Published 2017
| Version v1
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Searches for Sub-TeV Hadronic Resonances with the ATLAS Detector
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Description
The Large Hadron Collider has recently began colliding proton beams at a record center-of-mass energy $\sqrt{s}=13~{\text{TeV}}$. This allows the LHC experiments to drastically improve searches for heavy new particles. However at the same time, the more complicated environment means an increase in the trigger thresholds. Consequently a viable set of theories at lower energies remains unexplored. This thesis describes three ATLAS analyses that used different techniques to target new particles with sub-TeV mass. The first analysis searches for the Higgs boson produced via vector-boson fusion and decaying to two bottom quarks in in $\sqrt{s}=8~{\text{TeV}}$ dataset. The presence of the extra jets from vector-boson fusion and $b$-tagging is used to reduce the event rate to a manageable level. The second analysis searches for generic resonances decaying to two $b$-quarks with masses between $600~{\text{GeV}}$ to $1.2~{\text{TeV}}$. The use of $b$-tagging in the trigger allows it to set unique limits in the sub-TeV mass range. The third analysis searches for hadronic resonances produced in associtaion with energetic initial state radiation (ISR). The use of the ISR as a trigger decorrelates the resonance mass from the trigger efficiency. The result is world-class limits on new particles with masses between $200~{\text{GeV}}$ to $500~{\text{GeV}}$. This space is interesting for particles mediating between the Standard Model and the dark sector. The dark matter relic density prefers $\mathcal{O}~(100~{\text{GeV}})$ mediators, yet the most stringent constraints in this region previously came from the pre-LHC era.
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Krizka_uchicago_0330D_13675.pdf
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- oai:knowledge.uchicago.edu:682