989 resultados para Higgs Physics
Resumo:
Nella fisica delle particelle, onde poter effettuare analisi dati, è necessario disporre di una grande capacità di calcolo e di storage. LHC Computing Grid è una infrastruttura di calcolo su scala globale e al tempo stesso un insieme di servizi, sviluppati da una grande comunità di fisici e informatici, distribuita in centri di calcolo sparsi in tutto il mondo. Questa infrastruttura ha dimostrato il suo valore per quanto riguarda l'analisi dei dati raccolti durante il Run-1 di LHC, svolgendo un ruolo fondamentale nella scoperta del bosone di Higgs. Oggi il Cloud computing sta emergendo come un nuovo paradigma di calcolo per accedere a grandi quantità di risorse condivise da numerose comunità scientifiche. Date le specifiche tecniche necessarie per il Run-2 (e successivi) di LHC, la comunità scientifica è interessata a contribuire allo sviluppo di tecnologie Cloud e verificare se queste possano fornire un approccio complementare, oppure anche costituire una valida alternativa, alle soluzioni tecnologiche esistenti. Lo scopo di questa tesi è di testare un'infrastruttura Cloud e confrontare le sue prestazioni alla LHC Computing Grid. Il Capitolo 1 contiene un resoconto generale del Modello Standard. Nel Capitolo 2 si descrive l'acceleratore LHC e gli esperimenti che operano a tale acceleratore, con particolare attenzione all’esperimento CMS. Nel Capitolo 3 viene trattato il Computing nella fisica delle alte energie e vengono esaminati i paradigmi Grid e Cloud. Il Capitolo 4, ultimo del presente elaborato, riporta i risultati del mio lavoro inerente l'analisi comparata delle prestazioni di Grid e Cloud.
Resumo:
Let k := bar{F}_p for p > 2, W_n(k) := W(k)/p^n and X_n be a projective smooth W_n(k)-scheme which is W_{n+1}(k)-liftable. For all n > 1, we construct explicitly a functor, which we call the inverse Cartier functor, from a subcategory of Higgs bundles over X_n to a subcategory of flat Bundles over X_n. Then we introduce the notion of periodic Higgs-de Rham flows and show that a periodic Higgs-de Rham flow is equivalent to a Fontaine-Faltings module. Together with a p-adic analogue of Riemann-Hilbert correspondence established by Faltings, we obtain a coarse p-adic Simpson correspondence.
Resumo:
Uno dei cardini nel programma di ricerca attuale del Large Hadron Collider (LHC) al CERN è l’approfondimento della conoscenza relativa al bosone di Higgs e agli accoppiamenti di questa particella, di recente scoperta, con le altre del Modello Standard. Il prossimo Run di LHC sarà caratterizzato da collisioni di fasci di protoni con un'energia di 6.5 TeV ciascuno e renderà possibile l’acquisizione di grandi campioni di dati nei quali si prevede un aumento della statistica per tipologie di eventi che fino a questo momento è stato problematico studiare. Tra questi la produzione per Higgs-strahlung del bosone di Higgs associato al bosone vettore Z, che, essendo caratterizzata da una bassa sezione d’urto, è sempre stata considerata un processo molto difficile da investigare. Questa tesi fornisce uno studio preliminare della fattibilità di recuperare in modo efficiente questo canale, con l’obiettivo di individuare alcuni tagli che permettano di ripulire il grande fondo adronico prodotto nelle collisioni protone-protone a LHC. La presente analisi è stata effettuata su campioni di dati ottenuti tramite una generazione Monte Carlo e una simulazione parametrica del rivelatore ATLAS. Sebbene la statistica dei campioni MC sia ancora limitata e la simulazione della risposta del detector non sia dettagliata, le tecniche e i tagli utilizzati in questo lavoro di tesi potranno dare utili indicazioni per futuri studi più dettagliati e per l'investigazione di questo processo una volta che i dati del prossimo Run di LHC a √s=13 TeV saranno disponibili.
