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The Top Quark

The Top Quark. Why? How? Recent Results. Cecilia E. Gerber University of Illinois at Chicago December 17, 2009. Why bother with HEP?. What is the World Made of ? What are the building blocks of matter? How do they interact with each other? Connection with Cosmology?. e.  e. u. d.

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The Top Quark

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  1. The Top Quark • Why? • How? • Recent Results Cecilia E. Gerber University of Illinois at Chicago December 17, 2009

  2. Why bother with HEP? • What is the World Made of ? • What are the building blocks of matter? • How do they interact with each other? • Connection with Cosmology?

  3. e e u d   c s   t b g W+ Z0 W- g What is the World Made of? Standard Model (~1970) ELEMENTARY CONSTITUENTS Strong 1 Electromagnetic 10-2 INTERACTIONS Higgs Weak 10-6 H Gravity 10-40

  4. Rutherford Scattering Alpha particles were allowed to strike a thin gold foil. Surprisingly, alpha particles were found at large deflection angles and ~1 in 8000 were even found to be back-scattered. This experiment showed that the positive matter in atoms was concentrated in an incredibly small volume (10-13cm) and gave birth to the idea of the nuclear atom.

  5. Chicago  Booster CDF DØ Tevatron p source Main Injector DØ CDF The Fermilab Tevatron Accelerator p anti-p collider: 1992-96 Run 1: 100pb-1, 1.8TeV 2001-2011? Run 2: 10-12fb-1, 1.96TeV Next in line: CERN LHC ~2010 (pp) 14TeV (2.36)

  6. UnderlyingEvent g q u u q d u d u Hard Scatter How do we do research in HEP? • By taking these speeding subatomic particles and smashing them together, we can see what comes flying out. • At the Tevatron, ~2,500,000/sec a proton and an anti-proton cross each other. Only ~1/sec a Hard Scatter occurs • We are probing matter at the 10-17 cm level!

  7. Now (13.7 billion years) Stars form (1 billion years) Atoms form (380,000 years) Nuclei form (180 seconds) Nucleons form (10-10 seconds) Quarks differentiate (10-34 seconds?) ??? (Before that)

  8. Fermilab 4x10-12 seconds Now (13.7 billion years) Stars form (1 billion years) Atoms form (380,000 years) Nuclei form (180 seconds) Nucleons form (10-10 seconds) Quarks differentiate (10-34 seconds?) ??? (Before that)

  9. Now (13.7 billion years) Stars form (1 billion years) Atoms form (380,000 years) Nuclei form (180 seconds) LHC Nucleons form (10-10 seconds) 10-25 seconds Quarks differentiate (10-34 seconds?) ??? (Before that)

  10. Proton-anti Proton Collision Small x, products boosted along beam direction • Large x, can create massive objects that decay to secondaries with large momentum component transverse to the beam For every proton there is a probability that a single quark (or gluon) carries a fraction “x” of the proton momentum Good way of telling that a hard collision occurred.

  11. neutrinos A generic HEP detector

  12. CDF The D0 and CDF detectors at Fermilab

  13. Neutrinos do not interact with the detector p _ p hard scattering • total energy:unknown • total longitudinal momentum:unknown • total transverse momentum:zero Identifying Neutrinos Electron We infer the presence of a neutrino from the imbalance in the transverse momentum Neutrino

  14. Identifying Quarks Quarks (and Gluons) do not exist as free particles q-anti q pairs are pulled from the vacuum to produce stable particles : mesons, baryons Quarks “hadronize’’ single quark appears as a “Jet” (spray) of hadrons in the detector. Jets originating from the quarks of the first two generations (u,d,s,c) cannot be separated from each other.

  15. B Decay Products Flight Length ~ few mm Collision Decay Vertex Impact Parameter Identifying b-quarks: lifetime tag life time  1.5 ps  c  0.5 mm (short, but not too short) precise tracking close to primary collision point achieved with silicon microstrip detectors

  16. Lepton + jets with lifetime tag Top candidate

  17. Why Study the Top Quark? • Predicted by the SM and discovered in • 1995 by CDF and DØ • mt=173.1 ± 0.6 ± 1.1 GeV • Couples strongly to the Higgs • ─ may help identify the mechanism of mass generation • ─ may serve as a window to new • physics that might couple • preferentially to top • Successful Tevatron top quark program • High precision measurements for the top quark mass, top pair production cross section and decay properties • Some basic quantities still unmeasured: spin, width, lifetime • Single top quark production predicted by the SM, has been observed • in March 2009, 14 years after the pairs observation.

  18. Top-anti Top quark production Top anti-Top pair production (via strong interaction) (qq annihilation) (gluon fusion) Run1(1.8TeV)Run2(2TeV)LHC(14TeV) 90%85% 5% 10%15% 95% 5.47 800 x-sec(pb)

  19. Single Top quark production Single Top production (via electroweak interaction) (s-channel) (t-channel) Run1(1.8TeV)Run2(2TEV)LHC(14TeV) 0.71 10 1.72 250 x-sec(pb)

  20. Top-quark decay • ~100% of the time, a top quark decays into a bottom quark and a W boson. • The W boson can decay into two quarks or into a charged lepton and a neutrino. • A Top-anti Top event should therefore have either: • 6 quarks • 4 quarks, 1 charged lepton and 1 neutrino • 2 quarks, 2 charged leptons and 2 neutrinos In all cases, 2 b-quarks are present in the event

  21. e,m n b-jet b-jet jet jet e,m n jet jet MET MET b-jet b-jet b-jet b-jet n e,m jet jet All-hadronic (BR~46%, huge bckg) Lepton+jets (BR~30%, moderate bckg) Dilepton (BR~5%, low bckg) Top Quark Decay Modes “Lepton”: electron or muon

  22. ET emTop candidate m- jet e+ jet

  23. Top quark events are rare! • Top production is a rare process: about one collision in every 11010 produces a Top-anti Top quark pair. • Small cross sections require high luminosity, and the ability to detect and filter out • Top-anti Top events from a large number of other processes with the same final states (backgrounds)

  24. Single Top is even rarer

  25. And has a less populated final state

  26. Experimentally very challenging

  27. But important for Higgs observation • Same final state as WH • Backgrounds are the same • Test of techniques to extract small signal from a large background

  28. Recipe to measure a x-section Number of events that pass selection cuts Number of events from processes other than top Measured x-sec in channel x Integrated Luminosity: a measure of amount of data Efficiency for top events

  29. Top-anti Top x-section Measurement • Measure in different channels • Measure with different techniques • b-tagging method assumes Br(t→Wb)=1 • Kinematic fit methods are free of this assumption Test of pQCD at high Q2 Sensitive to new physics: Expect higher x-sec if resonant or non-SM production occurs Experimental uncertainties reaching precision in theoretical prediction.

  30. Single Top Production signal • Simple counting experiment cannot extract the signal from the background • Need advanced techniques • Multiple methods per experiment • Serve as cross check • Combination adds power

  31. Top Quark Pair Production Mechanisms Gluon Fusion Fraction Extracted from a fit to the azimuthal correlation between leptons (dilepton events) Uncertainty dominated by statistics Search for ttbar resonances ≥4jets, 1b-tag Study invariant mass spectrum of l+j events No evidence for narrow resonance decaying into ttbar

  32. W helicity Top Mass l+ Top Width Anomalous Couplings Production cross-section Top Spin W+ CP violation Top Charge Resonant production p n t b Production kinematics _ b X _ Top Spin Polarization _ q’ t q Rare/non SM Decays W- _ p Branching Ratios |Vtb| Top quark Properties b-tagging provides pure sample of top quarks for properties measurements 2 b-tags l+j 1 b-tag dileptons

  33. Top quark Mass Best results (errors ~ 1%) obtained by ME Method: - Event by event weight calculated according to quality of agreement with SM top and background differential cross-sections - Product of all event probabilities gives the most likely mass - JES constrained in-situ by the hadronic decay of the W→jj Dominated by systematics M(top)=173.1±0.6±1.1 GeV

  34. SM Constraints on the Higgs Light Higgs preferred by the SM with latest top and W mass Plots from LEP/TEV EW working group

  35. Top Mass from x-section Assuming production is governed by SM, top quark mass can be extracted comparing the measured x-sec with theory Measurement has different experimental and theoretical uncertainties than direct measurements. Both direct mass measurement and extraction from cross-section measurmement agree within errors.

  36. Top Anti-top Mass Difference CPT invariance requires that the mass of particles and corresponding anti-particles be identical. Difficult to test with quarks because they hadronize before decaying. Not the case for top quarks. Measured Mass Difference = 2.2±2.2%, consistent with zero

  37. Decay Properties: W Helicity θ* b W+ ℓ+ DØ: 2-parameter fit for fraction of longitudinal (f0) and right-handed (f+) polarized W bosons in top decays Statistically limited: consistent at the 23% level with the SM prediction.

  38. W charge * bJet Charge Top Quark Charge • Fundamental property of particle • has not been determined yet • One possible scenario Phys Rev D59, 091503 (1999): • The discovered top quark is an exotic quark of charge - 4e/3 • The top quark with charge 2e/3, mass 270GeV not observed yet • Model accounts for precision Z data (including Rb and AFBb) Statistically Limited! PRL 98, 041801 (2007) Both CDF & DØ Data strongly favor the SM over XM

  39. Top Quark Spin • Use Dilepton Events ee, em, mm • Angular distribution of leptons w.r.t. the beam axis sensitive to correlation Measured correlation agrees with the SM within 2SD • GtSM  1.4 GeV at mt = 175 GeV • Top decaysbefore hadronization, transferring spin and kinematics to the final state • SM predicts the spin of the top and the anti-top are correlated

  40. MANY Searches for BSM effects • Using top pair final states: • SM H→b anti-b in association with top (Htt-bar) • Top decay to charged Higgs B(t→H+b) • Scalar Top pair production • Using single top final states • H+→tb search • Anomalous Wtb couplings • W'→tb search • FCNC search All results agree with the SM expectations…

  41. After ~15 years of studies • mt=173.1±1.3 GeV • σ(tt)=7.84±0.95pb (for mt=175GeV) • σ(t)=3.76+0.58-0.47pb (for mt=170GeV) • |Vtbf1L| = 0.88 ± 0.07 • Charge: -4/3 excluded @ 92% CL • Longitudinally polarized W: f0=0.49±0.14 [f0(SM)=0.7] • Δm = mt−mt = 3.8±3.7 GeV • Γt < 13.1 GeV @ 95% CL [Γt(SM) = 1.4 GeV] • plus MANY limits on new physics http://www-cdf.fnal.gov/physics/new/top/top.html http://www-d0.fnal.gov/Run2Physics/top/top_public_web_pages/top_public.html

  42. Conclusions • Tevatron Run2 is an ongoing success… 7pb-1 delivered and ~12pb-1 expected (2011) • LHC startup imminent but at low energy • Tevatron is the only place for the next year to study the properties of the Top quark and search for the Higgs Boson • The next few years promise to be a very exciting time in the field of high energy particle physics.

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