scispace - formally typeset
L

L. La Rotonda

Researcher at University of Calabria

Publications -  833
Citations -  80640

L. La Rotonda is an academic researcher from University of Calabria. The author has contributed to research in topics: Large Hadron Collider & Higgs boson. The author has an hindex of 128, co-authored 828 publications receiving 74492 citations. Previous affiliations of L. La Rotonda include CERN & West University of Timișoara.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Search for contact interactions in dimuon events from pp collisions at root s=7 TeV with the ATLAS detector

Georges Aad, +3071 more
- 01 Jul 2011 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a search for contact interactions was performed using dimuon events recorded with the ATLAS detector in proton-proton collisions at root s = 7 TeV.
Journal ArticleDOI

Erratum to: "Search for first generation scalar leptoquarks in pp collisions at s=7TeV with the ATLAS detector" [Phys. Lett. B 709 (2012) 158]

Georges Aad, +3114 more
- 23 May 2012 - 
TL;DR: Weerts et al. as mentioned in this paper corrected the legend of the y-axis of Fig 4 to read σ ( pp → LQLQ ) as shown in the corrected Fig 4 attached, rather than σ × BR.
Journal ArticleDOI

Study of ordered hadron chains with the ATLAS detector

Morad Aaboud, +2929 more
- 29 Nov 2017 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a model of a helical QCD string fragmenting into a chain of ground-state hadrons was proposed and a threshold momentum difference in the production of adjacent pairs of charged hadrons is observed, in agreement with model predictions.

ATLAS computing technical proposal

A. Airapetian, +1667 more

Comparison of fragmentation functions for light-quark- and gluon-dominated jets from $pp$ and Pb+Pb collisions in ATLAS

Morad Aaboud, +2912 more
TL;DR: In this article, charged-particle fragmentation functions for jets azimuthally balanced by a high-transverse-momentum, prompt, isolated photon are measured in $25$ pb$^{-1}$ of Pb+Pb collision data at $5.02$ TeV per nucleon pair with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider.