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Institution

Paul Scherrer Institute

FacilityVilligen, Switzerland
About: Paul Scherrer Institute is a facility organization based out in Villigen, Switzerland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Neutron & Large Hadron Collider. The organization has 9248 authors who have published 23984 publications receiving 890129 citations. The organization is also known as: PSI.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered the theoretical and experimental constraints on two-Higgs-doublet models, focusing on the parameter space relevant to explain the present muon g-2 anomaly, Delta alpha(mu), in four different types of models, type I, II, lepton specific and flipped.
Abstract: We update the constraints on two-Higgs-doublet models (2HDMs) focusing on the parameter space relevant to explain the present muon g - 2 anomaly, Delta alpha(mu), in four different types of models, type I, II, ``lepton specific'' (or X) and ``flipped'' (or Y). We show that the strong constraints provided by the electroweak precision data on the mass of the pseudoscalar Higgs, whose contribution may account for Delta alpha(mu), are evaded in regions where the charged scalar is degenerate with the heavy neutral one and the mixing angles alpha and beta satisfy the Standard Model limit beta - alpha approximate to pi/2. We combine theoretical constraints from vacuum stability and perturbativity with direct and indirect bounds arising from collider and B physics. Possible future constraints from the electron g - 2 are also considered. If the 126 GeV resonance discovered at the LHC is interpreted as the light CP-even Higgs boson of the 2HDM, we find that only models of type X can satisfy all the considered theoretical and experimental constraints.

194 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the trajectories of charged particles produced in the collisions were reconstructed using the all-silicon Tracker and their momenta were measured in the 3.8 T axial magnetic field.
Abstract: The first LHC pp collisions at centre-of-mass energies of 0.9 and 2.36 TeV were recorded by the CMS detector in December 2009. The trajectories of charged particles produced in the collisions were reconstructed using the all-silicon Tracker and their momenta were measured in the 3.8 T axial magnetic field. Results from the Tracker commissioning are presented including studies of timing, efficiency, signal-to-noise, resolution, and ionization energy. Reconstructed tracks are used to benchmark the performance in terms of track and vertex resolutions, reconstruction of decays, estimation of ionization energy loss, as well as identification of photon conversions, nuclear interactions, and heavy-flavour decays.

194 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the hygroscopic growth of solid aerosol particles consisting of mixtures of ammonium sulfate and either adipic acid or Aldrich humic acid sodium salt was characterized with a hy-scopicity tandem differential mobility analyzer and an electrodynamic balance.

193 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a measurement of the single-top-quark t-channel production cross section in pp collisions at s√=7 TeV with the CMS detector at the LHC is presented.
Abstract: A measurement of the single-top-quark t-channel production cross section in pp collisions at s√=7 TeV with the CMS detector at the LHC is presented. Two different and complementary approaches have been followed. The first approach exploits the distributions of the pseudorapidity of the recoil jet and reconstructed top-quark mass using background estimates determined from control samples in data. The second approach is based on multivariate analysis techniques that probe the compatibility of the candidate events with the signal. Data have been collected for the muon and electron final states, corresponding to integrated luminosities of 1.17 and 1.56 fb^(−1), respectively. The single-top-quark production cross section in the t-channel is measured to be 67.2±6.1 pb, in agreement with the approximate next-to-next-to-leading-order standard model prediction. Using the standard model electroweak couplings, the CKM matrix element |V_(tb)| is measured to be 1.020 ± 0.046 (meas.) ± 0.017 (theor.).

193 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an energy analysis of the thermal decomposition of solid urea and urea solutions is presented, and the results are discussed in view of urea selective catalytic reduction (SCR) for automotive DeNOx systems.
Abstract: An energetic analysis of the thermal decomposition of solid urea and urea solutions is presented, and the results are discussed in view of urea selective catalytic reduction (SCR) for automotive DeNOx systems. Various types of decomposition reactors are possible which differ in their effectiveness to produce ammonia from urea. For reasons of simplicity, the decomposition is usually performed by atomizing urea solutions directly into the hot exhaust. However, this technique suffers from short residence times, leading to incomplete decomposition into ammonia and isocyanic acid and causing a significant performance loss of the SCR catalyst. The thermal decomposition out of the main exhaust stream allows much increased residence times for the process of urea decomposition. A reactor utilizing a partial stream of the exhaust seems particularly promising, especially if such a reactor includes a hydrolyzing catalyst, leading to ammonia practically free from isocyanic acid.

193 citations


Authors

Showing all 9348 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Andrea Bocci1722402176461
Tobin J. Marks1591621111604
Wolfgang Wagner1562342123391
David D'Enterria1501592116210
Andreas Pfeiffer1491756131080
Christoph Grab1441359144174
Maurizio Pierini1431782104406
Alexander Belyaev1421895100796
Ajit Kumar Mohanty141112493062
Felicitas Pauss1411623104493
Chiara Mariotti141142698157
Luc Pape1411441130253
Rainer Wallny1411661105387
Roland Horisberger1391471100458
Emmanuelle Perez138155099016
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202363
2022199
20211,299
20201,442
20191,330
20181,298