Benjamin Kilminster’s research while affiliated with University of Zurich and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (604)


Development of a timing chip prototype in 110 nm CMOS technology
  • Preprint
  • File available

February 2023

·

20 Reads

Matias Senger

·

Lea Caminada

·

Benjamin Kilminster

·

[...]

·

Stephan Wiederkehr

We present a readout chip prototype for future pixel detectors with timing capabilities. The prototype is intended for characterizing 4D pixel arrays with a pixel size of 100×100 μm2100\times100~\mu \text{m}^2, where the sensors are Low Gain Avalanche Diodes (LGADs). The long-term focus is towards a possible replacement of disks in the extended forward pixel system (TEPX) of the CMS experiment during the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC). The requirements for this ASIC are the incorporation of a Time to Digital Converter (TDC) within each pixel, low power consumption, and radiation tolerance up to 5×1015 neq cm25\times10^{15}~n_\text{eq}\text{~cm}^{-2} to withstand the radiation levels in the innermost detector modules for 3000fb13000 \text{fb}^{-1} of the HL-LHC (in the TEPX). A prototype has been designed and produced in 110~nm CMOS technology at LFoundry and UMC with different versions of TDC structures, together with a front end circuitry to interface with the sensors. The design of the TDC will be discussed, with the test set-up for the measurements, and the first results comparing the performance of the different structures.

Download

Performance of triple-GEM detectors for the CMS Phase-2 upgrade measured in test beam

January 2023

·

25 Reads

·

1 Citation

Triple-GEM detectors for the GE2/1 and ME0 stations of the endcap muon system for the Phase-2 upgrade of the CMS Experiment have been operated in a test beam to measure their efficiency and spatial resolution, together with a high spatial resolution triple-GEM tracker. A production module of GE2/1 detectors and a prototype ME0 detector show excellent local efficiency. A prototype detector with GEM foils employing random hole sectorization showed significant reduction of dead areas. The spatial resolution of the tracker has been measured and found close to the expected value of 75 µm.



Figure 4. Diagram showing the regions used for background estimation. The signal region is C, the regions A and B are used to determine TF(p T , η), and F, K, and H are validation regions. The x axis indicates the t tag category, and the y axis represents the Higgs or Z boson tag category. The inverted, medium, and tight tag category definitions are given in table 1.
Selection regions used for signal identification and background estimation. The AK8 jet discriminant and mass selections are explicitly defined here for the t, Higgs, and Z jet tags. m W (GeV) tHb low tHb medium tHb high tZb low tZb medium tZb high
Search for a W′ boson decaying to a vector-like quark and a top or bottom quark in the all-jets final state at s \sqrt{\mathrm{s}} = 13 TeV

September 2022

·

202 Reads

·

14 Citations

Journal of High Energy Physics

A bstract A search is presented for a heavy W′ boson resonance decaying to a B or T vector-like quark and a t or a b quark, respectively. The analysis is performed using proton-proton collisions collected with the CMS detector at the LHC. The data correspond to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb − 1 at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. Both decay channels result in a signature with a t quark, a Higgs or Z boson, and a b quark, each produced with a significant Lorentz boost. The all-hadronic decays of the Higgs or Z boson and of the t quark are selected using jet substructure techniques to reduce standard model backgrounds, resulting in a distinct three-jet W′ boson decay signature. No significant deviation in data with respect to the standard model background prediction is observed. Upper limits are set at 95% confidence level on the product of the W′ boson cross section and the final state branching fraction. A W′ boson with a mass below 3.1 TeV is excluded, given the benchmark model assumption of democratic branching fractions. In addition, limits are set based on generalizations of these assumptions. These are the most sensitive limits to date for this final state.


Search for Higgs Boson Pair Production in the Four b Quark Final State in Proton-Proton Collisions at s = 13 TeV

August 2022

·

217 Reads

·

43 Citations

Physical Review Letters

A search for pairs of Higgs bosons produced via gluon and vector boson fusion is presented, focusing on the four b quark final state. The data sample consists of proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV, collected with the CMS detector at the LHC, and corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb−1. No deviation from the background-only hypothesis is observed. A 95% confidence level upper limit on the Higgs boson pair production cross section is observed at 3.9 times the standard model prediction for an expected value of 7.8. Constraints are also set on the modifiers of the Higgs field self-coupling, κλ, and of the coupling of two Higgs bosons to two vector bosons, κ2 V. The observed (expected) allowed intervals at the 95% confidence level are −2.3<κλ<9.4 (−5.0<κλ<12.0) and −0.1<κ2 V<2.2 (−0.4<κ2 V<2.5). These are the most stringent observed constraints to date on the HH production cross section and on the κ2 V coupling.


