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. 2013 Mar 27;73(3):2362. doi: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-013-2362-5

Multi-channel search for squarks and gluinos in Inline graphicpp collisions with the ATLAS detector at the LHC

The ATLAS Collaboration1, G Aad 67, T Abajyan 29, B Abbott 137, J Abdallah 16, S Abdel Khalek 141, A A Abdelalim 68, O Abdinov 15, R Aben 131, B Abi 138, M Abolins 112, O S AbouZeid 197, H Abramowicz 192, H Abreu 172, B S Acharya 204,205, L Adamczyk 57, D L Adams 36, T N Addy 77, J Adelman 218, S Adomeit 123, P Adragna 99, T Adye 158, S Aefsky 31, J A Aguilar-Saavedra 153, M Agustoni 22, S P Ahlen 30, F Ahles 67, A Ahmad 187, M Ahsan 60, G Aielli 163,164, T P A Åkesson 103, G Akimoto 194, A V Akimov 119, M A Alam 100, J Albert 211, S Albrand 76, M Aleksa 43, I N Aleksandrov 87, F Alessandria 113, C Alexa 37, G Alexander 192, G Alexandre 68, T Alexopoulos 14, M Alhroob 204,206, M Aliev 21, G Alimonti 113, J Alison 147, B M M Allbrooke 23, L J Allison 94, P P Allport 97, S E Allwood-Spiers 74, J Almond 106, A Aloisio 127,128, R Alon 214, A Alonso 103, F Alonso 93, A Altheimer 53, B Alvarez Gonzalez 112, M G Alviggi 127,128, K Amako 88, C Amelung 31, V V Ammosov 157, S P Amor Dos Santos 152, A Amorim 152, S Amoroso 67, N Amram 192, C Anastopoulos 43, L S Ancu 22, N Andari 141, T Andeen 53, C F Anders 80, G Anders 79, K J Anderson 44, A Andreazza 113,114, V Andrei 79, M-L Andrieux 76, X S Anduaga 93, S Angelidakis 13, P Anger 63, A Angerami 53, F Anghinolfi 43, A Anisenkov 133, N Anjos 152, A Annovi 66, A Antonaki 13, M Antonelli 66, A Antonov 121, J Antos 181, F Anulli 161, M Aoki 126, S Aoun 107, L Aperio Bella 9, R Apolle 144, G Arabidze 112, I Aracena 179, Y Arai 88, A T H Arce 64, S Arfaoui 187, J-F Arguin 118, S Argyropoulos 61, E Arik 24, M Arik 24, A J Armbruster 111, O Arnaez 105, V Arnal 104, A Artamonov 120, G Artoni 161,162, D Arutinov 29, S Asai 194, S Ask 41, B Åsman 184,185, L Asquith 10, K Assamagan 36, A Astbury 211, M Atkinson 207, B Aubert 9, E Auge 141, K Augsten 155, M Aurousseau 182, G Avolio 43, D Axen 210, G Azuelos 118, Y Azuma 194, M A Baak 43, G Baccaglioni 113, C Bacci 165,166, A M Bach 20, H Bachacou 172, K Bachas 193, M Backes 68, M Backhaus 29, J Backus Mayes 179, E Badescu 37, P Bagnaia 161,162, Y Bai 47, D C Bailey 197, T Bain 53, J T Baines 158, O K Baker 218, S Baker 101, P Balek 156, E Banas 58, P Banerjee 118, Sw Banerjee 215, D Banfi 43, A Bangert 189, V Bansal 211, H S Bansil 23, L Barak 214, S P Baranov 119, T Barber 67, E L Barberio 110, D Barberis 69,70, M Barbero 29, D Y Bardin 87, T Barillari 124, M Barisonzi 217, T Barklow 179, N Barlow 41, B M Barnett 158, R M Barnett 20, A Baroncelli 165, G Barone 68, A J Barr 144, F Barreiro 104, J Barreiro Guimarães da Costa 78, R Bartoldus 179, A E Barton 94, V Bartsch 188, A Basye 207, R L Bates 74, L Batkova 180, J R Batley 41, A Battaglia 22, M Battistin 43, F Bauer 172, H S Bawa 179, S Beale 123, T Beau 102, P H Beauchemin 201, R Beccherle 69, P Bechtle 29, H P Beck 22, K Becker 217, S Becker 123, M Beckingham 174, K H Becks 217, A J Beddall 26, A Beddall 26, S Bedikian 218, V A Bednyakov 87, C P Bee 107, L J Beemster 131, M Begel 36, S Behar Harpaz 191, P K Behera 85, M Beimforde 124, C Belanger-Champagne 109, P J Bell 68, W H Bell 68, G Bella 192, L Bellagamba 27, M Bellomo 43, A Belloni 78, O Beloborodova 133, K Belotskiy 121, O Beltramello 43, O Benary 192, D Benchekroun 167, K Bendtz 184,185, N Benekos 207, Y Benhammou 192, E Benhar Noccioli 68, J A Benitez Garcia 199, D P Benjamin 64, M Benoit 141, J R Bensinger 31, K Benslama 159, S Bentvelsen 131, D Berge 43, E Bergeaas Kuutmann 61, N Berger 9, F Berghaus 211, E Berglund 131, J Beringer 20, P Bernat 101, R Bernhard 67, C Bernius 36, T Berry 100, C Bertella 107, A Bertin 27,28, F Bertolucci 149,150, M I Besana 113,114, G J Besjes 130, N Besson 172, S Bethke 124, W Bhimji 65, R M Bianchi 43, L Bianchini 31, M Bianco 95,96, O Biebel 123, S P Bieniek 101, K Bierwagen 75, J Biesiada 20, M Biglietti 165, H Bilokon 66, M Bindi 27,28, S Binet 141, A Bingul 26, C Bini 161,162, C Biscarat 220, B Bittner 124, C W Black 189, K M Black 30, R E Blair 10, J-B Blanchard 172, T Blazek 180, I Bloch 61, C Blocker 31, J Blocki 58, W Blum 105, U Blumenschein 75, G J Bobbink 131, V S Bobrovnikov 133, S S Bocchetta 103, A Bocci 64, C R Boddy 144, M Boehler 67, J Boek 217, T T Boek 217, N Boelaert 54, J A Bogaerts 43, A Bogdanchikov 133, A Bogouch 115, C Bohm 184, J Bohm 154, V Boisvert 100, T Bold 57, V Boldea 37, N M Bolnet 172, M Bomben 102, M Bona 99, M Boonekamp 172, S Bordoni 102, C Borer 22, A Borisov 157, G Borissov 94, I Borjanovic 17, M Borri 106, S Borroni 61, J Bortfeldt 123, V Bortolotto 165,166, K Bos 131, D Boscherini 27, M Bosman 16, H Boterenbrood 131, J Bouchami 118, J Boudreau 151, E V Bouhova-Thacker 94, D Boumediene 52, C Bourdarios 141, N Bousson 107, A Boveia 44, J Boyd 43, I R Boyko 87, I Bozovic-Jelisavcic 18, J Bracinik 23, P Branchini 165, A Brandt 12, G Brandt 144, O Brandt 75, U Bratzler 195, B Brau 108, J E Brau 140, H M Braun 217, S F Brazzale 204,206, B Brelier 197, J Bremer 43, K Brendlinger 147, R Brenner 208, S Bressler 214, T M Bristow 183, D Britton 74, F M Brochu 41, I Brock 29, R Brock 112, F Broggi 113, C Bromberg 112, J Bronner 124, G Brooijmans 53, T Brooks 100, W K Brooks 46, G Brown 106, P A Bruckman de