Top Production at the Tevatron

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Top Production at the Tevatron. Daniel Sherman Harvard/CDF. Experimental Seminar, SLAC December 7, 2006. Top. Fermilab celebrated the 10th anniversary of the discovery of the top quark last year General picture from Run I is consistent with the Standard Model - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Top Production at the TevatronTop Production at the TevatronDaniel Sherman

Harvard/CDF

Experimental Seminar, SLACDecember 7, 2006

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

2 Top

• Fermilab celebrated the 10th anniversary of the discovery of the top quark last year– General picture from Run I is

consistent with the Standard Model– A few (very) subtle hints of new

physics in the top sample

• Top physics is certainly interesting enough to justify a closer look…

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

3 And If You Don’t Care…

Top is VERY rare.(1 in 1010 collisions)

BUT

We’ll never findthis…

…without understanding

all of these

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

4 Outline

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

5 Tevatron Complex

• Proton-antiproton collider

• Two multi-purpose detectors– Collider Detector at Fermilab– DØ

• Run I (1992-1996)– √s = 1.8 TeV– Integrated Luminosity 110 pb-1

• Top Discovery in 1995

• Run II (2001-present)– √s = 1.96 TeV– Collected almost 2 fb-1 so far

The Fermilab Tevatron is the only place in the world to study top(for the next year)

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

6 Top Production at the Tevatron

• Top quarks are mostly produced (strongly) in pairs– 30% higher than in Run I

• In the Standard Model, they are also produced one at a time

85% 15%

σSM ~ 3pb Not Yet Observed

~7.5 pb

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

7 Accelerator Performance

• Tevatron is performing quite well– Nearly 2 fb-1 delivered in Run II

– Typically recording 20-25 pb-1 per week (new Run I-sized dataset every month!)

– 15,000 Run II top pairs per experiment

• Record instantaneous luminosity (2.2 x 1032 ~ 1 top event every 10 minutes)– Shooting for 6-8 fb-1 by the end of 2008

• This talk: 700 pb-1 (with silicon)

1.0 fb-1 3 top pairs/hr

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

8

• Silicon Tracker– ||<2

• Drift Chamber– ||<1

• Solenoid• Electromagnetic and

Hadronic Calorimeters• Muon Chambers

CDF II Detector Overview

y

xz

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

9 CDF II Detector

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

10

• Each top (should) decay to Wb, so we can sort final states based on the W decay products

• Lepton+jets final states consist of 2 bottom quarks, a lepton + neutrino, and 2 light (charm) quarks

• In the detector, an ideal event will be comprised of:– 4 jets (require ≥3 with ET>15 GeV)

– Large missing ET (ET>20 GeV)

– An energetic lepton (pT>20 GeV/c)

• Essential for triggering

• Top is still dominated by high-order QCD jet production with a real W– Top is distinguished by presence

of heavy-flavor (mostly bottom) jets

– Require jets to be b-tagged

– Large gains in signal purity

Event Signature

ν

μ

…but how do we detect b’s?

~2 cm

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

11 b-Tagging Overview

• We use two key properties of bottom quarks to “tag” them:– High semi-leptonic branching fraction (~10% per e/μ, plus cascades)

• Algorithms identify soft electrons or muons inside jets

– Electron tagging difficult at CDF (large conversion background)

• Maximum b-jet efficiency limited by decay rates

– Long lifetime (cτ~500 μm)• B hadrons will travel a macroscopic distance (several mm) before decaying

• Two strategies at CDF:

– Calculate heavy-flavor probability based on impact parameters of tracks

– SecVtx algorithm: Explicitly reconstruct heavy-flavor decay vertices

e/μ

JET

InteractionPoint B

D

Tracking is critical

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

12

LØØ, SVXØ

!LØØ, !SVXØ

!LØØ, SVXØ

LØØ, !SVXØ

Intrinsic Beam Width ~30μm

Silicon Tracking

• Impact parameter resolution asymptotically approaches 25 μm– Multiple scattering dominant at low pT

– Most of the work done by the innermost layers

• Entire silicon system upgraded in Run II• Three-component system covering radii

of 1.5 cm (LØØ), 2.5-11 cm (5-layer SVX), 20-30 cm (2-layer ISL)

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

13 CDF Silicon Detector

SVX II

ISL

LØØ

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

14 Event Reconstruction I: Beamlines

30 m

y

xz

• Starting point: ~50 tracks and average beam position & width

– Measured online with SVX

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

15

• Starting point: ~50 tracks and average beam position & width

– Measured online with SVX

• Vertex high-quality tracks near beam, extract interaction point

Event Reconstruction II: Primary Vertices

y

xz

30 m

PrimaryVertex

10 m30 m

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

16

d0

• Starting point: ~50 tracks and average beam position & width

– Measured online with SVX

• Vertex high-quality tracks near beam, extract interaction point

• Select tracks with large impact parameter that point from primary vertex to jet

