947 resultados para Non-Standard Model Higgs bosons
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This Letter presents a search for high-mass resonances decaying into tau(+)tau(-) final states using proton-proton collisions at root s = 7 TeV produced by the Large Hadron Collider. The data were recorded with the ATLAS detector and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 4.6 fb(-1). No statistically significant excess above the Standard Model expectation is observed; 95% credibility upper limits are set on the cross section times branching fraction of Z' resonances decaying into tau(+)tau(-) pairs as a function of the resonance mass. As a result, Z' bosons of the Sequential Standard Model with masses less than 1.40 TeV are excluded at 95% credibility.
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Several models of physics beyond the Standard Model predict neutral particles that decay into final states consisting of collimated jets of light leptons and hadrons (socalled “lepton jets”). These particles can also be long-lived with decay length comparable to, or even larger than, the LHC detectors’ linear dimensions. This paper presents the results of a search for lepton jets in proton-proton collisions at the centre-of-mass energy of √s = 8TeV in a sample of 20.3 fb−1 collected during 2012 with the ATLAS detector at the LHC. Limits on models predicting Higgs boson decays to neutral long-lived lepton jets are derived as a function of the particle’s proper decay length.
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This paper presents a search for new particles in events with one lepton (electron or muon) and missing transverse momentum using 20.3 fb−1 of proton-proton collision data at TeX = 8 TeV recorded by the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider. No significant excess beyond Standard Model expectations is observed. A W ′ with Sequential Standard Model couplings is excluded at the 95% confidence level for masses up to 3.24 TeV. Excited chiral bosons (W *) with equivalent coupling strengths are excluded for masses up to 3.21 TeV. In the framework of an effective field theory limits are also set on the dark matter-nucleon scattering cross-section as well as the mass scale M * of the unknown mediating interaction for dark matter pair production in association with a leptonically decaying W.
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A search is conducted for non-resonant new phenomena in dielectron and dimuon final states, originating from either contact interactions or large extra spatial dimensions. The LHC 2012 proton–proton collision dataset recorded by the ATLAS detector is used, corresponding to 20 fb−1 at √ s = 8 TeV. The dilepton invariant mass spectrum is a discriminating variable in both searches, with the contact interaction search additionally utilizing the dilepton forward-backward asymmetry. No significant deviations from the Standard Model expectation are observed. Lower limits are set on the ℓℓqq contact interaction scale ʌ between 15.4 TeVand 26.3 TeV, at the 95%credibility level. For large extra spatial dimensions, lower limits are set on the string scale MS between 3.2 TeV to 5.0 TeV.
Resumo:
search is presented for production of dark-matter particles recoiling against a leptonically decaying Z boson in 20.3 fb−1 of pp collisions at √s=8 TeV with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Events with large missing transverse momentum and two oppositely charged electrons or muons consistent with the decay of a Z boson are analyzed. No excess above the Standard Model prediction is observed. Limits are set on the mass scale of the contact interaction as a function of the dark-matter particle mass using an effective field theory description of the interaction of dark matter with quarks or with Z bosons. Limits are also set on the coupling and mediator mass of a model in which the interaction is mediated by a scalar particle.
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Double-differential dijet cross-sections measured in pp collisions at the LHC with a 7TeV centre-of-mass energy are presented as functions of dijet mass and half the rapidity separation of the two highest-pT jets. These measurements are obtained using data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.5 fb−1, recorded by the ATLAS detector in 2011. The data are corrected for detector effects so that cross-sections are presented at the particle level. Cross-sections are measured up to 5TeV dijet mass using jets reconstructed with the anti-kt algorithm for values of the jet radius parameter of 0.4 and 0.6. The cross-sections are compared with next-to-leading-order perturbative QCD calculations by NLOJet++ corrected to account for non-perturbative effects. Comparisons with POWHEG predictions, using a next-to-leading-order matrix element calculation interfaced to a partonshower Monte Carlo simulation, are also shown. Electroweak effects are accounted for in both cases. The quantitative comparison of data and theoretical predictions obtained using various parameterizations of the parton distribution functions is performed using a frequentist method. In general, good agreement with data is observed for the NLOJet++ theoretical predictions when using the CT10, NNPDF2.1 and MSTW 2008 PDF sets. Disagreement is observed when using the ABM11 and HERAPDF1.5 PDF sets for some ranges of dijet mass and half the rapidity separation. An example setting a lower limit on the compositeness scale for a model of contact interactions is presented, showing that the unfolded results can be used to constrain contributions to dijet production beyond that predicted by the Standard Model.
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Weak radiative decays of the B mesons belong to the most important flavor changing processes that provide constraints on physics at the TeV scale. In the derivation of such constraints, accurate standard model predictions for the inclusive branching ratios play a crucial role. In the current Letter we present an update of these predictions, incorporating all our results for the O(α2s) and lower-order perturbative corrections that have been calculated after 2006. New estimates of nonperturbative effects are taken into account, too. For the CP- and isospin-averaged branching ratios, we find Bsγ=(3.36±0.23)×10−4 and Bdγ=(1.73+0.12−0.22)×10−5, for Eγ>1.6 GeV. Both results remain in agreement with the current experimental averages. Normalizing their sum to the inclusive semileptonic branching ratio, we obtain Rγ≡(Bsγ+Bdγ)/Bcℓν=(3.31±0.22)×10−3. A new bound from Bsγ on the charged Higgs boson mass in the two-Higgs-doublet-model II reads MH±>480 GeV at 95% C.L.