Renstrom 58, D Bruncko 181, R Bruneliere 67, S Brunet 83, A Bruni 27, G Bruni 27, M Bruschi 27, L Bryngemark 103, T Buanes 19, Q Buat 76, F Bucci 68, J Buchanan 144, P Buchholz 177, R M Buckingham 144, A G Buckley 65, S I Buda 37, I A Budagov 87, B Budick 134, V Büscher 105, L Bugge 143, O Bulekov 121, A C Bundock 97, M Bunse 62, T Buran 143, H Burckhart 43, S Burdin 97, T Burgess 19, S Burke 158, E Busato 52, P Bussey 74, C P Buszello 208, B Butler 179, J M Butler 30, C M Buttar 74, J M Butterworth 101, W Buttinger 41, M Byszewski 43, S Cabrera Urbán 209, D Caforio 27,28, O Cakir 5, P Calafiura 20, G Calderini 102, P Calfayan 123, R Calkins 132, L P Caloba 32, R Caloi 161,162, D Calvet 52, S Calvet 52, R Camacho Toro 52, P Camarri 163,164, D Cameron 143, L M Caminada 20, R Caminal Armadans 16, S Campana 43, M Campanelli 101, V Canale 127,128, F Canelli 44, A Canepa 198, J Cantero 104, R Cantrill 100, M D M Capeans Garrido 43, I Caprini 37, M Caprini 37, D Capriotti 124, M Capua 55,56, R Caputo 105, R Cardarelli 163, T Carli 43, G Carlino 127, L Carminati 113,114, S Caron 130, E Carquin 46, G D Carrillo-Montoya 183, A A Carter 99, J R Carter 41, J Carvalho 152, D Casadei 134, M P Casado 16, M Cascella 149,150, C Caso 69,70, A M Castaneda Hernandez 215, E Castaneda-Miranda 215, V Castillo Gimenez 209, N F Castro 152, G Cataldi 95, P Catastini 78, A Catinaccio 43, J R Catmore 43, A Cattai 43, G Cattani 163,164, S Caughron 112, V Cavaliere 207, P Cavalleri 102, D Cavalli 113, M Cavalli-Sforza 16, V Cavasinni 149,150, F Ceradini 165,166, A S Cerqueira 33, A Cerri 20, L Cerrito 99, F Cerutti 20, S A Cetin 25, A Chafaq 167, D Chakraborty 132, I Chalupkova 156, K Chan 4, P Chang 207, B Chapleau 109, J D Chapman 41, J W Chapman 111, D G Charlton 23, V Chavda 106, C A Chavez Barajas 43, S Cheatham 109, S Chekanov 10, S V Chekulaev 198, G A Chelkov 87, M A Chelstowska 130, C Chen 86, H Chen 36, S Chen 49, X Chen 215, Y Chen 53, Y Cheng 44, A Cheplakov 87, R Cherkaoui El Moursli 171, V Chernyatin 36, E Cheu 11, S L Cheung 197, L Chevalier 172, G Chiefari 127,128, L Chikovani 71, J T Childers 43, A Chilingarov 94, G Chiodini 95, A S Chisholm 23, R T Chislett 101, A Chitan 37, M V Chizhov 87, G Choudalakis 44, S Chouridou 173, I A Christidi 101, A Christov 67, D Chromek-Burckhart 43, M L Chu 190, J Chudoba 154, G Ciapetti 161,162, A K Ciftci 5, R Ciftci 5, D Cinca 52, V Cindro 98, A Ciocio 20, M Cirilli 111, P Cirkovic 18, Z H Citron 214, M Citterio 113, M Ciubancan 37, A Clark 68, P J Clark 65, R N Clarke 20, W Cleland 151, J C Clemens 107, B Clement 76, C Clement 184,185, Y Coadou 107, M Cobal 204,206, A Coccaro 174, J Cochran 86, L Coffey 31, J G Cogan 179, J Coggeshall 207, J Colas 9, S Cole 132, A P Colijn 131, N J Collins 23, C Collins-Tooth 74, J Collot 76, T Colombo 145,146, G Colon 108, G Compostella 124, P Conde Muiño 152, E Coniavitis 208, M C Conidi 16, S M Consonni 113,114, V Consorti 67, S Constantinescu 37, C Conta 145,146, G Conti 78, F Conventi 127, M Cooke 20, B D Cooper 101, A M Cooper-Sarkar 144, K Copic 20, T Cornelissen 217, M Corradi 27, F Corriveau 109, A Cortes-Gonzalez 207, G Cortiana 124, G Costa 113, M J Costa 209, D Costanzo 175, D Côté 43, L Courneyea 211, G Cowan 100, B E Cox 106, K Cranmer 134, F Crescioli 102, M Cristinziani 29, G Crosetti 55,56, S Crépé-Renaudin 76, C-M Cuciuc 37, C Cuenca Almenar 218, T Cuhadar Donszelmann 175, J Cummings 218, M Curatolo 66, C J Curtis 23, C Cuthbert 189, P Cwetanski 83, H Czirr 177, P Czodrowski 63, Z Czyczula 218, S D’Auria 74, M D’Onofrio 97, A D’Orazio 161,162, M J Da Cunha Sargedas De Sousa 152, C Da Via 106, W Dabrowski 57, A Dafinca 144, T Dai 111, F Dallaire 118, C Dallapiccola 108, M Dam 54, M Dameri 69,70, D S Damiani 173, H O Danielsson 43, V Dao 130, G Darbo 69, G L Darlea 38, J A Dassoulas 61, W Davey 29, T Davidek 156, N Davidson 110, R Davidson 94, E Davies 144, M Davies 118, O Davignon 102, A R Davison 101, Y Davygora 79, E Dawe 178, I Dawson 175, R K Daya-Ishmukhametova 31, K De 12, R de Asmundis 127, S De Castro 27,28, S De Cecco 102, J de Graat 123, N De Groot 130, P de Jong 131, C De La Taille 141, H De la Torre 104, F De Lorenzi 86, L De Nooij 131, D De Pedis 161, A De Salvo 161, U De Sanctis 204,206, A De Santo 188, J B De Vivie De Regie 141, G De Zorzi 161,162, W J Dearnaley 94, R Debbe 36, C Debenedetti 65, B Dechenaux 76, D V Dedovich 87, J Degenhardt 147, J Del Peso 104, T Del Prete 149,150, T Delemontex 76, M Deliyergiyev 98, A Dell’Acqua 43, L Dell’Asta 30, M Della Pietra 127, D della Volpe 127,128, M Delmastro 9, P A Delsart 76, C Deluca 131, S Demers 218, M Demichev 87, B Demirkoz 16, S P Denisov 157, D Derendarz 58, J E Derkaoui 170, F Derue 102, P Dervan 97, K Desch 29, E Devetak 187, P O Deviveiros 131, A Dewhurst 158, B DeWilde 187, S Dhaliwal 197, R Dhullipudi 36, A Di Ciaccio 163,164, L Di Ciaccio 9, C Di Donato 127,128, A Di Girolamo 43, B Di Girolamo 43, S Di Luise 165,166, A Di Mattia 191, B Di Micco 43, R Di Nardo 66, A Di Simone 163,164, R Di Sipio 27,28, M A Diaz 45, E B Diehl 111, J Dietrich 61, T A Dietzsch 79, S Diglio 110, K Dindar Yagci 59, J Dingfelder 29, F Dinut 37, C Dionisi 161,162, P Dita 37, S Dita 37, F Dittus 43, F Djama 107, T Djobava 72, M A B do Vale 34, A Do Valle Wemans 152, T K O Doan 9, M Dobbs 109, D Dobos 43, E Dobson 43, J Dodd 53, C Doglioni 68, T Doherty 74, Y Doi 88, J Dolejsi 156, Z Dolezal 156, B