The TOTEM collaboration at the CERN LHC has measured the differential cross-section of elastic proton–proton scattering at
s
=
8
TeV
in the squared four-momentum transfer range
0.2
GeV
2
<
|
t
|
<
...1.9
GeV
2
. This interval includes the structure with a diffractive minimum (“dip”) and a secondary maximum (“bump”) that has also been observed at all other LHC energies, where measurements were made. A detailed characterisation of this structure for
s
=
8
TeV
yields the positions,
|
t
|
dip
=
(
0.521
±
0.007
)
GeV
2
and
|
t
|
bump
=
(
0.695
±
0.026
)
GeV
2
, as well as the cross-section values,
d
σ
/
d
t
dip
=
(
15.1
±
2.5
)
μ
b
/
GeV
2
and
d
σ
/
d
t
bump
=
(
29.7
±
1.8
)
μ
b
/
GeV
2
, for the dip and the bump, respectively.
Geant4 developments and applications Allison, J.; Amako, K.; Apostolakis, J. ...
IEEE transactions on nuclear science,
02/2006, Volume:
53, Issue:
1
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Open access
Geant4 is a software toolkit for the simulation of the passage of particles through matter. It is used by a large number of experiments and projects in a variety of application domains, including ...high energy physics, astrophysics and space science, medical physics and radiation protection. Its functionality and modeling capabilities continue to be extended, while its performance is enhanced. An overview of recent developments in diverse areas of the toolkit is presented. These include performance optimization for complex setups; improvements for the propagation in fields; new options for event biasing; and additions and improvements in geometry, physics processes and interactive capabilities
Abstract
The TOTEM collaboration at the CERN LHC has measured the differential cross-section of elastic proton–proton scattering at
$$\sqrt{s} = 8\,\mathrm{TeV}$$
s
=
8
TeV
in the squared ...four-momentum transfer range
$$0.2\,\mathrm{GeV^{2}}< |t| < 1.9\,\mathrm{GeV^{2}}$$
0.2
GeV
2
<
|
t
|
<
1.9
GeV
2
. This interval includes the structure with a diffractive minimum (“dip”) and a secondary maximum (“bump”) that has also been observed at all other LHC energies, where measurements were made. A detailed characterisation of this structure for
$$\sqrt{s} = 8\,\mathrm{TeV}$$
s
=
8
TeV
yields the positions,
$$|t|_{\mathrm{dip}} = (0.521 \pm 0.007)\,\mathrm{GeV^2}$$
|
t
|
dip
=
(
0.521
±
0.007
)
GeV
2
and
$$|t|_{\mathrm{bump}} = (0.695 \pm 0.026)\,\mathrm{GeV^2}$$
|
t
|
bump
=
(
0.695
±
0.026
)
GeV
2
, as well as the cross-section values,
$$\left. {\mathrm{d}\sigma /\mathrm{d}t}\right| _{\mathrm{dip}} = (15.1 \pm 2.5)\,\mathrm{{\mu b/GeV^2}}$$
d
σ
/
d
t
dip
=
(
15.1
±
2.5
)
μ
b
/
GeV
2
and
$$\left. {\mathrm{d}\sigma /\mathrm{d}t}\right| _{\mathrm{bump}} = (29.7 \pm 1.8)\,\mathrm{{\mu b/GeV^2}}$$
d
σ
/
d
t
bump
=
(
29.7
±
1.8
)
μ
b
/
GeV
2
, for the dip and the bump, respectively.
The proton–proton elastic differential cross section
d
σ
/
d
t
has been measured by the TOTEM experiment at
s
=
2.76
TeV
energy with
β
∗
=
11
m
beam optics. The Roman Pots were inserted to 13 times ...the transverse beam size from the beam, which allowed to measure the differential cross-section of elastic scattering in a range of the squared four-momentum transfer (|
t
|) from 0.36 to
0.74
GeV
2
. The differential cross-section can be described with an exponential in the |
t
|-range between 0.36 and
0.54
GeV
2
, followed by a diffractive minimum (dip) at
|
t
dip
|
=
(
0.61
±
0.03
)
GeV
2
and a subsequent maximum (bump). The ratio of the
d
σ
/
d
t
at the bump and at the dip is
1.7
±
0.2
. When compared to the proton–antiproton measurement of the D0 experiment at
s
=
1.96
TeV
, a significant difference can be observed. Under the condition that the effects due to the energy difference between TOTEM and D0 can be neglected, the result provides evidence for the exchange of a colourless C-odd three-gluon compound state in the
t
-channel of the proton–proton and proton–antiproton elastic scattering.
Measurements of the double-differential {pi}{sup {+-}} production cross section in the momentum range 100{<=}p{<=}800 MeV/c and angle range 0.35{<=}{theta}{<=}2.15 rad in proton-beryllium, ...proton-carbon, proton-aluminium, proton-copper, proton-tin, proton-tantalum, and proton-lead collisions are presented. The data were taken with the large-acceptance HARP detector in the T9 beam line of the CERN PS. The pions were produced by proton beams in a momentum range from 3 to 12.9 GeV/c hitting a target with a thickness of 5% of a nuclear interaction length. Tracking and identification of the produced particles was performed by using a small-radius cylindrical Time Projection Chamber (TPC) placed inside a solenoidal magnet. Incident particles were identified by an elaborate system of beam detectors. Results are obtained for the double-differential cross sections d{sup 2}{sigma}/(dpd{theta}) at six incident proton beam momenta 3, 5, 8, and 8.9 GeV/c (Be only) and 12 and 12.9 GeV/c (Al only). They are based on a complete correction of static and dynamic distortions of tracks in the HARP TPC, which allows the complete statistics of the collected data set to be used. The results include and supersede our previously published results and are compatible with these. Results are compared with the GEANT4 and MARS Monte Carlo simulation.
