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Jinhong Yu

Other affiliations: Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, CERN, Fermilab  ...read more
Bio: Jinhong Yu is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Large Hadron Collider & Thermal conductivity. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 577 publications receiving 22181 citations. Previous affiliations of Jinhong Yu include Federal University of Rio de Janeiro & CERN.


Papers
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DOI
20 May 2011
TL;DR: The first 10 months of the LHC Higgs Cross Sections Working Group (HCWG) were summarized in a complete and homogeneous form in this paper, where the main goal of the working group was to present the status-of-the-art on Higgs Physics at the Large Hadron Collider integrating all new results that have appeared in the last few years.
Abstract: This Report summarizes the results of the first 10 months' activities of the LHC Higgs Cross Sections Working Group. The main goal of the working group was to present the status-of-art on Higgs Physics at the LHC integrating all new results that have appeared in the last few years. The Report is more than a mere collection of the proceedings of the general meetings. The subgroups have been working in different directions. An attempt has been made to present the first Report from these subgroups in a complete and homogeneous form. The subgroups' contributions correspondingly comprise the main parts of the Report. A significant amount of work has been performed in providing higher-order corrections to the Higgs-boson cross sections and pinning down the theoretical uncertainty of the Standard Model predictions. This Report comprises explicit numerical results on total cross sections, leaving the issues of event selection cuts and differential distributions to future publications. The subjects for further study are identified.

590 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Georges Aad, B. Abbott1, Jalal Abdallah2, A. A. Abdelalim3  +3013 moreInstitutions (174)
TL;DR: In this article, detailed measurements of the electron performance of the ATLAS detector at the LHC were reported, using decays of the Z, W and J/psi particles.
Abstract: Detailed measurements of the electron performance of the ATLAS detector at the LHC are reported, using decays of the Z, W and J/psi particles. Data collected in 2010 at root s = 7 TeV are used, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of almost 40 pb(-1). The inter-alignment of the inner detector and the electromagnetic calorimeter, the determination of the electron energy scale and resolution, and the performance in terms of response uniformity and linearity are discussed. The electron identification, reconstruction and trigger efficiencies, as well as the charge misidentification probability, are also presented.

505 citations

Posted ContentDOI
TL;DR: The first 10 months of the LHC Higgs Cross Sections Working Group (HCWG) were summarized in a complete and homogeneous form in this article, where the main goal of the working group was to present the status-of-the-art on Higgs Physics at the Large Hadron Collider integrating all new results that have appeared in the last few years.
Abstract: This Report summarizes the results of the first 10 months' activities of the LHC Higgs Cross Sections Working Group. The main goal of the working group was to present the status-of-art on Higgs Physics at the LHC integrating all new results that have appeared in the last few years. The Report is more than a mere collection of the proceedings of the general meetings. The subgroups have been working in different directions. An attempt has been made to present the first Report from these subgroups in a complete and homogeneous form. The subgroups' contributions correspondingly comprise the main parts of the Report. A significant amount of work has been performed in providing higher-order corrections to the Higgs-boson cross sections and pinning down the theoretical uncertainty of the Standard Model predictions. This Report comprises explicit numerical results on total cross sections, leaving the issues of event selection cuts and differential distributions to future publications. The subjects for further study are identified.

