| Literature DB >> 30881213 |
Rabah Abdul Khalek1,2, Shaun Bailey3, Jun Gao4, Lucian Harland-Lang3, Juan Rojo1,2.
Abstract
Since its start of data taking, the LHC has provided an impressive wealth of information on the quark and gluon structure of the proton. Indeed, modern global analyses of parton distribution functions (PDFs) include a wide range of LHC measurements of processes such as the production of jets, electroweak gauge bosons, and top quark pairs. In this work, we assess the ultimate constraining power of LHC data on the PDFs that can be expected from the complete dataset, in particular after the High-Luminosity (HL) phase, starting in around 2025. The huge statistics of the HL-LHC, delivering L = 3 ab - 1 to ATLAS and CMS and L = 0.3 ab - 1 to LHCb, will lead to an extension of the kinematic coverage of PDF-sensitive measurements as well as to an improvement in their statistical and systematic uncertainties. Here we generate HL-LHC pseudo-data for different projections of the experimental uncertainties, and then quantify the resulting constraints on the PDF4LHC15 set by means of the Hessian profiling method. We find that HL-LHC measurements can reduce PDF uncertainties by up to a factor of 2 to 4 in comparison to state-of-the-art fits, leading to few-percent uncertainties for important observables such as the Higgs boson transverse momentum distribution via gluon-fusion. Our results illustrate the significant improvement in the precision of PDF fits achievable from hadron collider data alone, and motivate the continuation of the ongoing successful program of PDF-sensitive measurements by the LHC collaborations.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30881213 PMCID: PMC6394281 DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-6448-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Phys J C Part Fields ISSN: 1434-6044 Impact factor: 4.590
Fig. 1Representative Feynman diagrams at the Born level of the six types of collider processes for which HL–LHC pseudo–data has been generated in this analysis: the production of top quark pairs, W bosons in association with charm quarks, and the neutral and charged current Drell–Yan processes; the production of inclusive jets, Z bosons at finite transverse momentum, and direct photons
Summary of the features of the HL–LHC pseudo–data generated for the present study For each process we indicate the kinematic coverage, the number of pseudo–data points used across all detectors , the values of the correction factors and ; and finally the reference from the 8 TeV or 13 TeV measurement used as baseline to define the binning and the systematic uncertainties of the HL–LHC pseudo–data, as discussed in the text
| Process | Kinematics |
|
|
| Baseline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 338 | 0.5 |
| [ | |
|
| |||||
| High-mass Drell-Yan |
| 32 | 0.5 |
| [ |
| Top quark pair | 110 | 0.5 |
| [ | |
| 12 | 0.5 |
| [ | ||
|
| |||||
| 10 | 0.5 |
| LHCb projection | ||
|
| |||||
| Direct photon | 118 | 0.5 |
| [ | |
| Forward | 90 | 0.5 |
| [ | |
|
| |||||
| Inclusive jets | 58 | 0.5 |
| [ | |
| Total | 768 |
Fig. 2The kinematical coverage in the plane of the HL–LHC pseudo–data included in this analysis. For each data point, the values of and corresponding to each of the two colliding partons are determined approximatly from the corresponding leading–order kinematics. We assume if rapidities are not specified for the final states. The HL–LHC pseudo–data therefore spans a wide region in the kinematic plane, namely and
Fig. 3Comparison between the baseline PDF4LHC15 set and the sets profiled with the LHC data, either with or without the correlations between the experimental systematic uncertainties accounted for. In the latter case, the factor is chosen to reproduce the results of the profiling when the correlations are included, see text. We show here the results of profiling with the top differential distributions at TeV with (left) and the charm rapidity distribution at TeV with (right plot). A tolerance factor of has been used for this specific comparison
The three scenarios for the systematic uncertainties of the HL–LHC pseudo–data that we assume in the present study. These scenarios, ranging from conservative to optimistic, differ among them in the reduction factor , Eq. (2.2), applied to the systematic errors of the reference 8 TeV or 13 TeV measurements. We also indicate in each case the name of the corresponding LHAPDF grid
| Scenario | LHAPDF set | Comments | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | 0.5 | PDF4LHC_nnlo_hllhc_scen1 | Conservative |
| B | 0.7 | 0.36 | PDF4LHC_nnlo_hllhc_scen2 | Intermediate |
| C | 0.4 | 0.2 | PDF4LHC_nnlo_hllhc_scen3 | Optimistic |
Fig. 4The correlation coefficients between the PDFs and the HL–LHC pseudo–data. Left: the correlation between the anti–up quark and the high–mass Drell–Yan pseudo–data as a function of x for GeV. Right: the correlation between the anti–down quark and the inclusive W, Z production process in the forward region. In each plot, the different curves correspond to each of the bins of the pseudo–data used in the fit
