Title: Gnther Dissertori
1What have we learnt about QCD at LEP?
- Günther Dissertori
- ETH Zürich
- Laboratoire de Physique Corpusculaire de
- Clermont-Ferrand, 21.2.2003
2LEP 1989 - 2000
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4Anatomy of the process ee- Z Hadrons
Quantum Chromo Dynamics
pert.
MZ
Scale ? R(proton)
5Outlook
- Introduction
- Measurements of
- Measurement of the b-quark mass
- Transition pert./non-pert. regime
- Hadronization/Particle correlations
- Not covered colour factor measurements, gluino
limits, detailed studies of particle production,
Monte Carlo models, photon-photon interactions,
...
6Introduction
before LEP...
7Introduction
The huge statistics (4 million events per
experiment) has allowed a plethora of detailed
studies of pert. and non-pert. QCD.
8Part 1 Studies of perturbative QCD
9Measurements of the strong coupling constant
- from inclusive observables
- (counting experiments)
- from semi-inclusive observables
- (distributions of topology-dependent variables)
10as from inclusive Z or t decays
quarks hadrons
q
q
q
1
...
q
q
q
11Higher Order Corrections
12R from Z decays
Hadrons
Rl
Muons
13Rt Study the decay Z to tt-
e
t-
Z
t
e-
Rt
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15Hadronic mass spectrum
s(invariant mass)2 of hadronic decay products
r resonance
?s from moments of this distribution
pp
ppp
s (GeV/c2)2
16Without phase space factor and taking moments, in
order to average out resonances
Rt(non-strange states)
only quarks, no gluons
Example non-strange moments Rt00 3.484
0.024 Rt12 0.203 0.003
17Results
- Rl as(mZ) 0.123 0.005
- Rt as(mt) 0.323 0.030
-
- as(mZ) 0.118 0.003
energy evolution
18Less inclusive quantities Event Shapes, Jet
Rates
19General Structure of the Cross Section
Calculable for the class of observables,
which are infrared and collinear safe,
i.e. IR-singularities from real and virtual
radiative corrections cancel
Examples Jet Rates, Thrust, C-Parameter, .
20Example Thrust (invented around 1978, used at
Petra/DESY)
Thrust Axis parallel to vector n for which
maximum is obtained
21Z decays
22Thrust..
1/2
1
23Results from NLO Fits
- First measurements showed
- indication that missing higher order terms are
large - typical results
- as(Mz) 0.120 /- 0.010
- (0.115 - 0.130)
24An attempt to calculate higher order
correctionsResummation of Large Logs
Example Jet Rates
Have to define resolution criterion in order to
distinguish particles (and finally) jets
25Perturbative Predictions
26Resummation of logarithmic terms in all orders of
pert. theory
For a particular class of observables it is
possible to resum log. terms in all orders of
pert. theory
27Example Recent result by OPAL
Analysis of ee- data from 35 GeV
JADE to 91 GeV OPAL, LEP1 to 189 GeV
OPAL, LEP2
as(Mz) 0.1187 0.0034-0.0019
28Very recently new analysis by ALEPH using the
4-jet rate
- predictions known at NLO resummation
- note
- ALEPH
- as(Mz) 0.1170 ? 0.0001 (stat)
- ? 0.0009 (exp)
- ? 0.0003 (had)
- ? 0.0008 (scale)
- 0.1170 ? 0.0013
fit range
29World Average( summary by S.Bethke,
hep-ex/0211012)
LEP
DIS, HERA
PETRA/PEP
SPS, TEVATRON
LEP
30The of as
31Measurements of the b-quark mass
32What is mq?
- Two schemes
- Running mass scheme ( )
- The mass is a renormalizable parameter in the
Lagrangian, depends on renormalization scheme and
scale - Pole mass scheme
- The mass is defined as the position of the
pole of the quark propagator, does not depend on
a scheme or scale
33- In inclusive quantities at high energies you
dont see an effect
34Idea of the measurement
- 1) Charged particles radiate if accelerated
- 2) Under the influence of the same force, heavier
particles are less accelerated than lighter ones
- F m a
35The Theory
Dynamical as well as phase space effects
reduce radiation in b-quark events
1 for incl. Obs. b0 gtgt
1 for semi-incl. Obs. e.g.