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Very recently, the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations reported diboson and dijet excesses above standard model expectations in the invariant mass region of 1.8–2.0 TeV. Interpreting the diboson excess of events in a model independent fashion suggests that the vector boson pair production searches are best described by WZ or ZZ topologies, because states decaying into W+W− pairs are strongly constrained by semileptonic searches. Under the assumption of a low string scale, we show that both the diboson and dijet excesses can be steered by an anomalous U(1) field with very small coupling to leptons. The Drell–Yan bounds are then readily avoided because of the leptophobic nature of the massive Z′ gauge boson. The non-negligible decay into ZZ required to accommodate the data is a characteristic footprint of intersecting D-brane models, wherein the Landau–Yang theorem can be evaded by anomaly-induced operators involving a longitudinal Z. The model presented herein can be viewed purely field-theoretically, although it is particularly well motivated from string theory. Should the excesses become statistically significant at the LHC13, the associated Zγ topology would become a signature consistent only with a stringy origin.
Resumo:
Purpose: Leadership positions are still stereotyped as male, especially in male-dominated fields such as STEM. Therefore, women in such positions run the risk of being evaluated less favorably than men. Our study investigates how female and male leaders in existing teams (engineering project) are evaluated, and how these evaluations change over time. Design/Methodology: Participants worked in 45 teams to develop specific engineering projects. Evaluations of 45 leaders (33% women) by 258 team members (39% women) were analyzed, that is, leaders’ self-evaluation and their evaluation by team members. Results: Although female and male leaders did not differ in their self-evaluations at the beginning of the project, female leaders evaluated themselves better within time. However, team members evaluated female leaders better than male leaders at the beginning of the project. These gender differences disappeared over the time. Limitations: It should be replicated in a non-student sample. Implications: The results show that female leaders entering a male-dominated field (engineering) are evaluated better by team members than male leaders at the beginning of the team work, in line with the ‘shifting standard model’ (Biernat & Fuegen, 2001). While the initial impression formation of female and male leaders is influenced by category membership, its impact decreases over time as a consequence of individualization (Fiske & Neuberg, 1990); this results in similar evaluations over time. Originality: To our knowledge this is the first study to systematically test perceptions of change in the evaluation over time of female and male leaders in natural setting.
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Bargaining is the building block of many economic interactions, ranging from bilateral to multilateral encounters and from situations in which the actors are individuals to negotiations between firms or countries. In all these settings, economists have been intrigued for a long time by the fact that some projects, trades or agreements are not realized even though they are mutually beneficial. On the one hand, this has been explained by incomplete information. A firm may not be willing to offer a wage that is acceptable to a qualified worker, because it knows that there are also unqualified workers and cannot distinguish between the two types. This phenomenon is known as adverse selection. On the other hand, it has been argued that even with complete information, the presence of externalities may impede efficient outcomes. To see this, consider the example of climate change. If a subset of countries agrees to curb emissions, non-participant regions benefit from the signatories’ efforts without incurring costs. These free riding opportunities give rise to incentives to strategically improve ones bargaining power that work against the formation of a global agreement. This thesis is concerned with extending our understanding of both factors, adverse selection and externalities. The findings are based on empirical evidence from original laboratory experiments as well as game theoretic modeling. On a very general note, it is demonstrated that the institutions through which agents interact matter to a large extent. Insights are provided about which institutions we should expect to perform better than others, at least in terms of aggregate welfare. Chapters 1 and 2 focus on the problem of adverse selection. Effective operation of markets and other institutions often depends on good information transmission properties. In terms of the example introduced above, a firm is only willing to offer high wages if it receives enough positive signals about the worker’s quality during the application and wage bargaining process. In Chapter 1, it will be shown that repeated interaction coupled with time costs facilitates information transmission. By making the wage bargaining process costly for the worker, the firm is able to obtain more accurate information about the worker’s type. The cost could be pure time cost from delaying agreement or cost of effort arising from a multi-step interviewing process. In Chapter 2, I abstract from time cost and show that communication can play a similar role. The simple fact that a worker states to be of high quality may be informative. In Chapter 3, the focus is on a different source of inefficiency. Agents strive for bargaining power and thus may be motivated by incentives that are at odds with the socially efficient outcome. I have already mentioned the example of climate change. Other examples are coalitions within committees that are formed to secure voting power to block outcomes or groups that commit to different technological standards although a single standard would be optimal (e.g. the format war between HD and BlueRay). It will be shown that such inefficiencies are directly linked to the presence of externalities and a certain degree of irreversibility in actions. I now discuss the three articles in more detail. In Chapter 1, Olivier Bochet and I study a simple bilateral bargaining institution that eliminates trade failures arising from incomplete information. In this setting, a buyer makes offers to a seller in order to acquire a good. Whenever an offer is rejected by the seller, the buyer may submit a further offer. Bargaining is costly, because both parties suffer a (small) time cost after any rejection. The difficulties arise, because the good can be of low or high quality and the quality of the good is only known to the seller. Indeed, without the possibility to make repeated offers, it is too risky for the buyer to offer prices that allow for trade of high