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Leandro Cieri

Bio: Leandro Cieri is an academic researcher from University of Milano-Bicocca. The author has contributed to research in topics: Higgs boson & Quantum chromodynamics. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 50 publications receiving 3106 citations. Previous affiliations of Leandro Cieri include University of Buenos Aires & Sapienza University of Rome.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A fully exclusive calculation up to next-to-next- to-leading order (NNLO) in QCD perturbation theory is presented and selected numerical results at the Fermilab Tevatron and the LHC are shown.
Abstract: We consider QCD radiative corrections to the production of W and Z bosons in hadron collisions. We present a fully exclusive calculation up to next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in QCD perturbation theory. To perform this NNLO computation, we use a recently proposed version of the subtraction formalism. The calculation includes the gamma-Z interference, finite-width effects, the leptonic decay of the vector bosons, and the corresponding spin correlations. Our calculation is implemented in a parton level Monte Carlo program. The program allows the user to apply arbitrary kinematical cuts on the final-state leptons and the associated jet activity and to compute the corresponding distributions in the form of bin histograms. We show selected numerical results at the Fermilab Tevatron and the LHC.

746 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

Posted Content
TL;DR: The proceedings of the 2013 Les Houches workshop on physics at TeV colliders as discussed by the authors dealt primarily with the techniques for calculating standard model multi-leg NLO and NNLO QCD and NLO EW cross sections and comparison of those cross sections with LHC data from Run 1, and projections for future measurements in Run 2.
Abstract: This Report summarizes the proceedings of the 2013 Les Houches workshop on Physics at TeV Colliders. Session 1 dealt primarily with (1) the techniques for calculating standard model multi-leg NLO and NNLO QCD and NLO EW cross sections and (2) the comparison of those cross sections with LHC data from Run 1, and projections for future measurements in Run 2.

343 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered direct diphoton production in hadron collisions, and they computed the next-to-next-toleading order (NNLO) QCD radiative corrections at the fully-differential level.
Abstract: We consider direct diphoton production in hadron collisions, and we compute the next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) QCD radiative corrections at the fully-differential level. Our calculation uses the $q_T$ subtraction formalism and it is implemented in a parton level Monte Carlo program. The program allows the user to apply arbitrary kinematical cuts on the final-state photons and the associated jet activity, and to compute the corresponding distributions in the form of bin histograms. We present selected numerical results related to Higgs boson searches at the LHC and corresponding results at the Tevatron.

225 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider QCD radiative corrections to the production of colorless high-mass systems in hadron collisions and show that the hard factor is directly related to the all-order virtual amplitude of the corresponding partonic process.

185 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
Georges Aad1, T. Abajyan2, Brad Abbott3, Jalal Abdallah4  +2964 moreInstitutions (200)
TL;DR: In this article, a search for the Standard Model Higgs boson in proton-proton collisions with the ATLAS detector at the LHC is presented, which has a significance of 5.9 standard deviations, corresponding to a background fluctuation probability of 1.7×10−9.

9,282 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: MadGraph5 aMC@NLO as discussed by the authors is a computer program capable of handling all these computations, including parton-level fixed order, shower-matched, merged, in a unified framework whose defining features are flexibility, high level of parallelisation and human intervention limited to input physics quantities.
Abstract: We discuss the theoretical bases that underpin the automation of the computations of tree-level and next-to-leading order cross sections, of their matching to parton shower simulations, and of the merging of matched samples that differ by light-parton multiplicities. We present a computer program, MadGraph5 aMC@NLO, capable of handling all these computations — parton-level fixed order, shower-matched, merged — in a unified framework whose defining features are flexibility, high level of parallelisation, and human intervention limited to input physics quantities. We demonstrate the potential of the program by presenting selected phenomenological applications relevant to the LHC and to a 1-TeV e + e − collider. While next-to-leading order results are restricted to QCD corrections to SM processes in the first public version, we show that from the user viewpoint no changes have to be expected in the case of corrections due to any given renormalisable Lagrangian, and that the implementation of these are well under way.

6,509 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Pythia 8.2 is the second main release after the complete rewrite from Fortran to C++, and now has reached such a maturity that it offers a complete replacement for most applications, notably for LHC physics studies.

4,503 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