Figure 4. Measurement of the DY forward-backward asymmetry as a function the dilepton mass compared with the MC predictions. The green line is the predicted value for A FB from the aMC@NLO simulation and the shaded green region its uncertainty. The red, blue, and black points and error bars represent the dimuon, dielectron, and combined measurements, respectively. Error bars on the measurements include both statistical and systematic components.
Measurement of the Drell-Yan forward-backward asymmetry at high dilepton masses in proton-proton collisions at s \sqrt{s} = 13 TeV

August 2022

·

123 Reads

·

14 Citations

Journal of High Energy Physics

A bstract A measurement of the forward-backward asymmetry of pairs of oppositely charged leptons (dimuons and dielectrons) produced by the Drell-Yan process in proton-proton collisions is presented. The data sample corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb − 1 collected with the CMS detector at the LHC at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. The asymmetry is measured as a function of lepton pair mass for masses larger than 170 GeV and compared with standard model predictions. An inclusive measurement across both channels and the full mass range yields an asymmetry of 0 . 612 ± 0 . 005 (stat) ± 0 . 007 (syst). As a test of lepton flavor universality, the difference between the dimuon and dielectron asymmetries is measured as well. No statistically significant deviations from standard model predictions are observed. The measurements are used to set limits on the presence of additional gauge bosons. For a Z′ boson in the sequential standard model the observed (expected) 95% confidence level lower limit on the Z′ mass is 4.4 TeV (3.7 TeV).


Search for Flavor-Changing Neutral Current Interactions of the Top Quark and Higgs Boson in Final States with Two Photons in Proton-Proton Collisions at s = 13 TeV

July 2022

·

112 Reads

·

25 Citations

Physical Review Letters

Proton-proton interactions resulting in final states with two photons are studied in a search for the signature of flavor-changing neutral current interactions of top quarks (t) and Higgs bosons (H). The analysis is based on data collected at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV with the CMS detector at the LHC, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 137 fb^{-1}. No significant excess above the background prediction is observed. Upper limits on the branching fractions (B) of the top quark decaying to a Higgs boson and an up (u) or charm (c) quark are derived through a binned fit to the diphoton invariant mass spectrum. The observed (expected) 95% confidence level upper limits are found to be 0.019% (0.031%) for B(t→Hu) and 0.073% (0.051%) for B(t→Hc). These are the strictest upper limits yet determined.


FIG. 1. Schematic representation of the decay of a KK excitation W KK to the final states considered in this analysis. Left: three individually reconstructed W bosons with resolved R; right: one individually reconstructed W boson and two merged W bosons reconstructed as a single large-radius jet.
FIG. 4. Observed upper limits at 95% CL on the product of the signal cross section and the branching fraction (σB) to three W bosons as functions of the W KK and R resonance masses. Expected (dashed lines) and observed (solid lines) lower mass limits are shown as well for the particular parameters of the explored model. The blue straight dashed line indicates the border between merged and resolved radion cases. The limits obtained from this analysis are shown in red, and the results of the combination with Ref. [18] are shown in black.
Search for Resonances Decaying to Three W Bosons in Proton-Proton Collisions at sqrt[s]=13 TeV

July 2022

·

104 Reads

·

3 Citations

Physical Review Letters

A search for resonances decaying into a W boson and a radion, where the radion decays into two W bosons, is presented. The data analyzed correspond to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb^{-1} recorded in proton-proton collisions with the CMS detector at sqrt[s]=13 TeV. One isolated charged lepton is required, together with missing transverse momentum and one or two massive large-radius jets, containing the decay products of either two or one W bosons, respectively. No excess over the background estimation is observed. The results are combined with those from a complementary channel with an all-hadronic final state, described in an accompanying paper. Limits are set on parameters of an extended warped extra-dimensional model. These searches are the first of their kind at the LHC.


FIG. 1. An example of the two-step fit of the mass spectrum (upper) and v sigþbkg 2 f4g (lower) in the P T interval 3-4 GeV for the centrality class 30%-50%.
FIG. 2. Upper panel: prompt D 0 meson v 2 f2g and v 2 f4g coefficients as a function of P T , for the centrality classes 10%-30% (left) and 30%-50% (right). The lines indicate calculations from the DABMod model [11,12], with solid (dashed) lines indicating v 2 f4g (v 2 f2g) values. Blue lines include Langevin dynamics and green lines include radiative energy loss (E-loss). Lower panel: the prompt D 0 meson v 2 f4g=v 2 f2g ratios are shown and compared to those for charged particles in the pseudorapidity range jηj < 1 [53]. The vertical bars represent statistical uncertainties and the open boxes denote the systematic uncertainties.
Probing Charm Quark Dynamics via Multiparticle Correlations in Pb-Pb Collisions at s NN = 5.02 TeV

