generic Detector
muon
  • Electrons
  • Track
  • Stop (shower) in EM calorimeter
  • Muons
  • Track
  • Passes through calorimeter
  • track in muon detector

Muon detectors
Hadronic cal.
EM cal

tracking
electron
5
Electron Backgrounds
  • Jet Catch-all term for fakes of hadronic origin
  • Tracks energy in calorimeter
  • Nasty case pp0 gives one track EM energy
  • Photon
  • Need to pick up a track
  • Conversion g ? e e
  • Muon
  • Yes, really Energetic muons can emit
    bremstrahlung photon in EM cal track from muon
    (rare)
  • Heavy-flavor decay
  • Real electrons but treated as background tricky

6
Muon Backgrounds
  • Less background than electrons in general
  • Jet Catch-all term for fakes of hadronic origin
  • Tracks energy in calorimeter
  • Nasty case punch-throughs, K decay-in-flight
  • Cosmic rays
  • Real muons
  • Heavy-flavor decay
  • Real muons but treated as background tricky

7
CDF A Real Detector
  • Forward-backward and azimuthally symmetric
  • From the beamline outward
  • Silicon vertex detector
  • Drift chamber tracker
  • Solenoid
  • Electromagnetic calorimeter (with shower maximum)
  • Hadronic calorimeter
  • Shielding
  • Muon chambers and scintillator

Cutaway view of the CDF II detector
Protons go in here
Interaction point
8
CDF Tracking
  • Silicon strip tracking (Solid state)
  • Charged particle creates electron-hole pairs,
    apply HV to collect charge
  • Good resolution, radiation tolerance (close to
    IP)
  • R-phi, stereo, and Z type layers (7-8 layers,
    some double-sided)
  • Drift chamber tracking
  • Metal wires in closed chamber full of gas
  • Charged particle ionizes gas
  • Alternating R-phi and stereo layers (4 of each)
  • Algorithms reconstruct tracks from hits
  • Group wires/strips with signal above threshold
    into clusters hits
  • Momentum from curvature in 1.4 T field
  • Use track quality, number of tracks

9
CDF Tracking
Apparently this is also a CDF tracker The
Grumman S-2T Turbine Tracker
10
CDF Calorimetry
  • High-mass particle interacts with matter, stops
    ( transfers all its momentum)
  • CDF alternating layers of scintillator, heavy
    material
  • Shower develops in heavy material
  • Collect photons from scintillator
  • Electromagnetic calorimeter stops
    electrons/photons first (ideally)
  • Lead-scintillator
  • Hadronic calorimeter stops hadrons
  • Iron-scintillator
  • Designed to measure particle energy
  • Very coarse granularity in eta, phi
  • Projective geometry
  • Towers point back at interaction point

scintillator
iron
scintillator
lead
shower maximum detector
one tower
central
forward
interaction point
11
CDF Small Tracking
  • Shower maximum detectors electrons
  • Small, shallow tracking at depth where EM shower
    peaks
  • Wire chamber in central, scintillator strips in
    plug
  • Better spatial resolution than calorimetry
  • Run clustering algorithms, like central tracker
  • h, j location of shower centroid
  • Shower profile (collimated/ spread out?)
  • Muon chambers
  • Shallow wire tracker outside of calorimetry,
    shielding
  • Short tracks, called stubs, indicate muons

12
Kinematic vs. ID selection
  • Kinematic whats usable
  • ET or pT cuts
  • Fiducial (in volume where detector can measure
    reliably)
  • Fraction of signal events passing these cuts
    determined by physics process (Acceptance)
  • Identification (ID) cuts assume you have the
    above, aim is to reject backgrounds
  • Probability for real lepton to pass is
    Efficiency
  • Probability for something else to pass is the
    Fake Rate

13
Electron Identification
  • Jet rejection
  • Calorimeter Isolation Ratio of energy in a cone
    around the electron to the electron energy. Jets
    are wider objects
  • Track Isolation Require electron track to be
    much higher pT than any other track around it
  • Had/Em Ratio of energy in the hadronic
    calorimeter to energy in EM calorimeter. Jets
    typically deposit most of their energy in the
    hadronic calorimeter

14
Electron Identification
  • Jet rejection (continued)
  • Shower profile should be narrow (related to
    isolation)
  • Track-shower max matching track should point at
    cluster centroid (particularly good for rejecting
    sneaky pp0 s
  • Most of these (especially isolation-type
    variables, track-centroid matching) are also very
    good at rejecting real electrons from
    heavy-flavor decay, but not as powerful against
    that