A Dolgoshein 121, T Dohmae 194, M Donadelli 35, J Donini 52, J Dopke 43, A Doria 127, A Dos Anjos 215, A Dotti 149,150, M T Dova 93, A D Doxiadis 131, A T Doyle 74, N Dressnandt 147, M Dris 14, J Dubbert 124, S Dube 20, E Dubreuil 52, E Duchovni 214, G Duckeck 123, D Duda 217, A Dudarev 43, F Dudziak 86, M Dührssen 43, I P Duerdoth 106, L Duflot 141, M-A Dufour 109, L Duguid 100, M Dunford 79, H Duran Yildiz 5, R Duxfield 175, M Dwuznik 57, M Düren 73, W L Ebenstein 64, J Ebke 123, S Eckweiler 105, W Edson 3, C A Edwards 100, N C Edwards 74, W Ehrenfeld 29, T Eifert 179, G Eigen 19, K Einsweiler 20, E Eisenhandler 99, T Ekelof 208, M El Kacimi 169, M Ellert 208, S Elles 9, F Ellinghaus 105, K Ellis 99, N Ellis 43, J Elmsheuser 123, M Elsing 43, D Emeliyanov 158, R Engelmann 187, A Engl 123, B Epp 84, J Erdmann 218, A Ereditato 22, D Eriksson 184, J Ernst 3, M Ernst 36, J Ernwein 172, D Errede 207, S Errede 207, E Ertel 105, M Escalier 141, H Esch 62, C Escobar 151, X Espinal Curull 16, B Esposito 66, F Etienne 107, A I Etienvre 172, E Etzion 192, D Evangelakou 75, H Evans 83, L Fabbri 27,28, C Fabre 43, R M Fakhrutdinov 157, S Falciano 161, Y Fang 47, M Fanti 113,114, A Farbin 12, A Farilla 165, J Farley 187, T Farooque 197, S Farrell 203, S M Farrington 212, P Farthouat 43, F Fassi 209, P Fassnacht 43, D Fassouliotis 13, B Fatholahzadeh 197, A Favareto 113,114, L Fayard 141, P Federic 180, O L Fedin 148, W Fedorko 210, M Fehling-Kaschek 67, L Feligioni 107, C Feng 50, E J Feng 10, A B Fenyuk 157, J Ferencei 181, W Fernando 10, S Ferrag 74, J Ferrando 74, V Ferrara 61, A Ferrari 208, P Ferrari 131, R Ferrari 145, D E Ferreira de Lima 74, A Ferrer 209, D Ferrere 68, C Ferretti 111, A Ferretto Parodi 69,70, M Fiascaris 44, F Fiedler 105, A Filipčič 98, F Filthaut 130, M Fincke-Keeler 211, M C N Fiolhais 152, L Fiorini 209, A Firan 59, G Fischer 61, M J Fisher 135, E A Fitzgerald 31, M Flechl 67, I Fleck 177, J Fleckner 105, P Fleischmann 216, S Fleischmann 217, G Fletcher 99, T Flick 217, A Floderus 103, L R Flores Castillo 215, A C Florez Bustos 199, M J Flowerdew 124, T Fonseca Martin 22, A Formica 172, A Forti 106, D Fortin 198, D Fournier 141, A J Fowler 64, H Fox 94, P Francavilla 16, M Franchini 27,28, S Franchino 145,146, D Francis 43, T Frank 214, M Franklin 78, S Franz 43, M Fraternali 145,146, S Fratina 147, S T French 41, C Friedrich 61, F Friedrich 63, D Froidevaux 43, J A Frost 41, C Fukunaga 195, E Fullana Torregrosa 156, B G Fulsom 179, J Fuster 209, C Gabaldon 43, O Gabizon 214, S Gadatsch 131, T Gadfort 36, S Gadomski 68, G Gagliardi 69,70, P Gagnon 83, C Galea 123, B Galhardo 152, E J Gallas 144, V Gallo 22, B J Gallop 158, P Gallus 155, K K Gan 135, Y S Gao 179, A Gaponenko 20, F Garberson 218, M Garcia-Sciveres 20, C García 209, J E García Navarro 209, R W Gardner 44, N Garelli 179, V Garonne 43, C Gatti 66, G Gaudio 145, B Gaur 177, L Gauthier 172, P Gauzzi 161,162, I L Gavrilenko 119, C Gay 210, G Gaycken 29, E N Gazis 14, P Ge 50, Z Gecse 210, C N P Gee 158, D A A Geerts 131, Ch Geich-Gimbel 29, K Gellerstedt 184,185, C Gemme 69, A Gemmell 74, M H Genest 76, S Gentile 161,162, M George 75, S George 100, D Gerbaudo 16, P Gerlach 217, A Gershon 192, C Geweniger 79, H Ghazlane 168, N Ghodbane 52, B Giacobbe 27, S Giagu 161,162, V Giangiobbe 16, F Gianotti 43, B Gibbard 36, A Gibson 197, S M Gibson 43, M Gilchriese 20, T P S Gillam 41, D Gillberg 43, A R Gillman 158, D M Gingrich 4, J Ginzburg 192, N Giokaris 13, M P Giordani 206, R Giordano 127,128, F M Giorgi 21, P Giovannini 124, P F Giraud 172, D Giugni 113, M Giunta 118, B K Gjelsten 143, L K Gladilin 122, C Glasman 104, J Glatzer 29, A Glazov 61, G L Glonti 87, J R Goddard 99, J Godfrey 178, J Godlewski 43, M Goebel 61, T Göpfert 63, C Goeringer 105, C Gössling 62, S Goldfarb 111, T Golling 218, D Golubkov 157, A Gomes 152, L S Gomez Fajardo 61, R Gonçalo 100, J Goncalves Pinto Firmino Da Costa 61, L Gonella 29, S González de la Hoz 209, G Gonzalez Parra 16, M L Gonzalez Silva 40, S Gonzalez-Sevilla 68, J J Goodson 187, L Goossens 43, P A Gorbounov 120, H A Gordon 36, I Gorelov 129, G Gorfine 217, B Gorini 43, E Gorini 95,96, A Gorišek 98, E Gornicki 58, A T Goshaw 10, M Gosselink 131, M I Gostkin 87, I Gough Eschrich 203, M Gouighri 167, D Goujdami 169, M P Goulette 68, A G Goussiou 174, C Goy 9, S Gozpinar 31, I Grabowska-Bold 57, P Grafström 27,28, K-J Grahn 61, E Gramstad 143, F Grancagnolo 95, S Grancagnolo 21, V Grassi 187, V Gratchev 148, H M Gray 43, J A Gray 187, E Graziani 165, O G Grebenyuk 148, T Greenshaw 97, Z D Greenwood 36, K Gregersen 54, I M Gregor 61, P Grenier 179, J Griffiths 12, N Grigalashvili 87, A A Grillo 173, K Grimm 94, S Grinstein 16, Ph Gris 52, Y V Grishkevich 122, J-F Grivaz 141, A Grohsjean 61, E Gross 214, J Grosse-Knetter 75, J Groth-Jensen 214, K Grybel 177, D Guest 218, C Guicheney 52, E Guido 69,70, T Guillemin 141, S Guindon 75, U Gul 74, J Gunther 154, B Guo 197, J Guo 53, P Gutierrez 137, N Guttman 192, O Gutzwiller 215, C Guyot 172, C Gwenlan 144, C B Gwilliam 97, A Haas 134, S Haas 43, C Haber 20, H K Hadavand 12, D R Hadley 23, P Haefner 29, F Hahn 43, Z Hajduk 58, H Hakobyan 219, D Hall 144, G Halladjian 85, K Hamacher 217, P Hamal 139, K Hamano 110, M Hamer 75, A Hamilton 183, S Hamilton 201, L Han 48, K Hanagaki 142, K Hanawa 200, M Hance 20, C Handel 105, P Hanke 79, J R Hansen 54, J B Hansen 54, J