2. Exclusive and Semi-Exclusive Production in Proton–Proton Collisions at TeV
Studying exclusive and semi-exclusive dipion production provides a good opportunity to study certain low mass resonances, since the quantum numbers of the final state are restricted by the exchanged objects. In these processes, two pions are produced centrally, while the two colliding protons remain intact (exclusive) or dissociate into the
region (semi-exclusive), producing particles that cannot be detected by the forward calorimeter of the CMS detector. The two dominant processes are the double pomeron exchange (DPE) and the vector meson photoproduction (VMP)—the graphs of these processes are shown in
Figure 1. Since pomerons have the quantum numbers of the vacuum, the final states in a DPE process can have
and
quantum numbers, where
J is the total angular momentum,
P is the parity,
C is the charge parity,
I is the isospin, and
. Similarly, the final states allowed in VMP processes are restricted by the quantum numbers of the photon:
and
. DPE processes provide a gluon-rich environment, which makes them suitable for glueball search.
Special low pileup data was collected at TeV by the CMS detector in 2012, corresponding to 450 b integrated luminosity. The data collection was triggered on bunch-crossings with no further requirement (zero bias). Several event selection criteria are applied on the zero bias events to select exclusive dihadron events. First, two good quality (in terms of ) tracks with opposite sign are required. These should originate from the same interaction, and there should not be any other interactions in the event. Exclusivity is reached by rejecting events with activity in the calorimeters, except in a cone around track hits. The kinematic region of the analysis is GeV and , where the rapidity is calculated assuming mass. The final results are calculated as a function of following kinematic variables: invariant mass, transverse momentum, and rapidity, assuming pairs.
If an event fulfills all of the above criteria but contains one or more undetected particle, it contributes to the inclusive background. To estimate this contribution, a sample is used where all of the above selections are performed, except the calorimeter criteria. The distribution of events as a function of extra calorimeter hits is shown in
Figure 2. This distribution is fitted with a negative binomial distribution, which is commonly used to fit multiplicity distributions. Events from the side-band region with 2–10 extra calorimeter hits are used to construct a background template as a function of kinematic variables listed above. The normalization of the background is calculated from the negative binomial fit.
The differential cross-sections shown in
Figure 3 are unfolded by an iterative Bayesian method using early stopping as a regularization. The results are compared with the Minimum Bias Rockefeller (MBR) model of Pythia 8, Dime MC and STARlight Monte Carlo (MC) event generators. The MBR model describes DPE with a renormalized pomeron flux model. The Dime MC is capable to model continuum
production in DPE—this is when the dipion pair is produced directly without any intermediate resonance, resulting in a smooth mass spectrum. The STARlight generator is used to generate
VMP events. None of these simulations describe the low mass scalar and tensor resonances
,
, and
. A slightly larger cross-section is measured in the mass region of
, since the forward proton dissociation of semi-exclusive processes is not modelled by the MC event generators. There is a sharp drop at around 1 GeV in the mass spectrum, which was seen by several previous experiments [
5] and can be interpreted as the interference of the
resonance with the continuum production channel. There is a significant peak at 1.2–1.3 GeV, which is consistent with the parameters of the
resonance. The total cross-section calculated in the kinematic region
GeV and
is:
3. Upsilon Photoproduction in Ultraperipheral pPb Collisions
In pPb collisions there is an enhanced photoproduction cross-section due to the high photon flux, which is proportional to
. The production of
can be described in a perturbative quantum chromodynamics (pQCD) and in a Regge theory framework—the corresponding graphs are shown in
Figure 4. The cross-section of ultraperipheral
production is related to the
gluon parton distribution function (PDF) of the proton:
therefore providing a method to probe the gluon density in the
–
region.
The data collected with the CMS experiment in 2013 was triggered on a single muon and 6 or less tracks in the tracker. The integrated luminosity of the dataset used in the measurement is
nb
. Further event selection criteria were applied at the offline level: the kinematic variables of muons are constrained as
GeV and
. Additionally, GeV condition is required for the muon pair
. The low-
cut is applied to reduce
background, while the rejection of high-
reduces the contribution from inclusive and semi-exclusive
production. The invariant mass distribution of the
pairs is shown in
Figure 5. The differential cross-sections shown in
Figure 6 are calculated from the mass region from 9.12–10.64 GeV as a function of
and
.
There are five sources of background: quantum electrodynamics (QED) continuum production (), inclusive production, Drell–Yan processes, semi-exclusive production, and events (where the pomeron is emitted from the nucleus and the photon is originating from the proton). The QED contribution is estimated by STARlight MC event generator, and it is normalized to the luminosity of the data. The inclusive , Drell–Yan, and semi-exclusive background is determined by a data-driven method, using a template created by loosening the event selection criteria, allowing at least one additional track with GeV. The normalization is calculated by comparing the template to signal sample in the GeV region, which is dominated by semi-exclusive and inclusive events.