3-jet rate
36The Measurements
- The ratio of 3-jet rates in b- over uds-events
has been measured - have to apply b-tagging
- After corrections one gets a value at the parton
level
37The Measurements
- First measurement by DELPHI
- they deduced
- then ALEPH, OPAL, SLD
- eg. ALEPH
Running established
38Resumé Studies of perturbative QCD
- consistent as measurements obtained from
various processes, precision at the 1-2
level -
- uncertainties dominated by theoretical
uncertainties. Need at least NLO. Resummation
calculations established - strong motivation for theorists to invest
efforts in NNLO and resummation calculations
and their Monte Carlo implementations.
Useful also for future colliders
39Part 2 Transition of pert. to non-pert. regime
40 Quark vs. Gluon Jets
Simply from couplings one expects a larger
multiplicity in gluon jets of the order CA/CF
9/4 , and a softening of the momentum
distributions for particles coming from the
gluon jet. Also the scaling violations, ie.,
change of multiplicities with scale are different.
41Observations
- Experimental evidence that relevant scale for jet
comparison is some transverse momentum like
scale, but not eg. Ejet
- Gluon jets have larger hadron multiplicities than
quark jets, but lower than naive expectation
CA/CF9/4
- Gluon jets have softer spectrum. But beware
b-jets are again similar to gluon jets...
42Inclusive Hadron multiplicity
- pQCD including colour coherence effects, is able
to describe correctly the energy evolution, up to
an overall factor a (LPHD)
43Resumé Transition pert. to non-pert. regime
- gluon jets have larger hadron multiplicities
and softer hadron spectra than quark jets. -
- BUT it is important to use the correct scale
to compare different jets. Simply using jet
energy is not correct. - pQCD LPHD can describe certain quantities at
the hadron level. Important that coherence
effects are included in calculation of
multi-gluon radiation.
44Part 3 Hadronization
45Tests of phenomenological models
46Models
Parameters have to be adjusted using data!
String Fragmentation ? JETSET/PYTHIA
Cluster Fragmentation ? HERWIG
47Hadron Momentum Distributions
Inclusive
p/pbeam
48Hadron Momentum Distributions
Pions
Kaons
Protons
49Bose-Einstein Correlations
50Theory
- Wave function of like-sign pion pairs should be
symmetric, ie. obey Bose-Einstein statistics - Measure for like-sign pion pairs the following
correlation function (Qmomentum difference)
- Assuming the pion source is gaussian, spherically
symmetric (further assumptions...), fit this
simple parametrization
- Obtain thus information on the source size R
511-dim. Analysis
- However
- measured parameters depend on the details of the
analysis, eg. choice of (uncorrelated) reference
sample - detailed analysis shows that the simple
parametrization fits badly
52 2-dim Analysis
- From this simple picture we expect that
longitudinal source size is larger than
transversal one. - Measure correlation functions for momentum
difference components parallel/transverse to
thrust axis
53Resumé Hadronization
- phenomenological models are successful in
describing many (most) aspects of the
hadronic final states. However, many
parameters have to be tuned. -
- The reliability of these models is important
for past/present/future analyses/searches. - BE-correlations have been observed, together
with an elongation of the pion source.
However, be careful when interpreting
parameters of (too) simple parametrizations!
54Conclusions
- Experiments at LEP have performed QCD studies
with unprecedented precision - Progress on the theoretical as well as
experimental side improved confidence in QCD - major steps forward in the precision of the
- strong coupling constant as
- Also quark masses have been measured directly
(b,s) or even indirectly (top !) - Many insights in properties of q/g jets
- Phenomenological hadronization models work very
well, have been carefully studied/tuned at LEP - Prospects
55Prospects
- Precise measurements from LEP are important input
for future colliders, in particular LHC - many backgrounds to searches are QCD processes
- Big improvements in precision of as , mb ,
rather unlikely at LHC - LHC is a discovery machine
- nevertheless LHC offers a rich list of QCD topics
to study, and LEP has shown that high quality
data are good stimulus for theorists - big step forward in precision at future linear
collider (?) - e.g. as and mt from tt threshold, mb
from G(H bb)
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