D Hansen 54, P H Hansen 54, P Hansson 179, K Hara 200, T Harenberg 217, S Harkusha 115, D Harper 111, R D Harrington 65, O M Harris 174, J Hartert 67, F Hartjes 131, T Haruyama 88, A Harvey 77, S Hasegawa 126, Y Hasegawa 176, S Hassani 172, S Haug 22, M Hauschild 43, R Hauser 112, M Havranek 29, C M Hawkes 23, R J Hawkings 43, A D Hawkins 103, T Hayakawa 89, T Hayashi 200, D Hayden 100, C P Hays 144, H S Hayward 97, S J Haywood 158, S J Head 23, V Hedberg 103, L Heelan 12, S Heim 147, B Heinemann 20, S Heisterkamp 54, L Helary 30, C Heller 123, M Heller 43, S Hellman 184,185, D Hellmich 29, C Helsens 16, R C W Henderson 94, M Henke 79, A Henrichs 218, A M Henriques Correia 43, S Henrot-Versille 141, C Hensel 75, C M Hernandez 12, Y Hernández Jiménez 209, R Herrberg 21, G Herten 67, R Hertenberger 123, L Hervas 43, G G Hesketh 101, N P Hessey 131, R Hickling 99, E Higón-Rodriguez 209, J C Hill 41, K H Hiller 61, S Hillert 29, S J Hillier 23, I Hinchliffe 20, E Hines 147, M Hirose 142, F Hirsch 62, D Hirschbuehl 217, J Hobbs 187, N Hod 192, M C Hodgkinson 175, P Hodgson 175, A Hoecker 43, M R Hoeferkamp 129, J Hoffman 59, D Hoffmann 107, M Hohlfeld 105, M Holder 177, S O Holmgren 184, T Holy 155, J L Holzbauer 112, T M Hong 147, L Hooft van Huysduynen 134, S Horner 67, J-Y Hostachy 76, S Hou 190, A Hoummada 167, J Howard 144, J Howarth 106, M Hrabovsky 139, I Hristova 21, J Hrivnac 141, T Hryn’ova 9, P J Hsu 105, S-C Hsu 174, D Hu 53, Z Hubacek 43, F Hubaut 107, F Huegging 29, A Huettmann 61, T B Huffman 144, E W Hughes 53, G Hughes 94, M Huhtinen 43, M Hurwitz 20, N Huseynov 87, J Huston 112, J Huth 78, G Iacobucci 68, G Iakovidis 14, M Ibbotson 106, I Ibragimov 177, L Iconomidou-Fayard 141, J Idarraga 141, P Iengo 127, O Igonkina 131, Y Ikegami 88, M Ikeno 88, D Iliadis 193, N Ilic 197, T Ince 124, P Ioannou 13, M Iodice 165, K Iordanidou 13, V Ippolito 161,162, A Irles Quiles 209, C Isaksson 208, M Ishino 90, M Ishitsuka 196, R Ishmukhametov 135, C Issever 144, S Istin 24, A V Ivashin 157, W Iwanski 58, H Iwasaki 88, J M Izen 60, V Izzo 127, B Jackson 147, J N Jackson 97, P Jackson 2, M R Jaekel 43, V Jain 3, K Jakobs 67, S Jakobsen 54, T Jakoubek 154, J Jakubek 155, D O Jamin 190, D K Jana 137, E Jansen 101, H Jansen 43, J Janssen 29, A Jantsch 124, M Janus 67, R C Jared 215, G Jarlskog 103, L Jeanty 78, I Jen-La Plante 44, G-Y Jeng 189, D Jennens 110, P Jenni 43, A E Loevschall-Jensen 54, P Jež 54, S Jézéquel 9, M K Jha 27, H Ji 215, W Ji 105, J Jia 187, Y Jiang 48, M Jimenez Belenguer 61, S Jin 47, O Jinnouchi 196, M D Joergensen 54, D Joffe 59, M Johansen 184,185, K E Johansson 184, P Johansson 175, S Johnert 61, K A Johns 11, K Jon-And 184,185, G Jones 212, R W L Jones 94, T J Jones 97, C Joram 43, P M Jorge 152, K D Joshi 106, J Jovicevic 186, T Jovin 18, X Ju 215, C A Jung 62, R M Jungst 43, V Juranek 154, P Jussel 84, A Juste Rozas 16, S Kabana 22, M Kaci 209, A Kaczmarska 58, P Kadlecik 54, M Kado 141, H Kagan 135, M Kagan 78, E Kajomovitz 191, S Kalinin 217, L V Kalinovskaya 87, S Kama 59, N Kanaya 194, M Kaneda 43, S Kaneti 41, T Kanno 196, V A Kantserov 121, J Kanzaki 88, B Kaplan 134, A Kapliy 44, D Kar 74, M Karagounis 29, K Karakostas 14, M Karnevskiy 80, V Kartvelishvili 94, A N Karyukhin 157, L Kashif 215, G Kasieczka 80, R D Kass 135, A Kastanas 19, Y Kataoka 194, J Katzy 61, V Kaushik 11, K Kawagoe 92, T Kawamoto 194, G Kawamura 105, S Kazama 194, V F Kazanin 133, M Y Kazarinov 87, R Keeler 211, P T Keener 147, R Kehoe 59, M Keil 75, G D Kekelidze 87, J S Keller 174, M Kenyon 74, H Keoshkerian 9, O Kepka 154, N Kerschen 43, B P Kerševan 98, S Kersten 217, K Kessoku 194, J Keung 197, F Khalil-zada 15, H Khandanyan 184,185, A Khanov 138, D Kharchenko 87, A Khodinov 121, A Khomich 79, T J Khoo 41, G Khoriauli 29, A Khoroshilov 217, V Khovanskiy 120, E Khramov 87, J Khubua 72, H Kim 184,185, S H Kim 200, N Kimura 213, O Kind 21, B T King 97, M King 89, R S B King 144, 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Styles 61, D A Soh 190, D Su 179, HS Subramania 4, R Subramaniam 36, A Succurro 16, Y Sugaya 142, C Suhr 132, M Suk 156, V V Sulin 119, S Sultansoy 7, T Sumida 90, X Sun 76, J E Sundermann 67, K Suruliz 175, G Susinno 55,56, M R Sutton 188, Y Suzuki 88, Y Suzuki 89, M Svatos 154, S Swedish 210, I Sykora 180, T Sykora 156, J Sánchez 209, D Ta 131, K Tackmann 61, A Taffard 203, R Tafirout 198, N Taiblum 192, Y Takahashi 126, H Takai 36, R Takashima 91, H Takeda 89, T Takeshita 176, Y Takubo 88, M Talby 107, A Talyshev 133, M C Tamsett 36, K G Tan 110, J Tanaka 194, R Tanaka 141, S Tanaka 160, S Tanaka 88, A J Tanasijczuk 178, K Tani 89, N Tannoury 107, S Tapprogge 105, D Tardif 197, S Tarem 191, F Tarrade 42, G F Tartarelli 113, P Tas 156, M Tasevsky 154, E Tassi 55,56, Y Tayalati 170, C Taylor 101, F E Taylor 117, G N Taylor 110, W Taylor 199, M Teinturier 141, F A Teischinger 43, M Teixeira Dias Castanheira 99, P Teixeira-Dias 100, K K Temming 67, H Ten Kate 43, P K Teng 190, S Terada 88, K Terashi 194, J Terron 104, M Testa 66, R J Teuscher 197, J Therhaag 29, T Theveneaux-Pelzer 102, S Thoma 67, J P Thomas 23, E N Thompson 53, P D Thompson 23, P D Thompson 197, A S Thompson 74, L A Thomsen 54, E Thomson 147, M Thomson 41, W M Thong 110, R P Thun 111, F Tian 53, M J Tibbetts 20, T Tic 154, V O Tikhomirov 119, Y A Tikhonov 133, S Timoshenko 121, E Tiouchichine 107, P Tipton 218, S Tisserant 