quality goods. When allowing for repeated offers, however, at equilibrium both types of goods trade with probability one. We provide an experimental test of these predictions. Buyers gather information about sellers using specific price offers and rates of trade are high, much as the model’s qualitative predictions. We also observe a persistent over-delay before trade occurs, and this mitigates efficiency substantially. Possible channels for over-delay are identified in the form of two behavioral assumptions missing from the standard model, loss aversion (buyers) and haggling (sellers), which reconcile the data with the theoretical predictions. Chapter 2 also studies adverse selection, but interaction between buyers and sellers now takes place within a market rather than isolated pairs. Remarkably, in a market it suffices to let agents communicate in a very simple manner to mitigate trade failures. The key insight is that better informed agents (sellers) are willing to truthfully reveal their private information, because by doing so they are able to reduce search frictions and attract more buyers. Behavior observed in the experimental sessions closely follows the theoretical predictions. As a consequence, costless and non-binding communication (cheap talk) significantly raises rates of trade and welfare. Previous experiments have documented that cheap talk alleviates inefficiencies due to asymmetric information. These findings are explained by pro-social preferences and lie aversion. I use appropriate control treatments to show that such consideration play only a minor role in our market. Instead, the experiment highlights the ability to organize markets as a new channel through which communication can facilitate trade in the presence of private information. In Chapter 3, I theoretically explore coalition formation via multilateral bargaining under complete information. The environment studied is extremely rich in the sense that the model allows for all kinds of externalities. This is achieved by using so-called partition functions, which pin down a coalitional worth for each possible coalition in each possible coalition structure. It is found that although binding agreements can be written, efficiency is not guaranteed, because the negotiation process is inherently non-cooperative. The prospects of cooperation are shown to crucially depend on i) the degree to which players can renegotiate and gradually build up agreements and ii) the absence of a certain type of externalities that can loosely be described as incentives to free ride. Moreover, the willingness to concede bargaining power is identified as a novel reason for gradualism. Another key contribution of the study is that it identifies a strong connection between the Core, one of the most important concepts in cooperative game theory, and the set of environments for which efficiency is attained even without renegotiation.
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This article gives an overview on the status of experimental searches for dark matter at the end of 2014. The main focus is on direct searches for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) using underground-based low-background detectors, especially on the new results published in 2014. WIMPs are excellent dark matter candidates, predicted by many theories beyond the standard model of particle physics, and are expected to interact with the target nuclei either via spin-independent (scalar) or spin-dependent (axial-vector) couplings. Non-WIMP dark matter candidates, especially axions and axion-like particles are also briefly discussed.
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The issue of bias-motivated crimes has attracted consderable attention in recent years. In this paper, we develop an economic framework to analyze penalty enhancements for bias-motivated crimes. We extend the standard model by introducing two different groups of potential victims of crime, and assume that a potential offender's benefits from a crime depend on the group to which the victim belongs. We begin with the assumption that the harm to an individual victim from a bias-motivated crime is identical to that from an equivalent non-hate crime. Nonetheless, we derive the result that a pattern of crimes disproportionately targeting an identifiable group leads to greater social harm. This conclusion follows both from a model where disparities in groups' victimization probabilities lead to social losses due to fairness concerns, as well as a model where potential victims have the opportunity to undertake socially costly victimization avoidance activities. In particular, penalty enhancements can reduce the incentives for avoidance activity, and thereby protect the networks of profitable interactions that link members of different groups. We also argue that those groups that are covered by hate crime statutes tend to be those whose characteristics make it especially likely that penalty enhancement is socially optimal. Finally, we consider a number of other issues related to hate crimes, including teh choice of sanctions from behind a Rawlsian 'veil of ignorance' concerning group identity.
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Secchi depth is a measure of water transparency. In the Baltic Sea region, Secchi depth maps are used to assess eutrophication and as input for habitat models. Due to their spatial and temporal coverage, satellite data would be the most suitable data source for such maps. But the Baltic Sea's optical properties are so different from the open ocean that globally calibrated standard models suffer from large errors. Regional predictive models that take the Baltic Sea's special optical properties into account are thus needed. This paper tests how accurately generalized linear models (GLMs) and generalized additive models (GAMs) with MODIS/Aqua and auxiliary data as inputs can predict Secchi depth at a regional scale. It uses cross-validation to test the prediction accuracy of hundreds of GAMs and GLMs with up to 5 input variables. A GAM with 3 input variables (chlorophyll a, remote sensing reflectance at 678 nm, and long-term mean salinity) made the most accurate predictions. Tested against field observations not used for model selection and calibration, the best model's mean absolute error (MAE) for daily predictions was 1.07 m (22%), more than 50% lower than for other publicly available Baltic Sea Secchi depth maps. The MAE for predicting monthly averages was 0.86 m (15%). Thus, the proposed model selection process was able to find a regional model with good prediction accuracy. It could be useful to find predictive models for environmental variables other than Secchi depth, using data from other satellite sensors, and for other regions where non-standard remote sensing models are needed for prediction and mapping. Annual and monthly mean Secchi depth maps for 2003-2012 come with this paper as Supplementary materials.