Resumo:
Nowadays, data handling and data analysis in High Energy Physics requires a vast amount of computational power and storage. In particular, the world-wide LHC Com- puting Grid (LCG), an infrastructure and pool of services developed and deployed by a ample community of physicists and computer scientists, has demonstrated to be a game changer in the efficiency of data analyses during Run-I at the LHC, playing a crucial role in the Higgs boson discovery. Recently, the Cloud computing paradigm is emerging and reaching a considerable adoption level by many different scientific organizations and not only. Cloud allows to access and utilize not-owned large computing resources shared among many scientific communities. Considering the challenging requirements of LHC physics in Run-II and beyond, the LHC computing community is interested in exploring Clouds and see whether they can provide a complementary approach - or even a valid alternative - to the existing technological solutions based on Grid. In the LHC community, several experiments have been adopting Cloud approaches, and in particular the experience of the CMS experiment is of relevance to this thesis. The LHC Run-II has just started, and Cloud-based solutions are already in production for CMS. However, other approaches of Cloud usage are being thought of and are at the prototype level, as the work done in this thesis. This effort is of paramount importance to be able to equip CMS with the capability to elastically and flexibly access and utilize the computing resources needed to face the challenges of Run-III and Run-IV. The main purpose of this thesis is to present forefront Cloud approaches that allow the CMS experiment to extend to on-demand resources dynamically allocated as needed. Moreover, a direct access to Cloud resources is presented as suitable use case to face up with the CMS experiment needs. Chapter 1 presents an overview of High Energy Physics at the LHC and of the CMS experience in Run-I, as well as preparation for Run-II. Chapter 2 describes the current CMS Computing Model, and Chapter 3 provides Cloud approaches pursued and used within the CMS Collaboration. Chapter 4 and Chapter 5 discuss the original and forefront work done in this thesis to develop and test working prototypes of elastic extensions of CMS computing resources on Clouds, and HEP Computing “as a Service”. The impact of such work on a benchmark CMS physics use-cases is also demonstrated.
Resumo:
Modeling of tumor growth has been performed according to various approaches addressing different biocomplexity levels and spatiotemporal scales. Mathematical treatments range from partial differential equation based diffusion models to rule-based cellular level simulators, aiming at both improving our quantitative understanding of the underlying biological processes and, in the mid- and long term, constructing reliable multi-scale predictive platforms to support patient-individualized treatment planning and optimization. The aim of this paper is to establish a multi-scale and multi-physics approach to tumor modeling taking into account both the cellular and the macroscopic mechanical level. Therefore, an already developed biomodel of clinical tumor growth and response to treatment is self-consistently coupled with a biomechanical model. Results are presented for the free growth case of the imageable component of an initially point-like glioblastoma multiforme tumor. The composite model leads to significant tumor shape corrections that are achieved through the utilization of environmental pressure information and the application of biomechanical principles. Using the ratio of smallest to largest moment of inertia of the tumor material to quantify the effect of our coupled approach, we have found a tumor shape correction of 20\% by coupling biomechanics to the cellular simulator as compared to a cellular simulation without preferred growth directions. We conclude that the integration of the two models provides additional morphological insight into realistic tumor growth behavior. Therefore, it might be used for the development of an advanced oncosimulator focusing on tumor types for which morphology plays an important role in surgical and/or radio-therapeutic treatment planning.
Search for a standard model Higgs boson in the H→ZZ→ℓ(+)ℓ(-)νν decay channel with the ATLAS detector
Resumo:
A search for a heavy standard model Higgs boson decaying via H→ZZ→→ℓ(+)ℓ(-)νν, where ℓ=e, μ, is presented. It is based on proton-proton collision data at √s=7 TeV, collected by the ATLAS experiment at the LHC in the first half of 2011 and corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.04 fb(-1). The data are compared to the expected standard model backgrounds. The data and the background expectations are found to be in agreement and upper limits are placed on the Higgs boson production cross section over the entire mass window considered; in particular, the production of a standard model Higgs boson is excluded in the region 340
Resumo:
In this article we review the phenomenological consequences of radiative flavor-violation (RFV) in the MSSM. In the model under consideration the U(3)^3 flavor symmetry of the gauge sector is broken in a first step to U(2)^3 by the top and bottom Yukawa couplings of the superpotential (and possibly also by the bilinear SUSY-breaking terms). In a second step the remaining U(2)^3 flavor symmetry is softly broken by the trilinear A-terms in order to obtain the measured quark masses and the CKM matrix of the Standard Model (SM) at low energies. The phenomenological implications of this model depend on the actual choice of the SUSY breaking A-terms. If the CKM matrix is generated in the down sector (by A^d), Bs->mu^+mu^- receives non-decoupling contributions from Higgs penguins which become important already for moderate values of tan(beta). Also the Bs mixing amplitude can be significantly modified compared to the SM prediction including a potential induction of a new CP-violating phase (which is not possible in the MSSM with MFV).