107, T Todorov 9, S Todorova-Nova 201, B Toggerson 203, J Tojo 92, S Tokár 180, K Tokushuku 88, K Tollefson 112, M Tomoto 126, L Tompkins 44, K Toms 129, A Tonoyan 19, C Topfel 22, N D Topilin 87, E Torrence 140, H Torres 102, E Torró Pastor 209, J Toth 107, F Touchard 107, D R Tovey 175, T Trefzger 216, L Tremblet 43, A Tricoli 43, I M Trigger 198, S Trincaz-Duvoid 102, M F Tripiana 93, N Triplett 36, W Trischuk 197, B Trocmé 76, C Troncon 113, M Trottier-McDonald 178, P True 112, M Trzebinski 58, A Trzupek 58, C Tsarouchas 43, J C-L Tseng 144, M Tsiakiris 131, P V Tsiareshka 115, D Tsionou 9, G Tsipolitis 14, S Tsiskaridze 16, V Tsiskaridze 67, E G Tskhadadze 71, I I Tsukerman 120, V Tsulaia 20, J-W Tsung 29, S Tsuno 88, D Tsybychev 187, A Tua 175, A Tudorache 37, V Tudorache 37, J M Tuggle 44, M Turala 58, D Turecek 155, I Turk Cakir 8, R Turra 113,114, P M Tuts 53, A Tykhonov 98, M Tylmad 184,185, M Tyndel 158, G Tzanakos 13, K Uchida 29, I Ueda 194, R Ueno 42, M Ughetto 107, M Ugland 19, M Uhlenbrock 29, F Ukegawa 200, G Unal 43, A Undrus 36, G Unel 203, Y Unno 88, D Urbaniec 53, P Urquijo 29, G Usai 12, L Vacavant 107, V Vacek 155, B Vachon 109, S Vahsen 20, S Valentinetti 27,28, A Valero 209, L Valery 52, S Valkar 156, E Valladolid Gallego 209, S Vallecorsa 191, J A Valls Ferrer 209, R Van Berg 147, P C Van Der Deijl 131, R van der Geer 131, H van der Graaf 131, R Van Der Leeuw 131, E van der Poel 131, D van der Ster 43, N van Eldik 43, P van Gemmeren 10, J Van Nieuwkoop 178, I van Vulpen 131, M Vanadia 124, W Vandelli 43, A Vaniachine 10, P Vankov 61, F Vannucci 102, R Vari 161, E W Varnes 11, T Varol 108, D Varouchas 20, A Vartapetian 12, K E Varvell 189, V I Vassilakopoulos 77, F Vazeille 52, T Vazquez Schroeder 75, G Vegni 113,114, J J Veillet 141, F Veloso 152, R Veness 43, S Veneziano 161, A Ventura 95,96, D Ventura 108, M Venturi 67, N Venturi 197, V Vercesi 145, M Verducci 174, W Verkerke 131, J C Vermeulen 131, A Vest 63, M C Vetterli 178, I Vichou 207, T Vickey 183, O E Vickey Boeriu 183, G H A Viehhauser 144, S Viel 210, M Villa 27,28, M Villaplana Perez 209, E Vilucchi 66, M G Vincter 42, E Vinek 43, V B Vinogradov 87, M Virchaux 172, J Virzi 20, O Vitells 214, M Viti 61, I Vivarelli 67, F Vives Vaque 4, S Vlachos 14, D Vladoiu 123, M Vlasak 155, A Vogel 29, P Vokac 155, G Volpi 66, M Volpi 110, G Volpini 113, H von der Schmitt 124, H von Radziewski 67, E von Toerne 29, V Vorobel 156, V Vorwerk 16, M Vos 209, R Voss 43, J H Vossebeld 97, N Vranjes 172, M Vranjes Milosavljevic 131, V Vrba 154, M Vreeswijk 131, T Vu Anh 67, R Vuillermet 43, I Vukotic 44, W Wagner 217, P Wagner 29, H Wahlen 217, S Wahrmund 63, J Wakabayashi 126, S Walch 111, J Walder 94, R Walker 123, W Walkowiak 177, R Wall 218, P Waller 97, B Walsh 218, C Wang 64, H Wang 215, H Wang 59, J Wang 190, J Wang 47, R Wang 129, S M Wang 190, T Wang 29, A Warburton 109, C P Ward 41, D R Wardrope 101, M Warsinsky 67, A Washbrook 65, C Wasicki 61, I Watanabe 89, P M Watkins 23, A T Watson 23, I J Watson 189, M F Watson 23, G Watts 174, S Watts 106, A T Waugh 189, B M Waugh 101, M S Weber 22, J S Webster 44, A R Weidberg 144, P Weigell 124, J Weingarten 75, C Weiser 67, P S Wells 43, T Wenaus 36, D Wendland 21, Z Weng 190, T Wengler 43, S Wenig 43, N Wermes 29, M Werner 67, P Werner 43, M Werth 203, M Wessels 79, J Wetter 201, C Weydert 76, K Whalen 42, A White 12, M J White 110, S White 149,150, S R Whitehead 144, D Whiteson 203, D Whittington 83, D Wicke 217, F J Wickens 158, W Wiedenmann 215, M Wielers 158, P Wienemann 29, C Wiglesworth 99, L A M Wiik-Fuchs 29, P A Wijeratne 101, A Wildauer 124, M A Wildt 61, I Wilhelm 156, H G Wilkens 43, J Z Will 123, E Williams 53, H H Williams 147, S Williams 41, W Willis 53, S Willocq 108, J A Wilson 23, M G Wilson 179, A Wilson 111, I Wingerter-Seez 9, S Winkelmann 67, F Winklmeier 43, M Wittgen 179, S J Wollstadt 105, M W Wolter 58, H Wolters 152, W C Wong 60, G Wooden 111, B K Wosiek 58, J Wotschack 43, M J Woudstra 106, K W Wozniak 58, K Wraight 74, M Wright 74, B Wrona 97, S L Wu 215, X Wu 68, Y Wu 48, E Wulf 53, B M Wynne 65, S Xella 54, M Xiao 172, S Xie 67, C Xu 48, D Xu 47, L Xu 48, B Yabsley 189, S Yacoob 182, M Yamada 88, H Yamaguchi 194, A Yamamoto 88, K Yamamoto 86, S Yamamoto 194, T Yamamura 194, T Yamanaka 194, K Yamauchi 126, T Yamazaki 194, Y Yamazaki 89, Z Yan 30, H Yang 51, H Yang 215, U K Yang 106, Y Yang 135, Z Yang 184,185, S Yanush 116, L Yao 47, Y Yasu 88, E Yatsenko 61, J Ye 59, S Ye 36, A L Yen 78, M Yilmaz 6, R Yoosoofmiya 151, K Yorita 213, R Yoshida 10, K Yoshihara 194, C Young 179, C J Young 144, S Youssef 30, D Yu 36, D R Yu 20, J Yu 12, J Yu 138, L Yuan 89, A Yurkewicz 132, B Zabinski 58, R Zaidan 85, A M Zaitsev 157, L Zanello 161,162, D Zanzi 124, A Zaytsev 36, C Zeitnitz 217, M Zeman 155, A Zemla 58, O Zenin 157, T Ženiš 180, Z Zinonos 149,150, D Zerwas 141, G Zevi della Porta 78, D Zhang 111, H Zhang 112, J Zhang 10, X Zhang 50, Z Zhang 141, L Zhao 134, Z Zhao 48, A Zhemchugov 87, J Zhong 144, B Zhou 111, N Zhou 203, Y Zhou 190, C G Zhu 50, H Zhu 61, J Zhu 111, Y Zhu 48, X Zhuang 123, V Zhuravlov 124, A Zibell 123, D Zieminska 83, N I Zimin 87, R Zimmermann 29, S Zimmermann 29, S Zimmermann 67, M Ziolkowski 177, R Zitoun 9, L Živković 53, V V Zmouchko 157, G Zobernig 215, A Zoccoli 27,28, M zur Nedden 21, V Zutshi 132, L Zwalinski 43
PMCID: PMC4370863  PMID: 25814856