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Different methods to reduce the high suction caused by conical vortices have been reported in the literature: vertical parapets, either solids or porous, placed at the roof edges being the most analysed configuration. Another method for alleviating the high suction peaks due to conical vortices is to round the roof edges. Very recently, the use of some non-standard parapet configurations, like cantilever parapets, has been suggested. In this paper, its efficiency to reduce suction loads on curved roofs is experimentally checked by testing the pressure distribution on the curved roof of a low-rise building model in a wind tunnel. Very high suction loads have been measured on this model, the magnitude of these high suction loads being significantly decreased when cantilever...
Resumo:
La presente investigación se inicia planteando el objetivo de identificar los parámetros geométricos que son exclusivos del proceso de generación de la Forma y relacionarlos con los invariantes relacionados con la Fabricación digital aplicada a la Arquitectura. Con ello se pretende recuperar la geometría como herramienta principal del proceso de Proyecto ampliando su ámbito de actuación al encontrar una relación con los procesos de fabricación digital. El primer capítulo describe los antecedentes y contexto histórico centrándose especialmente en la influencia de la capacidad de definir geometrías complejas digitalmente mediante la aplicación de algoritmos. En los primeros ejemplos la aproximación del Arquitecto a proyectos con geometrías complejas no euclídeas aún se emplea sin precisión en la comunicación de la geometría ideada para su puesta en obra. Las técnicas constructivas obligan a asumir una tolerancia de desviación entre proyecto y obra y la previsión del comportamiento de esa geometría no permite asegurar su comportamiento final. No será hasta la introducción de herramientas CAD en el proceso de ideación arquitectónica cuando el Arquitecto se capacite para generar geometrías no representables de forma analógica. Sin embargo, la imposibilidad de trasladar la geometría proyectada a la praxis constructiva impedirá la plasmación de un proceso completo, salvo en las contadas ocasiones que se recogen en este texto. “El análisis cronológico de las referencias establece como aspecto esencial para la construcción de geometrías complejas la capacidad primero para definir y comunicar de forma precisa e inequívoca la geometría y después la capacidad de analizar el desempeño prestacional de dicha propuesta geométrica”. La presente investigación se inicia planteando el objetivo de identificar los parámetros geométricos que son exclusivos del proceso de generación de la Forma y relacionarlos con los invariantes relacionados con la Fabricación digital aplicada a la Arquitectura. Con ello se pretende recuperar la geometría como herramienta principal del proceso de Proyecto ampliando su ámbito de actuación al encontrar una relación con los procesos de fabricación digital. El primer capítulo describe los antecedentes y contexto histórico centrándose especialmente en la influencia de la capacidad de definir geometrías complejas digitalmente mediante la aplicación de algoritmos. En los primeros ejemplos la aproximación del Arquitecto a proyectos con geometrías complejas no euclídeas aún se emplea sin precisión en la comunicación de la geometría ideada para su puesta en obra. Las técnicas constructivas obligan a asumir una tolerancia de desviación entre proyecto y obra y la previsión del comportamiento de esa geometría no permite asegurar su comportamiento final. No será hasta la introducción de herramientas CAD en el proceso de ideación arquitectónica cuando el Arquitecto se capacite para generar geometrías no representables de forma analógica. Sin embargo, la imposibilidad de trasladar la geometría proyectada a la praxis constructiva impedirá la plasmación de un proceso completo, salvo en las contadas ocasiones que se recogen en este texto. “El análisis cronológico de las referencias establece como aspecto esencial para la construcción de geometrías complejas la capacidad primero para definir y comunicar de forma precisa e inequívoca la geometría y después la capacidad de analizar el desempeño prestacional de dicha propuesta geométrica”. Establecida la primera conclusión, el capítulo de contexto histórico continúa enfocándose sobre la aplicación de las técnicas digitales en el Proceso de proyecto primero, y en la puesta en obra después. Los casos de estudio identifican claramente como un punto de inflexión para la generación de formas complejas mediante un software CAD el Museo Guggenheim de Bilbao en 1992. El motivo esencial para elegir este proyecto como el primer proyecto digital es el uso de la herramienta de definición digital de la geometría para su reproducción inequívoca en obra. “La revolución digital ha aportado al Arquitecto la posibilidad de abandonar las tipologías arquitectónicas basados en restricciones geométricas-constructivas. La aplicación de técnicas de fabricación digital ha permitido la capacidad de diseñar con independencia del sistema constructivo y libertad formal. En este nuevo contexto las prestaciones suponen los nuevos límites conceptuales, ya que el acceso y disposición de la información del comportamiento de las alternativas que cada geometría conlleva demanda del Arquitecto la jerarquización de los objetivos y la formulación en un conjunto coherente de parámetros”. Los proyectos que emplean herramientas digitales para la resolución de las distintas etapas del proceso proyectual se verán incrementados de forma exponencial desde 1992 hasta nuestros días. A pesar del importante auge de las técnicas de diseño asistido por ordenador el principal desafío sigue siendo la vinculación de las geometrías y materiales propuestos con las capacidades de las técnicas de manufactura y puesta en obra. El proceso de diseño para fabricación en un entorno digital es una tecnología madura en otras industrias como la aeroespacial o la automovilística, incluso la de productos de consumo y decoración, sin embargo en el sector de Construcción es un sistema inmaduro e inconexo. Las particularidades de la industria de la construcción aún no han sido abordadas en su totalidad y las propuestas de investigación realizadas