Title: Electroweak Physics Lecture 2
1Electroweak PhysicsLecture 2
2Last Lecture
- Use EW Lagrangian to make predictions for width
of Z boson - Relate this to what we can measure s(ee-?ff)
- Lots of extracted quantities
- mZ, GZ
- Today look at the experimental results from
LEPSLC
3Review of our Aim
- Aim to explain as many of these measurements as
possible
Z pole measurements from LEP and SLC!
4Physics Topics
- Total cross section to quarks and leptons
- Number of neutrinos
- Angular cross sections
- Asymmetries
- Between forward and backward going particles
- Between events produced by left and right
electrons - ee-?ee-
- t-polarisation
- Quark final states
5Measuring a Cross Section
- Experimentalists formula
- Nsel, number of signal events
- Choose selection criteria, count the number that
agree - Nbg, number of background events
- Events that arent the type you want, but agree
with criteria - esel, efficiency of selection criteria to find
signal events - use a detailed Monte Carlo simulation of
physicsdetector to determine - L, luminosity measure of ee- pairs delivered
6An example s(ee-?quarks)
- Select events where the final state is two quarks
- In detector quarks appears as jets
- Simple selection criteria
- Number of charged tracks, Nch
- Sum of track momenta, Ech
- Efficiency,e 99
- Background 0.5
- mainly from tt-
7Measured Cross Sections
8Use Fit to Extract Parameters
- Fit s(ee-?hadrons) as function of s with to find
best value for parameters - mZ
- GZ
- s0had
9Energy of the Beam
- Critical to measurement
- How well do you know the energy of the beam, s ?
- At LEP, it was required to take into account
- The gravitational effect of the moon on tides
- The height of the water in Lake Geneva
- Leakage Currents from the TGV to Paris
10Leptonic Cross Sections
- Leptonic cross sections measured in a similar
way - s(ee-?ee-)
- s(ee-?µµ-)
- s(ee-?tt-)
- Use to extract values for
Equal up to QED, QCD corrections
11Values Extracted from Total Cross Section
12Number of Neutrinos
- Use shad to extract number of neutrinos
- N(?)2.999 ? 0.011
- Only three light (m?ltmZ/2) neutrinos interact
with Z
13Cross Section Asymmetries
- Results so far only use the total number of
events produced - Events also contain angular information
- Cross section asymmetries can be used to exploit
the angular information - Forward Backward Asymmetry, Afb
- Left-Right Asymmetry, ALR
14Angular Cross Section
15Angular Cross Section II
- Simplifies to
- Pe is the polarisation of the electron
- Pe1 for right-handed helicity
- Pe-1 for left-handed helicity
- For partial polarisation
- and
- depends on axial and vector couplings to the Z
- SM
16Asymmetries
- Can measure the asymmetries for all types of
fermion - axial vector couplings depend on the value of
sin2?W
Asymmetries measure Vf, Af and sin2?W
17Forward-Backward Asymmetry I
- At Z energies the basic Feynman diagrams are
- Z exchange (dominant, due to resonance effect)
- ? exchange (becomes more important off-peak)
- ? exchange is a pure vector parity conserving
process - the angular distribution of the final state
fermions only involves even powers of cos? - ? is the angle between the outgoing fermion
direction and the incoming electron - for spin 1 ? ? spin 1/2 ee- ?(cos?) 1
cos²?
18Forward-Backward Asymmetry II
- Z exchange is a V-A parity violating interaction
- the angular distribution of the final state
fermions can involve odd and even powers of cos ? - ?(cos?) AZ A? ² AZ²2A? AZ A?²
- 1 g(E) cos? cos²?
-1 lt g(E) lt 1 - Away from resonance E gtgt MZ or E ltlt MZ
- Can neglect AZ² contribution
- cos? term due to ?/Z interference g(E)
increases as E-MZ increases - Near resonance E ? MZ
- neglect A?² and 2A? AZ contributions
- small cos? term due to V-A structure of AZ
19Forward-Backward Asymmetry III
- Asymmetry between fermions that go in the same
direction as electron and those that go in the
opposite direction. - At the Z pole (no ? interference)
- SM values for full acceptance
- Afb(l)0.029
- Afb(up-type)0.103
- Afb(down-type)0.140
20Forward Backward Asymmetry Experimentally
- Careful to distinguish here between fermions and
anti-fermions - Experimentalists formula
- Ratio is very nice to measure, things cancel
- Luminosity
- Backgrounds efficiencies are similar for Nf Nb
- Expression only valid for full (4p) acceptance
21Afb Experimental Results
22Measured Value of Afb
- Combining all charged lepton types
23Extracting Vf and Af
- Large off-peak AFB are interesting to observe but
not very sensitive to V-A couplings of the Z
boson - whereas AFB(EMZ) is very sensitive to the
couplings - by selecting different final states (f e, ?, ?,
u, d, s, c, b) possible to measure the Vf/Af
ratios for all fermion types - Use Vf/Af ratios to extract sin²?W 1 - MW²/MZ²
- Vu/Au 1 - (4Qu/e) sin²?W
- Vd/Ad - 1 (4Qd/e) sin²?W
- charged leptons (e, ?, ?) V/A - (1- 4 sin²?W )
24Extracting Vf and Af II
- s(ee-?Z ?ff) also sensitive to Vf and Af
- decay widths ?f Vf² Af²
- combining Afb(EMZ) and ?f determination of Vf
and Af separately
25An aside ee-?ee-
- Complication for ee-?ee- channel
- Initial and final state are the same
- Two contributions s-channel, t-channel
- and interference
26Angular Measurements of ee-?ee-
27Left-Right Asymmetry
- Measures asymmetry between Zs produced with
different helicites
- Need to know beam energy precisely for ?
correction
28Left Right Asymmetry II
- Measurement only possible at SLC, where beams are
polarised. - Experimentalists Formula
- Valid independent of acceptance
- Even nicer to measure than Afb, more things
cancel!
29Beam Polarisation at SLC
- Polarised beams means that the beam are composed
of more eL than eR, or vice versa
- ltPegt 100 for fully polarised beams
- ltPegt (0.244 0.006 ) in 1992
- (0.76160.0040) in 1996
30SLC ALR Results
- A0LR 0.15140.0022
- sin2?W0.230970.00027
31One more asymmetry ALRfb
- Results
- Combined result
- Equivalent to
32Status so far
33The Grand Reckoning
- Correlations of the Z peak parameters for each of
the LEP experiments