431 citations

Posted ContentDOI
S. Dittmaier, Sami Lehti, W. J. Stirling, Giacinto Piacquadio, Gavin P. Salam, Amanda Cooper-Sarkar, M. Warsinsky, Ivica Puljak, Markus Schumacher, B. Di Micco, S. Goria, Bruce Mellado1, Nikolas Kauer, Iain W. Stewart, Andrea Banfi, David D'Enterria, Keith Hamilton, Frank Siegert, Giancarlo Ferrera, Fabio Maltoni, Richard Keith Ellis, Marek Schönherr, D. Rosco, Frank Krauss, Sasha Glazov, C. Neu, Trevor Vickey, F. J. Tackmann, Daniela Rebuzzi, C. B. Jackson, S. Palmer, M. Muhlleitner, Reisaburo Tanaka, C.M. Kuo, Alexander Nikitenko, E. Pilon, H. Y. Kim, Emanuele Bagnaschi, Markus Hauru, Marta Felcini, P. Slavich, Joey Huston, C. T. Potter, Qiang Li, Laura Reina, Frank Petriello, J. D. Price, Robert V. Harlander, Robert S. Thorne, R. Di Nardo, M. Vazquez Acosta, S. M. Gascon-Shotkin, Christian Sturm, S. Paganis, Sergey Alekhin, William Quayle, Georg Weiglein, Massimiliano Grazzini, Sally Dawson, J. Olsen, M. Flechl, Juan Rojo, Alessandro Vicini, Voica Radescu, Joergensen, Giulia Zanderighi, Maria Vittoria Garzelli, Serguei Ganjour, N. Lorenzo, Chiara Mariotti, C. Hackstein, Pavel Nadolsky, Jana Schaarschmidt, Fabian Stockli, Daniel de Florian, S. Höche, Ting Cheng1, S. Uccirati, A. Mück, Carlo Oleari, Maria Ubiali2, A. Farilla, Stefano Forte, Pedro Jimenez-Delgado, Wouter J. Waalewijn, Fabrizio Petrucci, Paolo Nason, Sara Diglio, Michael Kramer, Troels Petersen, S. O. Moch, Marc Weber, S. Heinemeyer, Gavin Davies, Marumi Kado, Michael Spira, N. De Filippis, S. Kallweit, Nicolas Chanon, J. Ph. Guillet, M. Cutajar, Andrey Sapronov, Johannes Blümlein, J. Alwall, Marius Wiesemann, M. Kovac, Giampiero Passarino, Adam Kardos2, S. Bolognesi, Ansgar Denner, Leandro Cieri, Sinead Farrington, Costas G. Papadopoulos, Davide Tommasini, Jinhong Yu, Doreen Wackeroth, Zoltan Laszlo Trocsanyi, Giuseppe Degrassi, P. Torrielli, Francesco Tramontano 
TL;DR: The second edition of the LHC Higgs Cross Section Working Group (HCSWG) as mentioned in this paper was published in 2011 and focused on predictions (central values and errors) for total Higgs production cross sections and Higgs branching ratios in the Standard Model and its minimal supersymmetric extension, covering also related issues such as Monte Carlo generators, parton distribution functions and pseudo-observables.
Abstract: This Report summarises the results of the second year's activities of the LHC Higgs Cross Section Working Group. The main goal of the working group was to present the state of the art of Higgs Physics at the LHC, integrating all new results that have appeared in the last few years. The first working group report Handbook of LHC Higgs Cross Sections: 1. Inclusive Observables (CERN-2011-002) focuses on predictions (central values and errors) for total Higgs production cross sections and Higgs branching ratios in the Standard Model and its minimal supersymmetric extension, covering also related issues such as Monte Carlo generators, parton distribution functions, and pseudo-observables. This second Report represents the next natural step towards realistic predictions upon providing results on cross sections with benchmark cuts, differential distributions, details of specific decay channels, and further recent developments.

427 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Georges Aad1, Georges Aad2, Brad Abbott3, Brad Abbott1  +5592 moreInstitutions (189)
TL;DR: The ATLAS trigger system as discussed by the authors selects events by rapidly identifying signatures of muon, electron, photon, tau lepton, jet, and B meson candidates, as well as using global event signatures, such as missing transverse energy.
Abstract: Proton-proton collisions at root s = 7 TeV and heavy ion collisions at root(NN)-N-s = 2.76 TeV were produced by the LHC and recorded using the ATLAS experiment's trigger system in 2010. The LHC is designed with a maximum bunch crossing rate of 40 MHz and the ATLAS trigger system is designed to record approximately 200 of these per second. The trigger system selects events by rapidly identifying signatures of muon, electron, photon, tau lepton, jet, and B meson candidates, as well as using global event signatures, such as missing transverse energy. An overview of the ATLAS trigger system, the evolution of the system during 2010 and the performance of the trigger system components and selections based on the 2010 collision data are shown. A brief outline of plans for the trigger system in 2011 is presented.

417 citations


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