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In situ calibration of large-radius jet energy and mass in 13 TeV proton–proton collisions with the ATLAS detector

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2019-02

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Springer Nature
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ATLAS Collaboration. 2018. In situ calibration of large-radius jet energy and mass in 13 TeV proton–proton collisions with the ATLAS detector, The European Physical Journal C, 79: 135.

Abstract

The response of the ATLAS detector to large- radius jets is measured in situ using 36.2 fb−1 of √s = 13 TeV proton–proton collisions provided by the LHC and recorded by the ATLAS experiment during 2015 and 2016. The jet energy scale is measured in events where the jet recoils against a reference object, which can be either a calibrated photon, a reconstructed Z boson, or a system of well-measured small-radius jets. The jet energy resolution and a calibration of forward jets are derived using dijet bal- ance measurements. The jet mass response is measured with two methods: using mass peaks formed by W bosons and top quarks with large transverse momenta and by compar- ing the jet mass measured using the energy deposited in the calorimeter with that using the momenta of charged-particle tracks. The transverse momentum and mass responses in sim- ulations are found to be about 2–3% higher than in data. This difference is adjusted for with a correction factor. The results of the different methods are combined to yield a calibration over a large range of transverse momenta ( pT ). The precision of the relative jet energy scale is 1–2% for 200 GeV < pT < 2 TeV, while that of the mass scale is 2–10%. The ratio of the energy resolutions in data and sim- ulation is measured to a precision of 10–15% over the same pT range.

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Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous), Engineering (miscellaneous)

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