en este ámbito se han centrado hasta 2015 en partes del proceso y no en el proceso total. “El principal obstáculo para la estandarización e implantación globalizada de un proceso digital desde el origen de la forma hasta la construcción es la inexistencia de un protocolo integrado que integre las limitaciones de fabricación, económicas y de puesta en obra junto a la evaluación de desempeño prestacional durante la fases iniciales de proyecto”. En el capítulo número 3 se estudian los distintos procesos de generación de la forma. Se propone una definición específica para el ámbito de la investigación de “forma” en el entendemos que se incluye la envolvente exterior y el conjunto organizativo de espacios interiores conectados. Por lo tanto no es excluyente del interior. El objetivo de este estudio es analizar y clasificar los procesos para la generación digital de formas en los distintos proyectos seleccionados como emblemáticos de cada tipología. Se concluye que la aproximación a este proceso es muy variada y compleja, con aplicación segregada y descoordinada entre los distintos agentes que han intervenir. En un proceso de generación formal analógico los parámetros que intervienen son en parte conscientes y en parte inconscientes o aprendidos. El Arquitecto sólo tiene control sobre la parte consciente de los parámetros a integrar en el diseño, de acuerdo a sus conocimientos y capacidades será capaz de manejar un número limitado de parámetros. La parte aprendida permanece en el inconsciente y dirige el proceso analógico, aportando prejuicios estéticos incorporados durante el proceso formativo y propio del entorno cultural. “El empleo de herramientas digitales basadas en la evaluación prestacional durante el proceso de selección formal permite al Arquitecto conocer “en tiempo real” el desempeño en el conjunto de prestaciones evaluadoras del conjunto de alternativas geométricas a la propuesta previamente definida por la intuición arquitectónica. El proceso definido no persigue identificar una solución óptima sino asistir al Arquitecto en el proceso de generación de la forma mediante la evaluación continua de los vectores direccionales más idóneos que el procedimiento generativo plantea”. La definición de complejidad en generación y producción de formas en relación con el proceso de diseño digital paramétrico global o integrado, es esencial para establecer un protocolo que optimice su gestión. “Se propone como definición de complejidad como factor resultante de multiplicar el número de agentes intervinientes por el número de parámetros e interacciones comunes que intervienen en el proceso de generación de la forma, dividido por la complejidad de intercambio de información digital desde el origen hasta la fase de fabricación y construcción”. Una vez analizados los procesos de generación digital de Arquitectura se propone identificar los parámetros geométricos que definen el proceso de Diseño digital, entendiendose por Diseño el proceso que engloba desde la proposición de una forma inicial basada en la intuición del Arquitecto, la generación y evaluación de variantes y posterior definición digital para producción, tanto de un objeto, un sistema o de la totalidad del Proyecto. En la actualidad el proceso de Diseño es discontinuo y lineal organizandose los parámetros por disciplinas en las que está estructurada las atribuciones profesionales en la industria de la construcción. Para simplificar la identificación y listado se han agrupado siguiendo estos grupos de conocimiento. Entendemos parametros invariables aquellos que son independientes de Tipologías arquitectónicas o que dependen del mismo proceso de generación de la Forma. “El listado de los parámetros que intervienen en un proceso de generación formal es una abstracción de una realidad compleja. La parametrización de las decisiones que intervienen en la selección de una forma determinada mediante “well defined problems” es imposible. El proceso que esta tesis describe entiende esta condición como un elemento que pone en valor el propio procedimiento generativo por la riqueza que la subjetividad que el equipo de diseño aporta”. La segunda parte esencial de esta investigación pretende extraer las restricciones propias del estado del arte de la fabricación digital para posteriormente incorporarlos en los procesos digitales de definición de la Forma arquitectónica. “La integración de las restricciones derivadas de las técnicas de fabricación y construcción digitales en el proceso de generación de formas desde el ámbito de la Arquitectura debe referirse a los condicionantes geométricos asociados a cada sistema constructivo, material y técnica de fabricación. La geometría es además el vínculo que permite asociar el conjunto de parámetros prestacionales seleccionados para un Proyecto con los sistemas de fabricación digital”. A estos condicionantes geométricos obtenidos del análisis de cada sistema de fabricación digital se les ha denominado “invariantes geométricos”. Bajo este término se engloban tanto límites dimensionales de fabricación, como materiales compatibles, tolerancias de manufactura e instalación y cualidades prestacionales asociadas. El objetivo de esta propuesta es emplear la geometría, herramienta fundamental y propia del Arquitecto, como nexo de unión entre el conjunto complejo y heterogéneo de parámetros previamente listados y analizados. Para ello se han simplificado en tablas específicas para cada parámetro prestacional los condicionantes geométricos que se derivan de los Sistemas de fabricación digital compatibles (ver apéndice 1). El estudio y evaluación de las capacidades y objetivos de las distintas plataformas de software disponibles y de las experiencias profesionales evaluadas en los proyectos presentados, permiten concluir que la propuesta de plataforma digital de diseño integral multi-paramétrico de formas arquitectónicas requiere de un protocolo de interoperatibilidad específico aún no universalmente establecido. Actualmente el enfoque de la estrategia para normalizar y universalizar el contexto normativo para regular la interoperatibilidad se centra en figura del gestor denominado “BIM manager”. Las atribuciones y roles de esta figura se enfocan a la gestión del continente y no del contenido (Definición de los formatos de intercambio, niveles de desarrollo (LOD) de los componentes o conjuntos constructivos, detección de interferencias y documentación del propio modelo). Siendo este ámbito un desarrollo necesario para la propuesta de universalización del sistema de diseño para fabricación digital integrado, la presente investigación aporta un organigrama y protocolo asociado. El protocolo: 1. Establece la responsabilidad de identificar y definir la Información que debe determinar el proceso de generación y desarrollo de la forma arquitectónica. 