15
Electron Identification
e
  • Photons
  • Correct EM signature
  • Requiring a track gets rid of prompt photons
  • Conversions Algorithm looks for opposite-sign
    tracks originating from the same, displaced point
  • Muons
  • Rare, but it happens
  • Reject some with track-centroid matching
  • Get rid of the rest by requiring that the
    electron not be pointing right at missing energy

e-
g
An exaggerated conversion
m
radiated photon showers in EM detector, just
like an electron
g
m
muon track points right at the cluster
16
Muon Identification
  • Jet rejection similar to electrons
  • Calorimeter, Track Isolation
  • MIP signature Require there to be almost
    nothing (few GeV) in the calorimeters
  • Muon stub Very few hadronic particles make it
    out of the calorimetry
  • Impact parameter, track quality
  • Kaon decays-in-flight have two low-pT tracks
    strung together to make one lousy high-pT track
  • Smaller fake rates, still worry about real muons
    from heavy flavor decays

17
Muon Identification
  • Cosmic rays
  • Impact parameter unlikely to have crossed
    detector at exactly the interaction point
  • Cosmic tagging algorithm looks at track timing
    information consistent with beam crossing?

18
Use in Analysis
  • Ideally, apply all selection criteria to a Monte
    Carlo of the physics process of interest
  • In practice, detector modeling is rarely perfect
  • Trust MC for your acceptance, but not efficiency
  • Quantify data/MC discrepancy by measuring the
    efficiency in both
  • Pure sample of leptons? At CDF, use Z bosons
    (mass window opposite charge), background 2 or
    less)
  • Compare to Z MC
  • Take scale factor ratio of e (data)/ e (MC)
    eff, multiply MC Ae by this correction factor

19
Moving to CMS _at_ the LHC
20
Moving to CMS _at_ the LHC
? A physicists-eye view
21
CMS Tracking
All silicon, all the time
Almost 10 M readout channels
  • Pixels lower occupancy close to interaction
    point
  • Strips are faster to readout and easier to track
    with (less combinations)
  • Endcap structures as well as radial
  • Stronger field (4 T) will provide better momentum
    resolution for higher pT particles

22
CMS EM Calorimetry
  • Instead of alternating dense material and
    scintillator, a very dense scintillator
  • Crystals of lead tungstate (PbWO4, 98 metal by
    mass but completely transparent)
  • Finer h-j resolution
  • Crystals are 1 Moliere radius ( typical width
    of EM shower 22 mm) wide
  • No shower max detector
  • Instead, pre-radiator
  • Two layers of lead (to start shower) followed by
    silicon layers (to measure position)

one crystal
23
CMS Hadron Calorimetry
  • Sampling calorimeters, like CDF
  • Central copper-scintillator sandwich
  • Forward steel-quartz sandwich
  • Robust for higher radiation evironment uses
    Cerenkov light instead of scintillation.
  • Spatial resolution (central) 0.87 x 0.87 in h-j
    (compare to CDF at 0.11 x 0.26)
  • All the calorimetry is inside the magnet
  • Less material in front of calorimetry (except
    the tracker)
  • Additional scintillator outside of magnet to get
    up to 11 absorption lengths

24
CMS muon detectors
  • 4 muon stations interleaved with iron absorber/
    flux return
  • Each station is layers of wire chambers
  • Right outside the solenoid
  • Enough lever arm for independent tracking

25
Signal, Background at 14 TeV
  • From pp at 2 TeV to pp at 14 TeV
  • More energetic leptons
  • More bremstrahlung
  • Adds tracks, confuses calorimeter information
  • A use for the better tracking
  • More noise in the event from underlying, softer
    interactions
  • Need to re-think isolation variables?

26
Electron ID at CMS
  • Much finer segmentation in calorimetry
  • More detailed isolation and shower shape
    variables
  • Instead of just an isolation ratio, look at shape
    of energy distrubution (electrons should be
    confined to one crystal)
  • Important as events are very busy and occupancy
    is high
  • With preradiator, may be able to discriminate
    against pp0
  • look for indications of two particles, better
    resolution for track/cluster mismatch
  • More material in tracker
  • Conversions will be more of a problem, but
    perhaps it will be easier to catch them?

27
Muon ID at CMS
  • All silicon tracking
  • More stringent track quality requirements
  • Forward muons more practical (coverage)
  • Pointing at vertex in Z as well as j
  • d0 resolution?
  • Must understand tracking to do muon ID well
  • Matching silicon track to muon chamber tracks
  • More material, more energetic muons
  • Challenge muons may radiate
  • Too much acceptance loss from requiring MIP
    signature in ECAL?
  • Use ECAL, preradiatior, accept muons that appear
    to be paired with a photon
  • Still require MIP in HCAL

28
Summary
  • Electrons and muons can be identified with good
    efficiency/ high purity
  • Use to identify interesting physics
  • Use all parts of detector to discriminate against
    backgrounds
  • CMS brings new challenges but new tools to use as
    well
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