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Author

L. Linssen

Other affiliations: Max Planck Society
Bio: L. Linssen is an academic researcher from CERN. The author has contributed to research in topics: Collider & Neutrino. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 98 publications receiving 4254 citations. Previous affiliations of L. Linssen include Max Planck Society.


Papers
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Posted ContentDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the physics potential and experiments at a future multi-teV e+e collider based on the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) technology, taking into account the interaction point environment and especially beaminduced backgrounds.
Abstract: This report describes the physics potential and experiments at a future multi- TeV e+e collider based on the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) technology The physics scenarios considered include precision measurements of known quantities as well as the discovery potential of physics beyond the Standard Model The report describes the detector performance required at CLIC, taking into account the interaction point environment and especially beaminduced backgrounds Two detector concepts, designed around highly granular calorimeters and based on concepts studied for the International Linear Collider (ILC), are described and used to study the physics reach and potential of such a collider Detector subsystems and the principal engineering challenges are illustrated The overall performance of these CLIC detector concepts is demonstrated by studies of the performance of individual subdetector systems as well as complete simulation studies of six benchmark physics processes These full detector simulation and reconstruction studies include beaminduced backgrounds and physics background processes After optimisation of the detector concepts and adopting the reconstruction algorithms the results show very efficient background rejection and clearly demonstrate the physics potential at CLIC in terms of precision mass and cross section measurements Finally, an overview of future plans of the CLIC detector and physics study is given and a list of key detector R&D topics needed for detectors at CLIC is presented

353 citations

Posted Content
Sally Dawson, Andrei Gritsan, Heather E. Logan, Jianming Qian, Christopher George Tully, R. Van Kooten, A. Ajaib, A. Anastassov, Ian Anderson, D. M. Asner, O. Bake, V. Barger, Timothy Barklow, Brian Batell, M. Battaglia, S. Berge, A. Blondel, S. Bolognesi, J. E. Brau, E. Brownson, M. Cahill-Rowley, C. Calancha-Paredes, Chien-Yi Chen, W. Chou, Robert Clare, David B. Cline, Nathaniel Craig, Kyle Cranmer, M. De Gruttola, A. Elagin, R. Essig, Lisa L. Everett, Eric Feng, Keisuke Fujii, James S. Gainer, Yang Gao, Ilia Gogoladze, Stefania Gori, Ricardo Gonçalo, N. Graf, Christophe Grojean, Stefan Guindon, Howard E. Haber, Tao Han, Gordon H. Hanson, Roni Harnik, S. Heinemeyer, Ulrich Heintz, J.L. Hewett, Y. Ilchenko, A. Ishikawa, Ahmed Ismail, Vivek Jain, Patrick Janot, S. Kanemura1, S. Kawada, Robert Kehoe, Markus Klute1, A. V. Kotwal, K. Krueger, G. Kukartsev, Kunal Kumar, J. Kunkle2, M. Kurata, Ian M. Lewis, Yang Li, L. Linssen2, Elliot Lipeles, Richard B. Lipton, Tony Liss, Jenny List, Tiehui Liu, Zhen Liu, I. Low, T. Ma, Paul B. Mackenzie, Bruce Mellado, Kirill Melnikov, A. Miyamoto, Gudrid Moortgat-Pick, G. Mourou, Meenakshi Narain, H. A. Neal, Jason Nielsen, N. Okada, Hideki Okawa, J. Olsen, H. Ono, Peter Onyisi, N. Parashar3, Michael E. Peskin, Francis John Petriello, Tilman Plehn, Christopher Samuel Pollard, C. T. Potter, Kirill Prokofiev, Michael Rauch3, Tom Rizzo, Tania Robens, Vincent Rodriguez, P. Roloff, Richard Ruiz, Veronica Sanz, J. Sayre, Qaisar Shafi, Gabe Shaughnessy, Marc Sher, Frank Simon, N. Solyak, J. F. Strube, John Stupak, Shufang Su, Taikan Suehara, Tomohiko Tanabe, T. Tajima, V. I. Telnov, J. Tian, Scott Thomas, M. A. Thomson, Koji Tsumura, Cem Salih Ün, Mayda Velasco, Carlos E. M. Wagner, Song-Ming Wang, Shoichi Watanuki, Georg Weiglein, Andrew Whitbeck, Kei Yagyu, W-M. Yao, Hiroshi Yokoya, Seth Conrad Zenz, Dirk Zerwas, Yue Zhang, Y. Zhou 
TL;DR: The work of the Energy Frontier Higgs Boson working group of the 2013 Community Summer Study (Snowmass) as mentioned in this paper summarizes the key elements of a precision Higgs physics program and document the physics potential of future experimental facilities as elucidated during the Snowmass study.
Abstract: This report summarizes the work of the Energy Frontier Higgs Boson working group of the 2013 Community Summer Study (Snowmass). We identify the key elements of a precision Higgs physics program and document the physics potential of future experimental facilities as elucidated during the Snowmass study. We study Higgs couplings to gauge boson and fermion pairs, double Higgs production for the Higgs self-coupling, its quantum numbers and $C\!P$-mixing in Higgs couplings, the Higgs mass and total width, and prospects for direct searches for additional Higgs bosons in extensions of the Standard Model. Our report includes projections of measurement capabilities from detailed studies of the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC), a Gamma-Gamma Collider, the International Linear Collider (ILC), the Large Hadron Collider High-Luminosity Upgrade (HL-LHC), Very Large Hadron Colliders up to 100 TeV (VLHC), a Muon Collider, and a Triple-Large Electron Positron Collider (TLEP).