2. Define la forma digital apropiada para generar la geometría del Proyecto, incluyendo la precisión necesaria para cada componente y el nivel de detalle necesario para su exportación inequívoca al proceso de fabricación. 3. Define el tempo de cada etapa de diseño identificando un nivel de detalle acorde. 4. Acopla este organigrama dentro de las estructuras nuevas que se proponen en un entorno BIM para asegurar que no se producen solapes o vacíos con las atribuciones que se identifican para el BIM Manager. “El Arquitecto debe dirigir el protocolo de generación coordinada con los sistemas de producción digital para conseguir que la integración completa. El protocolo debe asistir al proceso de generación de forma mediante la evaluación del desempeño prestacional de cada variante en tiempo real. La comunicación entre herramientas digitales es esencial para permitir una ágil transmisión de información. Es necesario establecer un protocolo adaptado a los objetivos y las necesidades operativas de cada proyecto ya que la estandarización de un protocolo único no es posible”. Una decisión estratégica a la hora de planificar una plataforma de diseño digital común es establecer si vamos a optar por un Modelo digital único o diversos Modelos digitales federados. Cada uno de los modos de trabajo tiene fortalezas y debilidades, no obstante en el ámbito de investigación se ha concluido que un proceso integrado de Diseño que incorpore la evaluación prestacional y conceptual definida en el Capítulo 3, requiere necesariamente de varios modelos de software distintos que han de relacionarse entre sí mediante un protocolo de comunicación automatizado. Una plataforma basada en un modelo federado consiste en establecer un protocolo de comunicación entre los programas informáticos empleados por cada disciplina. En este modelo de operación cada equipo de diseño debe establecer las bases de comunicación en función del número y tipo de programas y procesos digitales a emplear. En esta investigación se propone un protocolo basado en los estándares de intercambio de información que estructura cualquier proceso de generación de forma paramétrico “La investigación establece el empleo de algoritmos evolutivos como el sistema actual óptimo para desarrollar un proceso de generación de formas basadas en la integración y coordinación de invariantes geométricos derivados de un conjunto de objetivos prestacionales y constructivos. No obstante, para la aplicación en el caso práctico realizado se ha podido verificar que la evaluación del desempeño aún no puede realizarse en una única herramienta y por lo tanto el proceso de selección de las variantes genéticas óptimas ha de ejecutarse de forma manual y acumulativa. El proceso debe realizarse de manera federada para la selección evolutiva de los invariantes geométricos dimensionales”. La evaluación del protocolo de integración y los condicionantes geométricos obtenidos como parámetros geométricos que controlan las posibles formas compatibles se realiza mediante su aplicación en un caso práctico. El ejercicio simula la colaboración multidisciplinar con modelos federados de plataformas distintas. La elección del tamaño y complejidad constructiva del proyecto se ha modulado para poder alcanzar un desarrollo completo de cada uno de los parámetros prestacionales seleccionados. Continuando con el mismo objetivo propuesto para los parámetros prestacionales, la tipología constructiva-estructural seleccionada para el ejercicio permite la aplicación la totalidad de invariantes geométricos asociados. El objetivo de este caso práctico es evaluar la capacidad alterar la forma inicialmente propuesta mediante la evaluación del desempeño prestacional de conjunto de variantes geométricas generadas a partir de un parámetro dimensional determinado. Para que este proceso tenga sentido, cada una de las variantes debe ser previamente validada conforme a las limitaciones geométricas propias de cada sistema de fabricación y montaje previstos. El interés de las conclusiones obtenidas es la identificación de una variante geométrica distante a la solución simétrica inicialmente como la solución óptima para el conjunto de parámetros seleccionados. Al tiempo se ha comprobado como la participación de un conjunto de parámetros multi-disciplinares que representan la realidad compleja de los objetivos arquitectónicos favorecen la aparición de variaciones genéticas con prestaciones mejoradas a la intuición inicial. “La herencias tipológicas suponen un límite para la imaginación de variantes formales al proceso de ideación arquitectónica. El ejercicio realizado demuestra que incluso en casos donde aparentemente la solución óptima aparenta ser obvia una variante aleatoria puede mejorar su desempeño global. La posibilidad de conocer las condiciones geométricas de las técnicas de fabricación digital compatibles con el conjunto de parámetros seleccionados por el Arquitecto para dirigir el proceso asegura que los resultados del algoritmo evolutivo empleado sean constructivamente viables. La mejora de imaginación humana con la aportación de geometrías realmente construibles supone el objetivo último de esta tesis”. ABSTRACT Architectural form generation process is shifting from analogical to digital. Digital technology has changed the way we design empowering Architects and Engineers to precisely define any complex geometry envisioned. At the same time, the construction industry, following aeronautical and automotive industries, is implementing digital manufacturing techniques to improve efficiency and quality. Consequently construction complexity will no longer be related to geometry complexity and it is associated to coordination with digital manufacturing capacities. Unfortunately it is agreed that non-standard geometries, even when proposed with performance optimization criteria, are only suitable