Fr. 135.00

Searching for Dark Matter with the ATLAS Detector

English · Hardback

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Description

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This thesis describes the search for Dark Matter at the LHC in the mono-jet plus missing transverse momentum final state, using the full dataset recorded in 2012 by the ATLAS Experiment.  It is the first time that the number of jets is not explicitly restricted to one or two, thus increasing the sensitivity to new signals.  Instead, a balance between the most energetic jet and the missing transverse momentum is required, thus selecting mono-jet-like final states. Collider searches for Dark Matter have typically used signal models employing effective field theories (EFTs), even when comparing to results from direct and indirect detection experiments, where the difference in energy scale renders many such comparisons invalid.  The thesis features the first robust and comprehensive treatment of the validity of EFTs in collider searches, and provides a means by which the different classifications of Dark Matter experiments can be compared on asound and fair basis.

List of contents

Introduction.- Contributions.- Theoretical Background and Motivation for Dark Matter.- The ATLAS Experiment.- ATLAS Reconstruction and Performance.- Jet Reconstruction and Performance.- The Mono-jet Analysis.-  Mono-jet Dark Matter Interpretation.- Mono-jet Prospects at an Upgraded LHC.- Conclusions. 

Summary

This thesis describes the search for Dark Matter at the LHC in the mono-jet plus missing transverse momentum final state, using the full dataset recorded in 2012 by the ATLAS Experiment.  It is the first time that the number of jets is not explicitly restricted to one or two, thus increasing the sensitivity to new signals.  Instead, a balance between the most energetic jet and the missing transverse momentum is required, thus selecting mono-jet-like final states. Collider searches for Dark Matter have typically used signal models employing effective field theories (EFTs), even when comparing to results from direct and indirect detection experiments, where the difference in energy scale renders many such comparisons invalid.  The thesis features the first robust and comprehensive treatment of the validity of EFTs in collider searches, and provides a means by which the different classifications of Dark Matter experiments can be compared on asound and fair basis.

Product details

Authors Steven Schramm
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2016
 
EAN 9783319444529
ISBN 978-3-31-944452-9
No. of pages 324
Dimensions 159 mm x 243 mm x 25 mm
Weight 631 g
Illustrations XXIII, 324 p. 145 illus., 135 illus. in color.
Series Springer Theses
Springer Theses
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Theoretical physics

Gravitation, B, Kosmologie und das Universum, Gravity, Cosmology, Physics and Astronomy, Quantum field theory, Elementary particles (Physics), Elementary Particles, Quantum Field Theory, Relativity physics, Classical and Quantum Gravity, Classical and Quantum Gravitation, Relativity Theory

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