July 2022

·

116 Reads

·

15 Citations

Physical Review Letters

Multiparticle azimuthal correlations of prompt D^{0} mesons are measured in Pb-Pb collisions at a nucleon-nucleon center-of-mass energy of sqrt[s_{NN}]=5.02 TeV. For the first time, a four-particle cumulant method is used to extract the second Fourier coefficient of the azimuthal distribution (v_{2}) of D^{0} mesons as a function of event centrality and the D^{0} transverse momentum. The ratios of the four-particle v_{2} values to previously measured two-particle cumulant results provide direct experimental access to event-by-event fluctuations of charm quark azimuthal anisotropies. These ratios are also found to be comparable to those of inclusive charged particles in the event. However, hints of deviations are seen in the most central and peripheral collisions. To investigate the origin of flow fluctuations in the charm sector, these measurements are compared to a model implementing fluctuations of charm quark energy loss via collisional or radiative processes in the quark-gluon plasma. These models cannot quantitatively describe the data over the full transverse momentum and centrality ranges, although the calculations with collisional energy loss provide a better description of the data.


Figure 8. Data-to-simulation scale factors for genuine τ h to be reconstructed as τ h candidates and to pass the Loose, Medium, and Tight working points of the í µí°· jet discriminator as a function of the τ h candidate í µí± T (left). Vertical bars correspond to the combined statistical and systematic uncertainties in the individual scale factors. The red hatched bands indicate the uncertainties for í µí± T > 40 GeV, obtained from a combination of the individual measurements. The right plot shows the data-to-simulation scale factors for the τ h candidates with í µí± T > 40 GeV to pass the Medium í µí°· jet working point as a function of reconstructed τ h decay mode. The efficiencies are obtained with 2018 data and the according simulated events using a likelihood fit to the distribution of the reconstructed í µí±š vis (µ, τ h ). The scale factors are shown separately for data taken in 2016, 2017, and 2018 (and the corresponding simulated events) and for the four main τ h decay modes.
Figure 9. Relative difference between τ h energy obtained in data and simulated events for the four main reconstructed τ h decay modes for the 2018 data set. The results are obtained from fits to the distribution of either the reconstructed í µí±š vis (µ, τ h ) (blue lines) or í µí±š τ h (black lines). The horizontal bars represent the uncertainties in the measurements. The measured values are consistent with no shift of the τ h energy scale between data and simulation, with the largest difference amounting to 1.5 standard deviations.
Target τ h identification efficiencies for the different working points defined for the three different discriminators. The target efficiencies are evaluated with the H → τ τ event sample for τ h with í µí± T ∈ [30, 70] GeV.
Identification of hadronic tau lepton decays using a deep neural network

July 2022

·

133 Reads

·

62 Citations

Journal of Instrumentation

A new algorithm is presented to discriminate reconstructed hadronic decays of tau leptons ( τ h ) that originate from genuine tau leptons in the CMS detector against τ h candidates that originate from quark or gluon jets, electrons, or muons. The algorithm inputs information from all reconstructed particles in the vicinity of a τ h candidate and employs a deep neural network with convolutional layers to efficiently process the inputs. This algorithm leads to a significantly improved performance compared with the previously used one. For example, the efficiency for a genuine τ h to pass the discriminator against jets increases by 10–30% for a given efficiency for quark and gluon jets. Furthermore, a more efficient τ h reconstruction is introduced that incorporates additional hadronic decay modes. The superior performance of the new algorithm to discriminate against jets, electrons, and muons and the improved τ h reconstruction method are validated with LHC proton-proton collision data at √ s = 13 TeV.


Citations (69)


... Timing resolution results pre-and post-irradiation for prototypes from FBK (left) and HPK (right) latest productions[7]. ...

Reference:

Progress on characterization of LGAD sensors for the CMS ETL
The CMS MTD Endcap Timing Layer: Precision timing with Low Gain Avalanche Diodes
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

... The LHP seems to have emerged in the wake of recent LHC results [7,8] which apparently require m sof t ≫ m weak and is exemplified by recent sparticle search limits on gluino (mg ≳ 2.3 TeV [9][10][11]) and top-squark (mt 1 ≳ 1.2 TeV [12, 13]) masses within the context of simplified SUSY models. Thus, the LHP is concerned with a smaller hierarchy mismatch wherein m sof t ∼ 1 − 10 TeV is ≫ m weak ∼ 0.1 TeV. ...