• Make best 2-track ‘seed’ vertex and attach all nearby tracks

• Iteratively remove those with large χ2

• Decide whether or not secondary vertex is inconsistent with the primary

– Tag based on significance of displacement, not L2D

– Primary vertex error matters

Event Reconstruction III: SecVtx Algorithm

JET

y

xz

PrimaryVertex

SecondaryVertex

L2D

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

17 Calibration of b-Tagging Efficiency I

• Problem: Efficiency is sensitive to poorly-modeled detector quantities– Resolution tails, primary vertex errors, etc.

• Solution: Derive a multiplicative “scale factor” to correct the simulated efficiency in low-pT lepton samples

– Complementary methods for 8-GeV electrons and muons inside jets

b-Tagged Jet (e)

b-Fraction 70% (e), 80% (μ)

Only need the b-fraction of lepton jets• Muons: Fit μ momentum relative to

the jet for the heavy-flavor fraction• Electrons: Compare tag rates to

control sample of conversions and apply a simple formula…– Well, not that simple

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

18 Calibration of b-Tagging Efficiency II

• We measure the data-to-Monte Carlo “scale factor” to be ~0.92 ± 0.06– ±2% depending on the tagger

– Two years ago: 0.8 ± 0.1

• Dominant systematic derived from extrapolation to top-like energies– ET dependence is poorly constrained

– Large source of error in all b-tagged analyses (including the cross section)

Electron Sample

Muon Sample

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

19

• For multi-b event signatures (top/Higgs/SUSY), the tagged light-flavor background is typically quite small – Efficiency gains dominate purity losses

• New in Run II: Try to maximize yield of doubly-tagged events– Reduce combinatorics in top lepton+jets event reconstruction (esp. for mass)

• Final specs for “loose” SecVtx:– b-Tag Efficiency up 20%

– Light-flavor tag rate x2.5

Tuning the Algorithm

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

20 b-Tagging Efficiency in Top Events

Expect a top candidate sample 10 times larger than Run I

(25 times larger for double-tags)

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

21 Top Physics Program

• The b-tagged lepton+jets sample gives us a lot of things to explore– Where to begin?

• We can’t study top properties without knowing how much signal and background we have

• The cross section measurement is the foundation for all top physics analyses in this channel

q’

p

p t

b

W-

q

t

b

W+

l+

v

?

|Vtb|

Non-SM Decays

Decay Kinematics

Production Cross Section

Resonant Production

ProductionMechanism

Top Spin Polarization

W Helicity

Top Charge

Top Lifetime

Top Mass

Non-Top in Lepton+Jets (Superjets)

tt+X

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

22 Cross Section Calculation

• The cross section is derived from the expression:

• : Number of b-tagged events in data sample

• : Expected number of background events

• : Total integrated luminosity: 695/pb

• : Acceptance (includes branching fraction): ~7%

• : Event b-tagging efficiency (16-70%)

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

23

• Background dominated by events with a real W and jets– Tags can be real heavy flavor or mis-tagged light flavor

• W+Light Flavor (~40%)– Mistag rate measured with negative tags– Normalization comes from data

• W+Heavy Flavor (~35%)– Contributions from Wbb, Wcc, and Wc– “Scaled” leading-order Monte Carlo– Wbb dominates double-tag background

Backgrounds I: W+Jets

PrimaryVertex

xy

z

SecondaryVertex

L2D

Fake Tags (Negative L2D)

JET

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

24 Backgrounds II: Non-W and Electroweak

• Remaining background contributions are relatively small– Non-W (~15%)

• W signature (lepton and or missing ET) faked

– Lepton: Conversions, hadrons identified as muons, B decays, misidentified jets

– Missing ET: Calorimeter resolution, incomplete detector coverage

• Extrapolated from outside the W signal region

– Low-Rate Electroweak Processes (~10%)• Single top, dibosons, etc. with additional jets

Ultimately, we expect S/B of ~3 for single-tags, ~10 for

double-tags

Electron Data W

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

25 Cross Section Results

≥2 Tags≥1 Tag

Top “discovery” with double-tags!Best single measurement (14% error)

See Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 082004 (2006)

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

26 Systematic Uncertainties

• Limiting systematic uncertainty in cross section comes from data-to-simulation scale factor on the b-tag efficiency

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

27

• Natural question: How significant is the difference between the measured cross section and theory?– Strictly speaking, not very interesting (O(1σ))

• More exciting questions: How much does the sample look like top? Can we rule out new phenomena that would inflate the cross section?