Abstract

A search for supersymmetric particles in final states with zero, one, and two leptons, with and without jets identified as originating from b-quarks, in 4.7 fb−1 of Inline graphic pp collisions produced by the Large Hadron Collider and recorded by the ATLAS detector is presented. The search uses a set of variables carrying information on the event kinematics transverse and parallel to the beam line that are sensitive to several topologies expected in supersymmetry. Mutually exclusive final states are defined, allowing a combination of all channels to increase the search sensitivity. No deviation from the Standard Model expectation is observed. Upper limits at 95 % confidence level on visible cross-sections for the production of new particles are extracted. Results are interpreted in the context of the constrained minimal supersymmetric extension to the Standard Model and in supersymmetry-inspired models with diverse, high-multiplicity final states.

Introduction

One of the most promising extensions of the Standard Model, supersymmetry (SUSY) [19], has been the target of a large number of searches at the LHC. Prompted by the large predicted production cross-section of coloured SUSY particles (sparticles), ATLAS and CMS have performed inclusive searches for strongly produced squarks and gluinos, the superpartners of quarks and gluons [1017]. Assuming R-parity conservation [1822], these sparticles are produced in pairs and decay into energetic jets, possibly leptons, and the lightest SUSY particle (LSP, typically the lightest neutralino Inline graphic), which escapes detection and results in missing transverse momentum. For these searches, the selections adopted to discriminate the signal processes from the background typically include requirements on the missing transverse momentum (Inline graphic) and the scalar sum of transverse momenta of all selected physics objects (H T) plus the scalar Inline graphic (effective mass, M eff).

This paper presents a search for strongly produced sparticles that makes use of a variety of final states including high transverse momentum jets and zero, one, or two leptons (electrons or muons). The events are also separated according to the presence of a jet identified as originating from a b-quark (b-tagged jet). Several mutually exclusive search channels are defined, facilitating a simultaneous search in all of the typical final states and increasing the search sensitivity. The search employs a set of observables, called the “razor variables” [23], which make use of both longitudinal and transverse event information. Because of the inclusion of longitudinal information, the requirements on the transverse information to reduce the background are effectively relaxed, making the search sensitive to different regions of kinematic phase space relative to other Inline graphic-based searches. Thus, these search results complement those already performed by ATLAS. These variables were first employed in SUSY searches by CMS [24, 25].

This paper is organised as follows. The main features of the ATLAS detector are presented in Sect. 2. Section 3 introduces the razor variables. Section 4 describes the data sample, basic event selection, and the Monte Carlo simulation used to model the data. Section 5 defines the basic physics objects and event-level variables that are used through the analysis. The search technique is described in Sect. 6, and the background estimation is presented in Sect. 7. The performance of the search and interpretation of the results are presented in Sect. 8. Finally, Sect. 9 includes a summary of the analysis and of its findings.

ATLAS detector

The ATLAS detector comprises an inner tracking detector, a calorimeter, and a muon system [26]. The inner detector includes a silicon pixel detector, a silicon microstrip detector, and a transition radiation tracker. It is immersed in a 2 T axial field and precisely measures the tracks of charged particles in the pseudorapidity region1 |η|<2.5. The calorimeter covers the region |η|<4.9 and is divided into electromagnetic and hadronic compartments. The electromagnetic calorimetry in the central (|η|<3.2) region is provided by liquid argon sampling calorimeters with lead absorbers. In the barrel region (|η|<1.4), the hadronic calorimetry is provided by scintillator tiles with steel absorbers, and the more forward (1.4<|η|<3.2) region is covered by a liquid argon and copper sampling hadronic calorimeter. The forward calorimetry (|η|>3.2) uses liquid argon and copper or tungsten absorbers. The muon spectrometer covers |η|<2.7 and includes a system of air-core toroidal magnets. A variety of technologies are used to provide precision muon tracking and identification for |η|<2.7 and rapid response for triggering for |η|<2.4.

ATLAS uses a three-tier trigger system to select events. The first-level (L1) trigger is hardware-based and only uses coarse calorimeter information and muon system information. The calorimeter information available at the lowest level includes basic objects with rough calibration and simple identification of electromagnetic objects (electrons and photons) as distinct from hadronic objects (jets). The second-level (L2) trigger and event-filter (EF) compose the software-based high-level trigger (HLT), in which full event reconstruction is run, similar to that used offline, in order to accurately identify and measure objects. The L2 only examines η/ϕ regions that triggered the L1. The EF fully reconstructs events that pass L2.

Razor variable definitions

Searches for sparticles in R-parity-conserving scenarios generally make the assumption that the sparticles are pair-produced and decay subsequently to an LSP that is invisible in the detector. The heavy sparticles produced are either the same type of particle (pair-production) or are at the same mass scale (i.e. scenarios with associated squark–gluino production are most relevant when m squarkm gluino). Thus, the production mass and visible energy in the decays are fairly symmetric. Most analyses make use of the transverse balance of typical pp collision events, or exploit the event symmetry in the transverse plane. The razor variables attempt to also include longitudinal information about the event by making several assumptions motivated by the kinematics of the models of interest.

In the rest frame of each heavy sparticle, called the R-frame, the sparticle decays are symmetric. In an attempt to reconstruct the primary produced sparticle pair, the razor calculation clusters all final-state particles into a pair of objects with four-momenta called “mega-jets”. Each of these mega-jets is associated with one of the two SUSY decay chains and represents the visible energy-momentum of that produced sparticle. All possible combinations of the four-vectors of the visibly reconstructed/selected objects (signal jets and leptons) are considered when constructing the two mega-jets. The pair of mega-jets, j 1 and j 2, that minimises the sum of the squared masses of the four-vectors is selected. Following the prescription in Ref. [23] and for consistency with Ref. [24], all jets and the mega-jets are forced to be massless by setting their energy equal to the magnitude of their three momenta. Studies indicate that neither this choice nor the mega-jet selection, based on minimizing the mega-jet mass squared, have a significant impact on the reach of the razor-based search.

