I almost forgot to give a little update on new things happening in my field … Holger B. Nielsen is back with some new/updated theories!
He made it into the NY Times and to Tagessschau.de
I almost forgot to give a little update on new things happening in my field … Holger B. Nielsen is back with some new/updated theories!
He made it into the NY Times and to Tagessschau.de
I finally received my master certificate from the University of Copenhagen!
*pride*
One of the very special professors in Copenhagen just published a very interesting article about the “Search for Future Influence from L.H.C“…
Just have a look… it’s quite amusing!
I’m the master… yeah, right!
Last Friday (February 23rd) I got my “Master of Science (Physics)” degree at the Niels-Bohr-Institute in Copenhagen.
After now in total 5,5 years of physics studies I am finally done…
Now it’s time for the next step… a PhD in physics!
With a request from the Niels-Bohr-Institute (Copenhagen) and offers from Sacley (Paris), DESY-Zeuthen (Berlin) and the University of Freiburg, I got quite a selection… actually quite too big!
I’ll post my new address when I got it… so be expectant!
For now I am facing some troubles that I have to cope with first…
IT’S DONE!
“Electron Identification with the TRT
and the
W Boson Mass Measurement at ATLAS”
Thesis submitted for the degree of Candidatus Scientiarum in Physics by Sascha Mehlhase
Abstract
This thesis covers two physics analyses for the ATLAS experiment at CERN.
The first one, describing the mapping and optimisation of the electron identification in the TRT subdetector system, introduces new methods utilising the, so far unused, dE/dx information, carried in the time-over-threshold variable, as well as possible ways of combining this with the current algorithms. Based only on real data, its results will also be of use as input for a tuning of the Monte Carlo simulation of the system. Introducing a probability based approach for particle identification the overall pion rejection factor reaches value from 25 to 70. Especially at low energies an improvement, compared to the current method, of up to 300% is reached.
In the second analysis the systematic error in the W boson mass measurement, due to the theoretical description of real photons emitted by the final states in leptonic decays, is characterised. By observing the effect on parameters used for the mass measurement for successive theory improvements (orders in QED), the overall systematic error has been estimated to be about 8 MeV (5 MeV) for electrons (muons).