Collider Physics at the LHC

Lead Research Organisation: University of Glasgow
Department Name: School of Physics and Astronomy

Abstract

My research focuses predominantly on collider physics, namely what one expects to see inside a particle accelerator. Such experiments have been in use for many decades, and current machines (such as the forthcoming Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, near Geneva) are probing higher energies than ever before. In order to understand what happens in these experiments, detailed calculations are necessary in order to determine how the various particles involved interact. In the LHC, protons are collided together to create a localised concentration of very high energy, out of which new particles emerge. One such particle is the so-called top quark, first discovered in 1995. This is the heaviest known particle in our current description of particle physics (known as the Standard Model), and many of its properties are still poorly understood. The calculation and measurement of its behaviour are important for two main reasons. Firstly, we would like to complete our understanding of its properties. Secondly, it is strongly believed that new physics exists beyond the current Standard Model, and that the LHC will be pivotal in uncovering this. There are strong motivations for believing that this new physics will affect the behaviour of the top quark. Thus, detailed calculation of its properties as presently understood, together with investigation of how various ideas for theories beyond the Standard Model have an impact on its interactions, are necessary tasks. I am heavily involved in these calculations, which ultimately take the form of large computer programs used by experimentalists. The output of the LHC is dominated by events which have lots of particles. These arrange themselves in collimated jets, and there can be many of these in each event. In principle the properties of these jets can be calculated using a theory called Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), the part of the Standard Model that explains the behaviour of the quarks and gluons which collectively make up protons. However, it is extremely difficult to carry out these calculations exactly. I have been involved in the development of a new approximate method for calculating the properties of events containing many jets, which is fast to apply with present computing power. This technique has so far been applied to a process of high topical interest - the production of a Higgs boson, a particle thought to be responsible for the origin of mass. Being able to calculate the properties of how the Higgs is produced allows us to efficiently search for this particle, as well as measure its properties.

Publications

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Del Duca V (2011) The infrared structure of gauge theory amplitudes in the high-energy limit in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Del Duca V (2012) Infrared approach to Reggeization in Physical Review D

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Gardi E (2011) General properties of multiparton webs: proofs from combinatorics in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Gardi E (2010) Webs in multiparton scattering using the replica trick in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Gardi E (2011) On the renormalization of multiparton webs in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Godbole R (2012) Top polarisation studies in H - t and W t production in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Laenen E (2011) Next-to-eikonal corrections to soft gluon radiation: a diagrammatic approach in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Laenen E (2010) On next-to-eikonal exponentiation in Nuclear Physics B - Proceedings Supplements

 
Description This grant achieved the following results:

* Software was developed to predict the behaviour of the top quark with additional particles, from possible new physics theories. This software was subsequently used in experimental analyses at the LHC, to set world-leading bounds on the existence of such new physics.

* New methods were developed to study the behaviour of "soft" (low energy) radiation of quarks and gluons, which accompanies any scattering event at modern particle accelerators such as the LHC. These calculations have subsequently been used to show how the precision of theory predictions needed by experiments can be increased.

* Methods developed in QCD (the theory of quarks and gluons, constituents of the proton) were shown to also apply in possible theories of quantum gravity. More specifically, a result was given for how gravitons should radiate away from the strict low energy ("soft") limit. In the last couple of years, this result has received significant global attention, particularly from string theorists in the US.
Exploitation Route See above.
Sectors Education,Energy,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections,Other

 
Description Particle Physics Masterclass 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Type Of Presentation Keynote/Invited Speaker
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact Presented research results on quantum gravity to schoolchildren from local schools, as part of a day long particle physics event.

500 children have attended in the past four years, with 65% subsequently applying to study physics at the University of Glasgow. 22 participants were from disadvantaged backgrounds, as measured by the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2010,2011,2012,2013