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J. Sjoelin

Researcher at Stockholm University

Publications -  10
Citations -  1057

J. Sjoelin is an academic researcher from Stockholm University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Large Hadron Collider & Calorimeter (particle physics). The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications receiving 997 citations.

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Boosted objects: a probe of beyond the standard model physics

A. Abdesselam, +67 more
TL;DR: The report of the hadronic working group of the BOOST2010 workshop held at the University of Oxford in June 2010 as discussed by the authors discusses the potential of hadronic decays of highly boosted particles as an aid for discovery at the LHC and a discussion of tools developed to meet the challenge of reconstructing and isolating these topologies.
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Readiness of the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter for LHC collisions.

Georges Aad, +2568 more
TL;DR: An overview of the Tile Calorimeter performance as measured using random triggers, calibration data, data from cosmic ray muons and single beam data and the determination of the global energy scale was performed with an uncertainty of 4%.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ATLAS Inner Detector commissioning and calibration

Georges Aad, +2630 more
TL;DR: The ATLAS Inner Detector as mentioned in this paper is a composite tracking system consisting of silicon pixels, silicon strips and straw tubes in a 2 T magnetic field, which was completed in 2008 and the detector took part in data-taking with single LHC beams and cosmic rays.
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Readiness of the ATLAS liquid argon calorimeter for LHC collisions

Georges Aad, +2926 more
TL;DR: In this article, an overview of the ATLAS liquid argon calorimeter performance measured in situ with random triggers, calibration data, cosmic muons, and LHC beam splash events is presented.
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Performance of the ATLAS detector using first collision data

Georges Aad, +3256 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the performance of the ATLAS detector in the first half a million minimum bias events of the LHC collision data was investigated at center-of-mass energies of 0.9 TeV and 2.36 TeV.