Test of lepton flavor universality by using top quark decay
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Date
2024
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Lancaster university
Abstract
Lepton flavor universality is one of the most important assumptions in the Standard
Model, which states that all leptons (electrons, muons, taus) interact with the W
boson with the same strength. This assumption can be tested by measuring the
ratio of branching fractions of the decays (W → µν) and (W → eν), denoted by
R(µ/e). To measure this ratio, the efficiency of the muon and electron is determined
by using the decay of Z
0 boson to muon and electron. Comparing the number of
detected electrons and muons from Z boson decays reveals any efficiency differences
between the detector’s response to these particles.
The analysis is based on data collected by the ATLAS experiment during Run 2
of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), from 2015 to 2018. This data corresponds to
an integrated luminosity of 140 f b−1
. The obtained uncertainty of R(µ/e) is 0.0064.
In addition to the lepton flavor universality test, our study also investigates the
beam position and luminosity measurement for the ATLAS detector during Run 3
of the LHC. This investigation focuses on changes in the beam spot position and
partial widths across four runs taken in 2022: the van der Meer (vdM) run, two
LHCf runs, and a physics run. A comparison of X, Y, and Z beam spot positions
for the investigated runs reveals a consistent shape and direction for the scans in
the vdM run and the other runs, with differences due to a crossing angle present in
LHCf and physics runs. The symmetry of the scans in terms of the beam spot width
was investigated by studying the dependence of the absolute value of the nominal
separation. This revealed no asymmetry between the ascending and descending
parts of the beam scans.
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Keywords
LHC, Top quark, lepton flavor universality, CERN, particle physics