GeantV Amadio, G.; Ananya, A.; Apostolakis, J. ...
Computing and software for big science,
12/2021, Volume:
5, Issue:
1
Journal Article
Open access
Full detector simulation was among the largest CPU consumers in all CERN experiment software stacks for the first two runs of the Large Hadron Collider. In the early 2010s, it was projected that ...simulation demands would scale linearly with increasing luminosity, with only partial compensation from increasing computing resources. The extension of fast simulation approaches to cover more use cases that represent a larger fraction of the simulation budget is only part of the solution, because of intrinsic precision limitations. The remainder corresponds to speeding up the simulation software by several factors, which is not achievable by just applying simple optimizations to the current code base. In this context, the GeantV R&D project was launched, aiming to redesign the legacy particle transport code in order to benefit from features of fine-grained parallelism, including vectorization and increased locality of both instruction and data. This paper provides an extensive presentation of the results and achievements of this R&D project, as well as the conclusions and lessons learned from the beta version prototype.
Measurements of the double-differential {pi}{sup {+-}} production cross section in the range of momentum 0.5{<=}p{<=}8.0 GeV/c and angle 0.025{<=}{theta}{<=}0.25 rad in collisions of protons on ...beryllium, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, aluminum, copper, tin, tantalum, and lead are presented. The data were taken with the large-acceptance HAdRon Production (HARP) detector in the T9 beamline of the CERN Proton Synchrotron. Incident particles were identified by an elaborate system of beam detectors. Thin targets of 5% of a nuclear interaction length were used. The tracking and identification of the produced particles were performed using the forward system of the HARP experiment. Results are obtained for the double-differential cross sections d{sup 2}{sigma}/dp d{omega} mainly at four incident proton beam momenta (3, 5, 8, and 12 GeV/c). Measurements are compared with the GEANT4 and MARS Monte Carlo generators. A global parametrization is provided as an approximation of all the collected datasets, which can serve as a tool for quick yield estimates.
The TOTEM collaboration has measured the proton–proton total cross section at
s
=
13
TeV
with a luminosity-independent method. Using dedicated
β
∗
=
90
m
beam optics, the Roman Pots were inserted ...very close to the beam. The inelastic scattering rate has been measured by the T1 and T2 telescopes during the same LHC fill. After applying the optical theorem the total proton–proton cross section is
σ
tot
=
(
110.6
±
3.4
) mb, well in agreement with the extrapolation from lower energies. This method also allows one to derive the luminosity-independent elastic and inelastic cross sections:
σ
el
=
(
31.0
±
1.7
)
mb
and
σ
inel
=
(
79.5
±
1.8
)
mb
.
The TOTEM experiment at the LHC has performed the first measurement at
s
=
13
TeV
of the
ρ
parameter, the real to imaginary ratio of the nuclear elastic scattering amplitude at
t
=
0
, obtaining the ...following results:
ρ
=
0.09
±
0.01
and
ρ
=
0.10
±
0.01
, depending on different physics assumptions and mathematical modelling. The unprecedented precision of the
ρ
measurement, combined with the TOTEM total cross-section measurements in an energy range larger than
10
TeV
(from 2.76 to
13
TeV
), has implied the exclusion of all the models classified and published by COMPETE. The
ρ
results obtained by TOTEM are compatible with the predictions, from other theoretical models both in the Regge-like framework and in the QCD framework, of a crossing-odd colourless 3-gluon compound state exchange in the
t
-channel of the proton–proton elastic scattering. On the contrary, if shown that the crossing-odd 3-gluon compound state
t
-channel exchange is not of importance for the description of elastic scattering, the
ρ
value determined by TOTEM would represent a first evidence of a slowing down of the total cross-section growth at higher energies. The very low-|
t
| reach allowed also to determine the absolute normalisation using the Coulomb amplitude for the first time at the LHC and obtain a new total proton–proton cross-section measurement
σ
tot
=
(
110.3
±
3.5
)
mb
, completely independent from the previous TOTEM determination. Combining the two TOTEM results yields
σ
tot
=
(
110.5
±
2.4
)
mb
.
The TOTEM collaboration has measured the elastic proton-proton differential cross section
d
σ
/
d
t
at
s
=
13
TeV LHC energy using dedicated
β
∗
=
90
m beam optics. The Roman Pot detectors were ...inserted to 10
σ
distance from the LHC beam, which allowed the measurement of the range 0.04 GeV
2
; 4 GeV
2
in four-momentum transfer squared |
t
|. The efficient data acquisition allowed to collect about 10
9
elastic events to precisely measure the differential cross-section including the diffractive minimum (dip), the subsequent maximum (bump) and the large-|
t
| tail. The average nuclear slope has been found to be
B
=
(
20.40
±
0
.
002
stat
±
0
.
01
syst
)
GeV
-
2
in the |
t
|-range 0.04–0.2 GeV
2
. The dip position is
|
t
dip
|
=
(
0.47
±
0
.
004
stat
±
0
.
01
syst
)
GeV
2
. The differential cross section ratio at the bump vs. at the dip
R
=
1.77
±
0
.
01
stat
has been measured with high precision. The series of TOTEM elastic pp measurements show that the dip is a permanent feature of the pp differential cross-section at the TeV scale.