Fig. 5Comparison between the HL–LHC pseudo–data and the theoretical predictions for high–mass (left) and forward (right) Drell–Yan production. The theory calculations are shown both before (PDF4LHC15) and after profiling. Luminosity uncertainties are not shown in the experimental errors. In the bottom panel, we show the same results normalised to the central value of the original theory calculation. Note in the right plot the comparison are only made for forward Z data though both W and Z data are included in the profiling
Fig. 6The impact of the HL–LHC pseudo–data on the PDFs at GeV. Left: impact of high–mass Drell–Yan production on the up antiquark. Right: impact of forward W, Z process on the down antiquark
Fig. 7As in Fig. 4, now for the correlation coefficient between the gluon PDF and the various bins of , the invariant mass of the top quark pair
Fig. 8Left: As in Fig. 5, now for the distribution in top quark pair production. Right: As in Fig. 6, now for the gluon PDF after including the HL–LHC pseudo–data in the fit
Fig. 9As in Fig. 4, now for the correlation coefficient between the gluon PDF and the central rapidity bin of the inclusive jet (left) and direct photon (right) pseudo–data
Fig. 10As in Fig. 5, now for the central rapidity bins of the inclusive jet production (left plot) and the direct photon production (right plot) HL–LHC pseudo–data
Fig. 11As in Fig. 6, now for the gluon PDF after including the HL–LHC pseudo–data on inclusive jet production (left plot) and on direct photon production (right plot)
Fig. 12As in Fig. 4, now for the correlation coefficient between the strange PDF and the lepton rapidity distributions in W+charm production pseudo–data in the central rapidity region (left) and in the forward region (right plot)
Fig. 13As in Fig. 5, now for W+charm production in the central (left plot) and forward (right plot) rapidity regions. In the right plot only the statistical errors are shown, while the data have been shifted by the dominant correlated source of uncertainty, namely the 5% normalization uncertainty
Fig. 14As in Fig. 6, now for the strange quark PDF including the HL–LHC pseudo–data on W+charm production in the central (left plot) and in the forward region (right plot)
Fig. 15As in Fig. 4, now for the correlation coefficients between the gluon PDF and the Z transverse momentum distributions in the central rapidity region, for the dilepton invariant mass GeV (left plot) and GeV (right plot)
Fig. 16Left: as in Fig. 5, now for the distribution of Z bosons in the dilepton final state, in the on–peak bin defined by . Right: as in Fig. 6, now for the gluon PDF after including the HL–LHC Z transverse momentum pseudo–data in the fit
Fig. 17Comparison of the PDF4LHC15 set with the HL–LHC profiled set in scenarios A and C, defined in Table 2. We show the gluon, down quark, up anti–quark, and total strangeness at GeV, normalized to the central value of the PDF4LHC15 baseline. The bands correspond to the one–sigma PDF uncertainties
Fig. 18The reduction of the uncertainties in the PDF luminosities at TeV once the HL–LHC pseudo–data has been included, compared to the PDF4LHC15 baseline. We show the gg, qg, , qq, , and luminosities for the conservative (A) and optimistic (C) scenarios. The average values for the PDF uncertainty reduction in different bins of is also reported in this figure
The reduction of the PDF uncertainties compared to the PDF4LHC15 baseline for different initial partonic combinations (that is, a value of 1 corresponds to no reduction at all). Results are presented for three different bins of the invariant mass of the produced system, averaging over 10 points logarithmically spaced within each bin. The values shown outside (inside) the brackets correspond to the optimistic (conservative) scenario. The corresponding results differential in are presented in Fig. 18
| Ratio to baseline |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| gluon–gluon | 0.50 (0.60) | 0.28 (0.40) | 0.22 (0.34) |
| gluon–quark | 0.66 (0.72) | 0.42 (0.45) | 0.28 (0.37) |
| quark–quark | 0.74 (0.79) | 0.37 (0.46) | 0.43 (0.59) |
| quark–antiquark | 0.71 (0.76) | 0.31 (0.40) | 0.50 (0.60) |
| strange–antistrange | 0.34 (0.44) | 0.19 (0.30) | 0.23 (0.27) |
| strange–antiup | 0.67 (0.73) | 0.27 (0.38) | 0.38 (0.43) |
Fig. 19Comparison of the predictions for representative SM cross sections at TeV between the PDF4LHC15 baseline and the HL–LHC profiled sets in the conservative (A) and optimistic (C) scenarios. Results are shown normalised to the central value of PDF4LHC15. The upper plots show the diphoton (left) and dijet (right plot) production cross sections as a function of the minimum invariant masses of the final state, and respectively. The bottom plots show Higgs boson production in gluon fusion with heavy top quark effective theory, both inclusive and decaying into as a function of (left), and then in association with a hard jet as a function its transverse momentum (right plot). The calculations have been performed using MCFM8.2 with leading–order matrix elements
Fig. 20The cross sections for high–mass supersymmetric particle production at TeV, comparing the predictions of the PDF4LHC15 baseline with those of the HL–LHC PDF sets in the conservative (A) and optimistic (C) scenarios, normalised to the central value of PDF4LHC15. We show the results corresponding to gluino pair production (left) and squark–gluino production (right). The cross sections have been evaluated with Pythia8.235 using leading–order matrix elements and the SLHA2 benchmark point as model input