The exclusive
production is modelled by the STARlight event generator. For better description of the data, the generated events are reweighted to the observed cross-sections as
where
t is the transferred momentum squared,
is the photon proton center-of-mass energy, and
b and
are fit parameters. Then,
is the energy of the proton,
and
y are mass and rapidity of the
meson, respectively, and the ± sign is defined according to the beam configuration (
or
). The result of reweighting is shown in
Figure 6.
The cross-sections as a function of
and
are shown in
Figure 7, where
approximation is used to get
and
is calculated from
as
where
is photon flux, obtained from STARlight. An iterative Bayesian algorithm is used with an early stopping as regularization to correct for detector effects and data migration. An exponential fit is performed on
:
where
N and
b are the fit parameters. The obtained value of
b is
GeV
, which is compatible with HERA (Hadron-Electron Ring Accelerator) measurements (H1:
GeV
[
6], Zeus:
GeV
[
7]).
Since
is related to the square of the gluon PDF, which can be well described with a power law behaviour at this regime of
x, the
is fitted with a power function
, where
A and
are fit parameters. The fit is performed for CMS only (
) and CMS+HERA (
) data points. The result disfavours the leading order Jones-Martin-Ryskin-Teubner (JMRT) model results, but it is consistent with the next-to-leading order JMRT prediction [
8]. The fit is also compared to the factorized IPsat model [
9], which is based on the color glass condensate (CGC) formalism, and the Iancu-Itakura-Munier (IIM) color dipole model [
10]. These two predictions bracket the measured CMS+HERA data. Finally the impact-parameter color glass condensate (bCGC) models [
11], using meson wave functions to describe the
t-dependence of differential cross-sections, are also compared to the results. The bCGC predictions systematically underestimate the cross-section, but are still consistent within uncertainties and correctly describe the rise of the cross-section.
4. Search for W-Boson Pairs Produced via Two-Photon Fusion in pp Collisions and Limits on Anomalous Quartic Gauge Couplings
The measurement of exclusive W-boson pair production provides information about electroweak gauge couplings. Any significant deviation from the Standard Model predictions can be a sign of new physics, like supersymmetry, extra dimensions, or additional gauge bosons. The leading order processes are shown in
Figure 8—the contribution of the graph with the quartic coupling (
, where
g is the coupling constant of the weak interaction and
e is the electron charge) is suppressed compared to the ones with triple coupling (
).
The measurement is performed on both a 7 and 8 TeV dataset, corresponding to
fb
and
fb
integrated luminosity, respectively. The data collection is triggered on two leptons with
GeV for the leading and
GeV for the subleading lepton. The
W-bosons are observed via their weak decay to lepton–antineutrino and antilepton–neutrino pairs:
Therefore, selected events are required to have opposite sign, different flavour lepton pairs (), originating from a common vertex with no other tracks. Further requirements are , GeV, , and GeV. Another sample containing same-flavour lepton pairs is used as control sample. The signal region of the measurement is GeV. One or both protons can dissociate in the non-instrumented forward direction (semi-exclusive or elastic process). This contribution is accounted for by a correction factor calculated by a Monte Carlo-based method using high statistics channels ( and ). There are four sources of background: inclusive diboson production, W+jets, Drell–Yan production, and , treated by various data-driven methods.
The measured distribution as a function of
is shown in
Figure 9. The observed cross-section for process
is
fb and
fb at 7 and 8 TeV, respectively. The Standard Model prediction at 7 TeV is
fb and
fb at 8 TeV, thus the measurements are consistent within uncertainties. The combined significance of the 7 and 8 TeV measurement is
.
The Standard Model only allows gauge couplings obeying gauge invariance. Effective models can have other gauge couplings, which would be the signs of new physics. These can be considered in the Lagrangian by adding extra terms; the simplest possible extension is the six-dimensional “LEP-legacy” model (LEP: Large Electron-Positron Collider),
and
are the so-called six-dimensional operators [
12]. The next possible extension introduces the eight-dimensional operators (
), which can be expressed with the six-dimensional ones [
13,
14]. The six-dimensional operators were ruled out by LEP, but they could be still used to calculate eight-dimensional operators by assuming a unitarity restoring form factor with
GeV:
Combining the 7 and 8 TeV results, the following one-dimensional limits are obtained at
confidence level: the value of
is constrained in the range
GeV
, while
is within
GeV
. According to
Figure 10 [
15], this result gives the most stringent limit on
operator so far.
5. Conclusions
Exclusive processes are a versatile tool of high-energy physics. They are useful in a wide range of topics such as studying low mass meson resonances, evolution of gluon PDF at low x values, and testing Standard Model couplings to search for new physics. The differential cross-sections of final state is measured as a function of invariant mass, transverse momentum, and rapidity. A resonant structure is observed in the mass spectrum, which is a signature of low mass resonances. The observed features of these resonances are consistent with the , , and resonances. The evolution of gluon density function is studied at low x values via the production of states observed in pPb collisions. The results are consistent with previous HERA measurements, NLO JMRT model, color glass condensate, and color dipole models. The anomalous coupling couplings are studied via exclusive production. The measurement provides the most stringent limit on the operator so far.