Search for supersymmetry in final states with two or three soft leptons and missing transverse momentum in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

Journal of High Energy Physics

... CMS Collaboration has reported the observed (expected) upper limit on the invisible branching fraction of the Higgs boson to be 0.18 (0.10) at the 95% con¯dence level, by assuming the SM production cross-section. 82 A similar analysis was performed by ATLAS collaboration in which an observed upper limit of 0.145 is placed on the branching fraction of its decay into invisible particles at a 95% con¯dence level. 83 Figure 2 shows the allowed range of parameters by considering CMS 82 upper limit for invisible Higgs mode. ...

Search for invisible decays of the Higgs boson produced via vector boson fusion in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

... Since CMS and ECAL were designed for 300 fb −1 at 1 × 10 34 cm −2 s −1 an upgrade of the detector is required and planned. 10,11 In Fig. 3, you can evaluate the expected crystal transparency degradation as a function of |η|, for different values of the integrated hadron fluence in EB and EE. ...

Phase 1 upgrade of the CMS Hadron Barrel Calorimeter
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

... Similar kinematic thresholds can be exploited at twice the pole mass of the W boson [15] and of the top quark [16] in different production and decay channels. Both the ATLAS and CMS collaborations have recently reported evidence for the production of off-shell Higgs bosons using the H * → ZZ → 4ℓ and H * → ZZ → 2ℓ2ν decay channels [7,17,18]. ...

Measurement of the Higgs boson width and evidence of its off-shell contributions to ZZ production
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

Nature Physics

... Reprinted with permission from Elsevier. Figure 18 shows the nuclear modification of Υ(1S), Υ(2S), and Υ(3S) in p+Pb collisions as a function of rapidity [84]. The left-hand plot shows the bottomonium measurements for transverse momentum p T < 6 GeV/c, and the right-hand plot shows the measurements for the range 6 < p T < 30 GeV/c. ...

Nuclear modification of Y states in pPb collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 5.02 TeV
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

Physics Letters B

... In the context of these efforts, the LHCb Collaboration recently published the first measurement of the χ c1 (3872) in p-Pb collisions, as shown in the left panel of Figure 5. This measurement indicates that the production of χ c1 (3872) in p-Pb collisions relative to that of the ψ(2S ) is more abundant than in pp collisions, following the trend already established by the first measurement of the χ c1 (3872) in Pb-Pb collisions by the CMS Collaboration [16]. Such an enhancement is very similar to that observed for light nuclei; however, it is not easy to reconcile with the measurement of the χ c1 (3872)/ψ(2S ) ratio as a function of charged particle multiplicity in pp collisions [17], which is instead decreasing. ...

Evidence for X(3872) in Pb-Pb Collisions and Studies of its Prompt Production at sNN\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 5.02 TeV
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

Physical Review Letters

... The largest contribution to the background comes from W+jets that consist in the production of a W boson in association with jets of particles initiated by quarks or gluons. Other minor background events were included as well, two vector bosons (VV), three vector bosons (VVV), Drell-Yan, single top and tt, Vector Boson Fusion (VBF), vector boson with a real (Vγ ) or vitual (Vγ * ) photon (Tumasyan A et al. 2022). ...

Evidence for WW/WZ vector boson scattering in the decay channel νqq\ell \nu qq produced in association with two jets in proton-proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} =13 TeV
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

Physics Letters B

... New instrumentation detectors have better sensitivity, sampling rate, and pixel density. These improvements significantly increase the total data velocity, exceeding terabytes per second (TB/s) in particle physics and medical imaging experiments and surpassing the capacity of current acquisition systems [1,2]. For example, the data generation of 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 A c c e p t e d M a n u s c r i p t Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiments at CERN reach 1200 GB/s [3]. ...

An overview of the trigger system at the CMS experiment
  • Citing Article
  • January 2022

Physica Scripta

... While high-energy measurements are frequently dominated by the low-x behavior of the PDFs, the rapidity and invariant-mass distributions that serve as fertile ground for BSM searches can also be significantly dependent on the very high-x PDFs as well [3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]; as such, experiments at the LHC and other facilities probe a wide range of x, up to and including high x. Considerable attention has therefore been trained on the determination of PDFs at high x ≳ 0.1, where sensitive data remain comparatively sparse [13][14][15][16], and the parametrization dependence on the chosen functional form used to fit the PDFs can represent a significant effect that must be quantified and controlled [17]; moreover, the subject of identifying optimal parametric bases of lower dimensionality for PDF combinations [18] has been a subject of prior study. ...

Addendum to: Measurement and QCD analysis of double-differential inclusive jet cross sections in proton-proton collisions at s \sqrt{\textrm{s}} = 13 TeV

Journal of High Energy Physics