Interpreting the Cross Section

• We measure 8.8 ± 1.2 pb for a top mass of 175 GeV/c2

– CDF Dilepton: 8.3 ± 1.8 pb

– CDF All-Hadronic: 8.3 ± 2.1 pb

• Some dependence on assumed mt

• Unscientific combination favors a lower mass (~166 ± 4 GeV/c2)– Measured: 170.9 ± 2.4 GeV/c2

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

28 Kinematics

• We attribute the excess in tagged events to top, but does it really look like top?– YES!

• Need to be a bit more quantitative with some hypotheses…

HT

mTW

ET

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

29

• Is there a non-QCD production mechanism for top pairs?

– No further evidence for 500 GeV/c2 resonance– Also: Detached W (“top lifetime”) hunt consistent with zero

Searches I

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

30 Searches II

• Are we mistaking something else for top?– Dedicated searches for t’→Wq in

lepton+jets using event kinematics– Exclude t’ with mass 258 GeV/c2

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

31

• Are we counting events from top pairs+X? (e.g. X=H, ET)

– Heavy stop pairs (→tχ0) or top partners in little Higgs (→tAH)

– Sensitive to O(0.5 pb) in 1 fb-1

• The bottom line: there is no significant evidence for physics beyond the Standard Model in the top sample

Searches III

300 GeV/c2 stop

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

32

Remember this?

Forget it.

• If it’s all top, double-tag statistics can be exploited to tackle systematics

• σ: Requiring σ1-tag=σ2-tag constrains the tagging “scale factor” directly

– 20% error reduction with 700 pb-1 (benefits all tagging analyses)

– Expect to reach total precision of 12% on cross section with 1.2 fb-1

• mt: Forcing the untagged jets to the W mass constrains the jet energy scale

– 40% error reduction

• These approaches are becoming the standards at the Tevatron (& LHC?)

Aside: Top as a Calibration Sample

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

33 LHC Top Production

• Tevatron center-of-mass energies are typically insufficient to produce a top pair (350 GeV/c2)– x > ~0.2

• The 7-TeV beam at LHC can produce top at smaller values of x– Dominated by gluon fusion (90%)

• Expected cross section increases by a factor of >100

gluonup

downanti-up

To

p A

cces

sib

le @

Tev

atro

n

Top

Acc

essi

ble

@

LHC

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

34

σ(W→lν)

σ(tt)mt=175 GeV/c2

The Lepton+Jets Sample

• Enhancement in σ for top is larger than that for backgrounds (W+jets)

• Without b-tagging, top may be visible in ~1 week at 1033 (150 pb-1)

• With b-tagging, may reach a precision of 5-7% on σ (dominated by luminosity)– Combined with 2-GeV precision on mt, a

stringent test of QCD (finally)

Mass of 3 leading jets (ATLAS)

TopW+Jets

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

35 Summary

• The CDF Run II top physics program is in great shape, benefiting from large improvements in accelerator and detector performance and in b-tagging capabilities

• We have made the world’s best measurement of the pair production cross section in the lepton+jets decay channel with 700 pb-1, and we expect the result to improve significantly in the coming months (1.2 fb-1)– More sensitive searches for new physics in the top sample will follow

• The LHC will bring us to a new level of understanding top, and the last few years of Tevatron data will help us get there

BackupBackup

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

37 Radiative Corrections and Global Fits

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

38 Latest Higgs Results

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

39 Standard Model Top Decays

In the Standard Model, top pairs decay ~100% of the time as:

• Signatures are distinguished by the W decay products:– All-hadronic: High yield (44%

branching ratio), large QCD background

– Dilepton (2 e/μ’s): High purity, low yield (5% BR)

– τ channels: difficult to trigger on, reconstruct leptons

– Lepton+jets (1 e/μ only): Good purity and yield (30% BR), manageable background, kinematically constrained

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

40 Detector Signatures

• CDF’s design allows us to perform signature-based analyses with physics objects– Jets (quarks and gluons): Clusters of tracks pointing to EM/hadronic

calorimeter deposits– Electrons: Track pointing to narrow EM deposit– Muons: Track with little calorimeter energy pointing to muon “stub”– Neutrinos: Undetected → observe imbalance in transverse energy

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

41 Loose-Tag Backgrounds

No b-tagging systematics included

December 7, 2006 Top at the Tevatron

42 Double-Tag Backgrounds

No b-tagging systematics included

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