Ph.D. Thesis: Calibration of the ATLAS calorimeters and discovery potential for massive top quark resonances at the LHC
by
Elin Bergeås Kuutmann(Stockholm University, Department of Physics)
→
Europe/Stockholm
FB42
FB42
Description
ATLAS is a multi-purpose detector which has recently started to take data at the LHC at CERN.
This thesis describes the tests and calibrations of the central calorimeters of ATLAS and outlines a
search for heavy top quark pair resonances.The calorimeter tests were performed before the ATLAS
detector was assembled at the LHC, in such a way that particle beams of known energy were
targeted at the calorimeter modules. In one of the studies presented here, modules of the hadronic
barrel calorimeter, TileCal, were exposed to beams of pions of energies between 3 and 9 GeV. It
is shown that muons from pion decays in the beam can be separated from the pions, and that the
simulation of the detector correctly describes the muon behaviour.
In the second calorimeter study, a scheme for local hadronic calibration is developed and applied
to single pion test beam data in a wide range of energies, measured by the combination of the
electromagnetic barrel calorimeter and the TileCal hadronic calorimeter. The calibration method
is shown to provide a calorimeter linearity within 3%, and also to give a reasonable agreement
between simulations and data.
The physics analysis of this thesis is the proposed search for heavy top quark resonances, and
it is shown that a narrow uncoloured top pair resonance, a Z', could be excluded (or discovered)
at 95% CL for cross sections of 4.0±1.6 pb (in the case of M=1.0 TeV/c2) or 2.0±0.3 pb (M=2.0
TeV/c2), including systematical uncertainties in the model, assuming √s = 10 TeV and an integrated
luminosity of 200 pb-1. It is also shown that an important systematical uncertainty is the jet energy
scale, which further underlines the importance of hadronic calibration.