for projects with non-restricted budgets. Furthemore, the lack of coordinated exportation protocol and geometry management between design and construction is avoiding the globalization of emergence process in built projects Present research first objective is to identify exclusive form-generation parameters related to digital manufacturing geometrical restraints. The intention was to use geometry as the form-generation tool and integrate the digital manufacturing capacities at first stages of the project. The first chapter of this text describes the investigation historical context focusing on the influence between accurate geometry definition at non-standard forms and its construction. At first examples of non-Euclidean geometries built the communication between design and construction were based on analogical partial and imprecise documentation. Deficient communication leads to geometry adaptation on site leaving the final form uncontrolled by the Architect. Computer Aided Design enable Architects to define univocally complex geometries that previously where impossible to communicate. “The univocally definition of the Form, and communication between design and construction is essential for complex geometry Projects”. The second chapter is focused on digital technologies application in form finding process and site construction. The case studies selected identifies a clear inflexion node at 1992 with the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao. The singularity of this project was the use of Aeronautics software to define digitally the external envelope complex geometry to enable the contractor to build it. “The digital revolution has given the Architect the capacity to design buildings beyond the architectural archetypes driven by geometric-constructive limitations. The application of digital manufacturing techniques has enabled a free-form construction without geometrical limitations. In this new context performance shall be the responsible to set new conceptual boundaries, since the behavior of each possible geometry can be compare and analyze beforehand. The role of the Architect is to prioritize the performance and architectural objectives of each project in a complete and coherent set of parameters”. Projects using digital tools for solving various stages of the design process were increased exponentially since 1992 until today. Despite the significant rise of the techniques of computer-aided design the main challenge remains linking geometries and materials proposed at each design with the capabilities of digital manufacturing techniques. Design for manufacturing in a digital environment is a mature technology in other industries such as aerospace and automotive, including consumer products and decoration, but in the construction sector is an immature and disjointed system. The peculiarities of the construction industry have not yet been addressed in its entirety and research proposals made in this area until 2015 have focused in separate parts of the process and not the total process. “The main obstacle to global standardization and implementation of a complete digital process from the form-finding to construction site is the lack of an integrated protocol that integrates manufacturing, economic and commissioning limitations, together with the performance evaluation of each possible form”. The different form generation processes are studied at chapter number 3. At the introduction of this chapter there is a specific definition of "form" for the research field. Form is identified with the outer envelope geometry, including the organizational set of connected indoor spaces connected to it. Therefore it is not exclusive of the interior. The aim of this study is to analyze and classify the main digital form generation processes using different selected projects as emblematic of each type. The approach to this process is complex, with segregated and uncoordinated different actors have to intervene application. In an analogical form-generation process parameters involved are partly conscious and partly unconscious or learned. The architect has control only over limited part of the parameters to be integrated into the design, according to their knowledge and. There is also a learned aesthetical prejudice that leads the form generation process to a specific geometry leaving the performance and optimization criteria apart from the decision making process. “Using performance evaluation digital tools during form finding process provides real-time comparative information to the Architect enabling geometry selection based on its performance. The generative form generation process described at this document does not ambition to identify the optimum geometry for each set of parameters. The objective is to provide quick information at each generation of what direction is most favorable for the performance parameters selected”. Manufacturing complexity definition in relation to a global and integral process of digital design for manufacture is essential for establishing an efficient managing protocol. “The definition of complexity associated to design for production in Architecture is proposed as the factor between number of different agents involved in the process by the number of interactions required between them, divided by the percentage of the interchange of information that is standardized and proof of information loss”. Design in architecture is a multi-objective process by definition. Therefore, addressing generation process linked to a set of non-coherent parameters requires the selection of adequate generative algorithm and the interaction of the architect. During the second half of the twentieth century and early twenty-first century it have been developed various mathematical algorithms for multi-parametric digital design. Heuristic algorithms are the most adequate algorithms for architectural projects due to its nature. The advantage of such algorithms is the ability to efficiently handle large scale optimization cases where a large number of design objectives and variables are involved. These generative processes do not pursue the optimum solution, in fact it will be impossible to proof with such algorithm. This is not a problem in architectural design where the final goal is to guide the form finding process towards a