In the R-frames, each heavy sparticle should be nearly at rest with some mass m Heavy. The sparticle decay may then be approximated as a two-body decay to some visible object (a mega-jet) and the invisible, stable LSP. The final visible decay products (i.e. the final-state quarks and gluons, or the observable jets and leptons) have masses far below the SUSY mass scale and can therefore be approximated as being massless. Then the energy of each mega-jet in the R-frame, E 1 and E 2, becomes:

graphic file with name 10052_2013_2362_Article_Equ1.gif 1

where m LSP is the mass of the LSP. This leads to a characteristic mass, M R, in the R frame of M R=2×E 1=2×E 2, which for m Heavym LSP is identical to m Heavy. Therefore, in events where heavy particles are pair-produced, M R, which is a measure of the scale of the heaviest particles produced, should form a bump [23, 24]. In Inline graphic or WW events, for example, the characteristic mass M Rm top or m W. Like the Jacobian peak of the transverse mass distribution in Wℓν events, the width of the bump is dominated by the kinematics of the invisible particles in the event. The product of M R and the Lorentz factor for the boost from the lab to R-frame, Inline graphic, is useful for characterisation of the sparticle mass scale, in part because of its close relation to m Heavy, and in part because Standard Model backgrounds tend to have small values of Inline graphic. When expressed in terms of the mega-jet quantities in the lab frame, the expression is given by:

graphic file with name 10052_2013_2362_Article_Equ2.gif 2

where j i,E and j i,z are the energy and longitudinal momentum, respectively, of mega-jet i. The transverse information of the system is taken into account by constructing a transverse mass for the mega-jets, assuming half of the Inline graphic is associated with each jet:

graphic file with name 10052_2013_2362_Equ3_HTML.gif 3

where Inline graphic is the two-dimensional vector of the Inline graphic in the transverse plane. When an event contains “fake” Inline graphic from a detector defect or mismeasurement, the system will tend to have back-to-back mega-jets. In such cases, the vector sum of the two mega-jet momenta will be small. If, on the other hand, there is real Inline graphic, the mega-jets may not be back-to-back and may even point in the same direction. In these cases, the vector sum, and thus Inline graphic, will have a large value. Inline graphic is another measure of the scale of the event that only uses transverse quantities in contrast to longitudinal quantities in Inline graphic.

Finally a razor variable is defined to discriminate between signal and background:

graphic file with name 10052_2013_2362_Article_Equ4.gif 4

This variable takes low values for multijet-like events and tends to be uniformly distributed between 0 and 1 for sparticle decay-like events, providing good discrimination against backgrounds without genuine Inline graphic. The impact of some important experimental uncertainties, like the jet energy scale uncertainty, are reduced in this ratio. In an analysis based on the razor variables, a cut on R can be used to eliminate these backgrounds before a SUSY search is made in the distribution of the variable Inline graphic.

Data and Monte Carlo samples

The data included in this analysis were collected between March and October 2011. After basic trigger and data quality requirements, the full dataset corresponds to 4.7±0.2 fb−1 [27, 28].

Events in the zero-lepton channels are selected using a trigger that requires a jet with transverse momentum p T>100 GeV at L1. In the event filter, H T>400 GeV is required, where H T is calculated through a scalar sum of the p T of all calorimeter objects with p T>30 GeV and |η|<3.2. With the exception of a cross-check of the multijet background estimate, which uses prescaled single-jet triggers, this trigger requirement is fully efficient for the offline selection used in the analysis.

The one- and two-lepton channels make use of the lowest-p T single-lepton triggers available for the entire running period. The muon triggers require a muon with p T>18 GeV, and the electron triggers require an electron with p T>22 GeV. Offline, the leading lepton in the event is required to have p T>20 GeV (p T>25 GeV) if it is a muon (electron), in order to ensure that the triggers are fully efficient with respect to the offline event selection. For the two-lepton analysis, where there are overlaps in the triggers, the electron trigger takes priority over the muon trigger.

Offline, an event is required to have at least one vertex with at least five tracks associated to it, each with Inline graphic. This requirement reduces cosmic ray and beam-related backgrounds. The primary vertex is defined as the one with the largest Inline graphic of the associated tracks. Events that suffer from sporadic calorimeter noise bursts or data integrity errors are also rejected.

Monte Carlo (MC) simulated events were used to develop the analysis and assist in estimations of background rates. All MC samples are processed through ATLAS’s full detector simulation [29] based on Geant4 [30], which was run with four different configurations corresponding to detector conditions of four distinct operating periods of 2011. The fractions of MC simulation events in these four periods match the fractions of data in each period. During the data collection, the average number of proton–proton collisions per bunch crossing in addition to the one of interest (“event pile-up” or simply “pile-up”) increased from approximately two to twelve. To mimic the effect of pile-up, additional inelastic proton–proton collisions are generated using Pythia [31] and overlaid on top of every MC event. Within each period, the profile of the average number of events per bunch crossing (〈μ〉) is re-weighted to match the data in that period. The same trigger selection is applied to the MC simulation events, which are then passed through the same analysis code as the data. Reconstruction and trigger efficiency scale factors are applied to the MC simulation in order to take into account small discrepancies between the data and the MC simulation.

Table 1 lists the major backgrounds along with the chosen estimation method (described in Sect. 7) and the primary and alternative MC generators used in this analysis. In all cases, MC@NLO and Alpgen are interfaced to Herwig and Jimmy for the parton shower, hadronisation, and underlying event modelling. The multijet background is normalised to the leading order generator cross-section predicted by Pythia. The Inline graphic production cross-section of 166.8 pb is calculated at approximate NNLO in QCD using Hathor [32] with the MSTW2008 NNLO PDF sets [33]. The calculation is cross-checked with an NLO+NNLL calculation [34] implemented in Top++ [35]. The single-top production cross-sections are calculated separately for s-channel, t-channel, and Wt production at NNLO [3638].

Table 1.

Background estimation methods, primary and alternative MC event generators, and normalisation uncertainties for each of the major backgrounds. The backgrounds are constrained using various Control Regions (CRs) that are enriched in certain samples (see Sect. 6). The Inline graphic background estimate includes small contributions from Inline graphic and Inline graphic, generated with MadGraph. The diboson WW background estimate also includes W ± W ± jj generated with MadGraph. The last column of the table indicates the uncertainty on the normalization in the simultaneous fit used to test signal hypotheses. “None” indicates that the normalization is fully constrained in the fit. The grouping indicates the samples that are combined and jointly varied in the fit. Within a group, the relative normalizations are fixed

Background 0-Lepton 1-Lepton 2-Lepton Generator Alternate Normalisation uncertainty
Multijets MJ CRs Matrix method Matrix method Pythia [31] Alpgen [43] None
Wℓν W CRs W CRs Matrix method Alpgen [43] None (grouped with Z)
Zℓℓ Z CRs Z CRs Z CRs Alpgen [43] None (grouped with W)
Drell–Yan Z CRs Z CRs Z CRs Alpgen [43] None (grouped with W)
Zνν Z CRs Matrix method Matrix method Alpgen [43] None (grouped with W/Z)
Inline graphic(had) Inline graphic CRs Inline graphic CRs Inline graphic CRs MC@NLO [44] None
Inline graphic(leptonic) Inline graphic CRs Inline graphic CRs Inline graphic CRs Alpgen [43] MC@NLO [4447] None
Single top Inline graphic CRs Inline graphic CRs Inline graphic CRs MC@NLO [44] None (grouped with Inline graphic)
WW diboson MC MC MC Herwig [48] Alpgen [43] NLO ± 30 %
Other diboson Z CRs Z CRs Z CRs Herwig [48] Alpgen [43] None (grouped with W/Z)

The W and Z (including Drell–Yan with m ℓℓ>40 GeV) production cross-sections of 10.46 nb and 0.964 nb are calculated at NNLO using FEWZ [39]. For the production of vector bosons in association with heavy flavour, in accordance with ATLAS measurements [40], the production cross-section for Inline graphic and Inline graphic are scaled by 1.63, and the cross-section for W+c is scaled by 1.11 compared to the NLO cross-section [41]. Additional uncertainties on the production of W and Z bosons in association with heavy flavour of 45 % for Inline graphic and Inline graphic, 32 % for W+c, and 55 % for Inline graphic are included. Alpgen describes the jet multiplicity and inclusive Inline graphic distributions well, but it does not correctly model the vector boson p T distribution. Therefore, the boson p T in the Alpgen samples is re-weighted according to the distribution produced Sherpa. Half of the difference between the weight and unity is applied as a systematic uncertainty on the re-weighting procedure. Further systematic uncertainties on the shapes of Alpgen samples are derived by systematically varying the generator parameters, including matching and factorisation scales. Diboson production cross-sections of 44.92 pb, 17.97 pb, and 9.23 pb for WW, WZ, and ZZ (including off-shell production with m ℓℓ>12 GeV) are calculated at NLO using MCFM [42]. In order to avoid low-mass resonances, all dilepton events are required to have the invariant mass m ℓℓ>20 GeV. These cross-sections provide the starting normalisations for all background processes.