219 citations

ReportDOI
01 Feb 2010
TL;DR: The International Large Detector (ILD) is a concept for a detector at the International Linear Collider, ILC as discussed by the authors, which will collide electrons and positrons at energies of initially 500 GeV, upgradeable to 1 TeV.
Abstract: The International Large Detector (ILD) is a concept for a detector at the International Linear Collider, ILC. The ILC will collide electrons and positrons at energies of initially 500 GeV, upgradeable to 1 TeV. The ILC has an ambitious physics program, which will extend and complement that of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). A hallmark of physics at the ILC is precision. The clean initial state and the comparatively benign environment of a lepton collider are ideally suited to high precision measurements. To take full advantage of the physics potential of ILC places great demands on the detector performance. The design of ILD is driven by these requirements. Excellent calorimetry and tracking are combined to obtain the best possible overall event reconstruction, including the capability to reconstruct individual particles within jets for particle ow calorimetry. This requires excellent spatial resolution for all detector systems. A highly granular calorimeter system is combined with a central tracker which stresses redundancy and efficiency. In addition, efficient reconstruction of secondary vertices and excellent momentum resolution for charged particles are essential for an ILC detector. The interaction region of the ILC is designed to host two detectors, which can be moved into the beam position with a push-pull scheme. The mechanical design of ILD and the overall integration of subdetectors takes these operational conditions into account.

202 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
P. Astier1, D. Autiero2, A. Baldisseri, M. Baldo-Ceolin3  +169 moreInstitutions (23)
TL;DR: In this paper, the results of a search for vμ → v e oscillations in the NOMAD experiment at CERN were presented and the 90% confidence limits obtained are Δm2 < 0.4 eV 2 for maximal mixing and sin2(2θ) < 1.4 × 10-3 for large Δm 2.

184 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
J. Altegoer, M. Anfreville, C. Angelini, P. Astier  +154 moreInstitutions (21)
TL;DR: The NOMAD experiment as mentioned in this paper is a short base-line search for νμ − ντ oscillations in the CERN neutrino beam, which enables the reconstruction of individual particles produced in the neutrinos interactions.
Abstract: The NOMAD experiment is a short base-line search for νμ − ντ oscillations in the CERN neutrino beam. The ντ's are searched for through their charged current interactions followed by the observation of the resulting τ− through its electronic, muonic or hadronic decays. These decays are recognized using kinematical criteria necessitating the use of a light target which enables the reconstruction of individual particles produced in the neutrino interactions. This paper describes the various components of the NOMAD detector: the target and muon drift chambers, the electromagnetic and hadronic calorimeters, the preshower and transition radiation detectors and the veto and trigger scintillation counters. The beam and data acquisition system are also described. The quality of the reconstruction and individual particles is demonstrated through the ability of NOMAD to observe Ks0's, Λ0's and π0's. Finally, the observation of τ− through its electronic decay being one of the most promising channels in the search, the identification of electrons in NOMAD is discussed.

183 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
Claude Amsler1, Michael Doser2, Mario Antonelli, D. M. Asner3  +173 moreInstitutions (86)
TL;DR: This biennial Review summarizes much of particle physics, using data from previous editions.

12,798 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Pythia program as mentioned in this paper can be used to generate high-energy-physics ''events'' (i.e. sets of outgoing particles produced in the interactions between two incoming particles).
Abstract: The Pythia program can be used to generate high-energy-physics ''events'', i.e. sets of outgoing particles produced in the interactions between two incoming particles. The objective is to provide as accurate as possible a representation of event properties in a wide range of reactions, within and beyond the Standard Model, with emphasis on those where strong interactions play a role, directly or indirectly, and therefore multihadronic final states are produced. The physics is then not understood well enough to give an exact description; instead the program has to be based on a combination of analytical results and various QCD-based models. This physics input is summarized here, for areas such as hard subprocesses, initial- and final-state parton showers, underlying events and beam remnants, fragmentation and decays, and much more. Furthermore, extensive information is provided on all program elements: subroutines and functions, switches and parameters, and particle and process data. This should allow the user to tailor the generation task to the topics of interest.

6,300 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the first set of parton distribution functions (PDFs) determined with a methodology validated by a closure test is presented, which is based on LO, NLO and NNLO QCD theory and also includes electroweak corrections.
Abstract: We present NNPDF3.0, the first set of parton distribution functions (PDFs) determined with a methodology validated by a closure test. NNPDF3.0 uses a global dataset including HERA-II deep-inelastic inclusive cross-sections, the combined HERA charm data, jet production from ATLAS and CMS, vector boson rapidity and transverse momentum distributions from ATLAS, CMS and LHCb, W+c data from CMS and top quark pair production total cross sections from ATLAS and CMS. Results are based on LO, NLO and NNLO QCD theory and also include electroweak corrections. To validate our methodology, we show that PDFs determined from pseudo-data generated from a known underlying law correctly reproduce the statistical distributions expected on the basis of the assumed experimental uncertainties. This closure test ensures that our methodological uncertainties are negligible in comparison to the generic theoretical and experimental uncertainties of PDF determination. This enables us to determine with confidence PDFs at different perturbative orders and using a variety of experimental datasets ranging from HERA-only up to a global set including the latest LHC results, all using precisely the same validated methodology. We explore some of the phenomenological implications of our results for the upcoming 13 TeV Run of the LHC, in particular for Higgs production cross-sections.

2,028 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the final electroweak measurements performed with data taken at the Z resonance by the experiments operating at the electron-positron colliders SLC and LEP are reported.

1,381 citations