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Effects of Tracking Limitations On Jet Mass Resolution Chris Meyer UCSC ILC Simulation Reconstruction Meeting July 3, 2007
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Motivation No one has yet studied how tracking limitations effect Jet Reconstruction. Limit in P T reach Limit in cos θ reach Non prompt tracks (K S ) Photon conversion in tracker material
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Approach Use e + e - q qbar at E cm = 500 GeV (turn off ISR so that events are evenly distributed) Find “perfect jets” from MC truth particles that: –Originate within 1cm and terminate outside 1cm from the origin –Are FINALSTATE or INTERMEDIATE –Are not backscatter –Confirmed E i = 500 ± a few GeV for this selection Using a y cut of 0.07 select events with only 2 jets Calculate Jet/Jet invariant mass
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Approach cont. Apply tracking limitation (e.g. P T > 0.5 GeV cut) Find jets with cut applied. If no y cut gives two jets, toss event (<1%) Compare Jet/Jet mass with “perfect” reconstruction. Accumulate RMS ( δm) of Jet/Jet mass degradation.
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Goal For Maximum Degradation: 1% Need to distinguish W’s from Z’s using the Jet/Jet invariant mass from high energy Jets. Our sample has high energy Jets but a Jet/Jet mass of 500 GeV (rather than 100 GeV). Taking two jets of the same energy we find the invariant mass and associated error go as: m 2 = 2 (1 – cos θ ) p 2 δm 2 = 2 (1 – cos θ ) δp 2 Error on momentum is constant wrt mass, to eliminate the mass dependence from cos θ form fractional error on mass, so that δm 2 / m 2 = const. wrt mass, so that δm / m = const. wrt mass also To distinguish between a Z and W 10% resolution is required, and to be outside 3 standard deviations brings it down to 3%. Finally to disregard error on tracking we require the error to be 1%. Using 500 GeV uds events, m = 500, which means δm ≤ 5 To keep from degrading W and Z seperation we need an error on invariant mass of less then 5 GeV.
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Cuts on charged track P T P T cut of 0.75 GeV δm = 5.62 GeV P T cut of 0.5 GeV δm = 3.49 GeV
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K Shorts Finding NO K Shorts δm = 43.61 GeV Finding 90% of K Shorts δm = 11.11 GeV But RMS is still dominated by tails…
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K Shorts Finding 90% K Shorts (cutting top 3%) δm = 2.86 GeV
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Gamma’s Finding NO Photons < 1 GeV δm = 3.45 GeV Finding 90% of Photons < 1 GeV δm = 0.65 GeV Low energy photons that convert will miss the calorimeter. How many low energy ( < 1 GeV ) photons do we need to find then?
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Gamma’s Finding NO Photons δm = 69.28 GeV Finding 90% of Photons δm = 14.96 GeV How many photons (no energy cut) do we need to find?
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Conclusions Looking at simple cuts on Jets we have found: The P T range of any proposed ILC tracker looks fine. We have to find a good percentage (90%) of the K shorts. Low energy photons don’t play an enormous role, but when you include higher energy photons you need to find them. Next we plan on running over cos θ cuts and put more stringent cuts on material parameters. This should be accomplished within the next week.
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