better performance within the initial direction provided by the architect. This research has focused on genetic algorithms due to its capacity to generate geometric alternatives in multiple directions and evaluate the fitness against a set of parameters specified in a single process. "Any protocol seeks to achieve standardization. The design to manufacturing protocol aims to provide a coordinated and coherent form generation process between a set of design parameters and the geometrical requirements of manufacturing technique. The protocol also provides an information exchange environment where there is a communication path and the level of information is ensured. The research is focused on the process because it is considered that each project will have its own singularities and parameters but the process will stay the same. Again the development of a specific tool is not a goal for the research, the intention is to provide an open source protocol that is valid for any set of tools”. Once the digital generation processes are being analized and classified, the next step is to identify the geometric parameters that define the digital design process. The definition of design process is including from the initial shape proposal based on the intuition of the architect to the generation, evaluation, selection and production of alternatives, both of an object , system or of the entire project . The current design process in Architecture is discontinuous and linear, dividing the process in disciplines in which the construction industry is structured. The proposal is to unify all relevant parameters in one process. The parameters are listed in groups of knowledge for internal classification but the matrix used for parameter relationship determination are combined. “A multi-parameter determination of the form-finding process is the integration all the measurable decisions laying behind Architect intuition. It is not possible to formulate and solve with an algorithm the design in Architecture. It is not the intention to do so with the proposal of this research. The process aims to integrate in one open protocol a selection of parameters by using geometry as common language. There is no optimum solution for any step of the process, the outcome is an evaluation of performance of all the form variations to assist the Architect for the selection of the preferable solution for the project”. The research follows with the geometrical restrictions of today Digital manufacturing techniques. Once determined it has been integrated in the form-finding process. “Digital manufacturing techniques are integrated in the form-finding process using geometry as common language. Geometric restraints define the boundary for performance parametric form-finding process. Geometrical limitations are classified by material and constructive system”. Choose between one digital model or several federate models is a strategic decision at planning a digital design for manufacturing protocol. Each one of the working models have strengths and weakens, nevertheless for the research purposes federated models are required to manage the different performance evaluation software platforms. A protocol based on federated models shall establish a communication process between software platforms and consultants. The manager shall integrate each discipline requirements defining the communication basis. The proposed protocol is based on standards on information exchange with singularities of the digital manufacturing industry. “The research concludes evolutionary algorithms as current best system to develop a generative form finding process based on the integration and coordination of a set of performance and constructive objectives. However, for application in professional practice and standardize it, the performance evaluation cannot be done in only one tool and therefore the selection of optimal genetic variants must be run in several iterations with a cumulative result. Consequently, the evaluation process within the geometrical restraints shall be carried out with federated models coordinated following the information exchange protocol”. The integration protocol and geometric constraints evaluation is done by applying in a practical case study. The exercise simulates multidisciplinary collaboration across software platforms with federated models. The choice of size and construction complexity of the project has been modulated to achieve the full development of each of the parameters selected. Continuing with the same objective proposed for the performance parameters the constructive and structural type selected for the exercise allows the application all geometric invariants associated to the set of parameters selected. The main goal of the case study is to proof the capacity of the manufacturing integrated form finding process to generate geometric alternatives to initial form with performance improved and following the restrictions determined by the compatible digital manufacturing technologies. The process is to be divided in consecutive analysis each one limited by the geometrical conditions and integrated in a overall evaluation. The interest of this process is the result of a non-intuitive form that performs better than a double symmetrical form. The second conclusion is that one parameter evaluation alone will not justify the exploration of complex geometry variations, but when there is a set of parameters with multidisciplinary approach then the less obvious solution emerge as the better performing form. “Architectural typologies impose limitation for Architects capacity to imagine formal variations. The case study and the research conclusions proof that even in situations where the intuitive solution apparently is the optimum solution, random variations can perform better when integrating all parameters evaluation. The capacity of foreseing the geometrical properties linking each design parameter with compatible manufacturing technologies ensure the result of the form-finding process to be constructively viable. Finally, the propose of a complete process where the geometry alternatives are generated beyond the Architect intuition and performance evaluated by a set of parameters previously selected and coordinated with the manufacturing requirements is the final objective of the Thesis”.