CMS-FSQ-12-019 ; CERN-PH-EP-2013-060 | ||
Measurement of the hadronic activity in events with a Z and two jets and extraction of the cross section for the electroweak production of a Z with two jets in pp collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 7 TeV | ||
CMS Collaboration | ||
31 May 2013 | ||
J. High Energy Phys. 10 (2013) 062 | ||
Abstract: The first measurement of the electroweak production cross section of a Z boson with two jets (Zjj) in pp collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 7 TeV is presented, based on a data sample recorded by the CMS experiment at the LHC with an integrated luminosity of 5 inverse femtobarns. The cross section is measured for the lljj (l = e, $\mu$) final state in the kinematic region $m_{ll} \gt$ 50 GeV, $m_{jj} \gt$ 120 GeV, transverse momenta $p_T^{j} \gt$ 25 GeV and pseudorapidity abs($\eta^{j}$) $\lt$ 4.0. The measurement, combining the muon and electron channels, yields $\sigma$ = 154 +/- 24 (stat.) +/- 46 (exp. syst.) +/- 27 (th. syst.) +/- 3 (lum.) fb, in agreement with the theoretical cross section. The hadronic activity, in the rapidity interval between the jets, is also measured. These results establish an important foundation for the more general study of vector boson fusion processes, of relevance for Higgs boson searches and for measurements of electroweak gauge couplings and vector boson scattering. | ||
Links: e-print arXiv:1305.7389 [hep-ex] (PDF) ; CDS record ; inSPIRE record ; Public twiki page ; CADI line (restricted) ; |
Figures | |
png pdf |
Figure 1-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 1-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 1-c:
|
png pdf |
Figure 2:
|
png pdf |
Figure 3-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 3-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 4-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 4-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 5-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 5-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 6-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 6-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 7-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 7-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 8-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 8-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 9-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 9-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 10:
|
png pdf |
Figure 11-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 11-b:
|
png pdf |
Figure 12-a:
|
png pdf |
Figure 12-b:
|
Compact Muon Solenoid LHC, CERN |