Two SUSY-inspired simplified models are used for the interpretation of the results from this search. The first considers gluino pair-production, with the gluino decaying to a Inline graphic pair and the LSP via an off-shell stop. This model is generated using Herwig++ [49], with the gluino and LSP masses being the only free parameters. The top quarks are required to be on-shell, limiting the mass splitting between the gluino and the LSP to greater than 2×m top.

The second considers gluino pair-production, with the gluino decaying to two quarks and a chargino via an off-shell squark. The chargino then decays to a W boson and the LSP. The free parameters of this model are the masses of the gluino, chargino, and LSP. For convenience, two two-dimensional planes are generated: one with the chargino mass exactly between the masses of the gluino and the LSP and one with the mass of the LSP fixed to 60 GeV. Because initial-state radiation can be important for the acceptance of these models when the mass splitting between the gluino and LSP is small, this model is generated using MadGraph [50] with at most one additional jet in the matrix element. Pythia is used for the parton shower and hadronisation. Systematic uncertainties on matrix element matching and initial-state radiation modelling are included, leading to 20 % uncertainties for small mass splittings and small gluino masses, but no uncertainty for mass splittings above 200 GeV and masses above 400 GeV.

Additionally, the results are interpreted in terms of SUSY signal models based on the constrained minimal supersymmetric model (CMSSM or MSUGRA) [1822]. The parameters of this model are the high-energy-scale universal scalar mass, m 0, the universal gaugino mass, m 1/2, the ratio of the vacuum expectation values of the two Higgs fields, tan(β), the tri-linear coupling strength, A 0, and the sign of the Higgsino mass parameter, μ. Samples are generated in a two-dimensional grid of the m 0m 1/2 parameters where tan(β)=10 and A 0=0 are fixed and μ is set positive. This MC data grid is generated using Herwig++ [49], with a more dense population of points at low mass. IsaSUSY [51] is used to run the high-energy-scale parameters down to the weak-scale.

Signal cross-sections are calculated to next-to-leading order in the strong coupling constant, adding the resummation of soft gluon emission at next-to-leading-logarithmic accuracy (NLO+NLL) [5256]. The nominal cross-section and the uncertainty are taken from an envelope of cross-section predictions using different PDF sets and factorisation and renormalisation scales, as described in Ref. [57]. For each of these signal models, the luminosity systematic uncertainty of 3.9 % [27, 28] and statistical uncertainty, typically of order 10 %, is included.

Physics object identification and selection

Events are categorised into six exclusive samples defined by the presence of zero, one, or two leptons, with or without b-tagged jets. The particle candidate selections that define these samples are referred to as the “baseline” object selection. Since a particle may simultaneously satisfy multiple particle hypotheses (e.g. electron and jet), an overlap removal procedure (described below) assigns a unique interpretation to each candidate. The selections are then refined to enhance signal candidates whilst removing leptons not originating from gauge bosons, tau-leptons or sparticles.

Baseline electrons are required to have E T>10 GeV, be within the fiducial acceptance of the inner detector (|η|<2.47), and pass a version of the “medium” selection criteria [58] updated for 2011 running conditions, which requires hadronic calorimeter energy deposition and a calorimetric shower shape consistent with an electron and a match to a good quality inner detector track. Signal electrons are required to be isolated from other objects and satisfy “tight” selections. The tight selection applies stricter track quality and matching than medium and ensures the number of hits in the transition radiation tracker is consistent with the electron hypothesis. The isolation requirement is that the sum of the p T of all charged particle tracks associated with the primary vertex within ΔR=0.2, where Inline graphic, of the electron is less than 10 % of the electron E T. In the leptonic channels, if the leading lepton in a data event is an electron, it is additionally required to match an EF trigger electron. MC simulation events are re-weighted to compensate for mis-modelling of the single-lepton trigger efficiency. The energy of electrons in simulated events is also smeared prior to object selection in order to reproduce the resolution in Z and J/ψ data. Finally, in order to account for percent-level differences in electron reconstruction efficiency, η- and E T-dependent scale factors, derived from Z, W, and J/ψ events in the data, are applied to each simulated electron satisfying overlap removal and selection requirements.

Baseline muons are reconstructed as either a combined track in the muon spectrometer and inner detector, or as an inner detector track matching with a muon spectrometer segment [59]. Tracks are required to have good quality, and the muon is required to have p T>10 GeV and |η|<2.4. Signal muons are required to be isolated by ensuring that the sum of the p T of all charged particle tracks associated with the primary vertex within ΔR=0.2 of the muon is less than 1.8 GeV. Matching to EF trigger muons in data, MC event trigger re-weighting, muon momentum smearing, and MC/data efficiency scaling are performed in a similar way for muons as electrons (described above) [6062]. These corrections are typically percent or sub-percent level.

Calorimeter jets are reconstructed from topological clusters of energy deposited in the calorimeter calibrated at the electromagnetic (EM) scale [63] using the anti-k t jet algorithm [64, 65] with a four-momentum recombination scheme and a distance parameter of 0.4. Jets reconstructed with an EM-scale p T>7 GeV are calibrated to the hadronic scale (particle level) using p T and η-dependent factors, derived from simulation and validated with test beam and collision data [66]. In order to remove specific non-collision backgrounds, events are rejected if they contain a reconstructed jet that does not pass several quality and selection criteria [66]. Signal jets are selected if they lie within |η|<2.5 with a jet vertex fraction (JVF) of at least 75 %, where the JVF is the fraction of summed p T of the tracks associated with the jet that is carried by tracks consistent with the primary vertex of the event, thus associating the jet with the pp collision of interest. Jets are tagged as heavy flavour using the combined neural network “jet fitter” algorithm [67] with the 60 % efficiency working point. Scale factors for heavy flavour jets are used in MC simulation in order to reproduce the expected b-jet identification performance in data.

In order to ensure that objects are not double counted, overlaps between objects are removed using a hierachical procedure. If any two baseline electrons lie within a distance of ΔR=0.1 of one another, the electron with the lower calorimeter E T is discarded. Next, jets passing basic selections are required to be at least 0.2 units away from all surviving baseline electrons in ηϕ. Electrons are then required to be at least 0.4 units away from surviving jets. Finally, in order to mitigate the effect of jets which have deposited significant energy in the muon spectrometer on mass measurements and reduce the number of events with badly measured missing transverse momentum, muons with p T>250 GeV within ΔR=0.2 of a jet with p T>500 GeV are removed. A negligible number of events in the data are removed by this cut.

Following these overlap removal procedures, the missing transverse momentum and razor variables are calculated. The determination of the missing transverse momentum uses all baseline electrons with E T>20 GeV, all baseline muons, all calibrated jets with p T>20 GeV, and EM scale topological calorimeter clusters not belonging to any object. Note that in the MC simulation, objects enter this calculation after the energy or p T smearing described above.

In counting leptons for event classification, baseline electrons and muons are then required to be at least 0.4 units away from all good jets in ηϕ. If an electron and muon are separated by ΔR cone<0.1, neither is counted.

In order to remove events with large missing transverse momentum due to cosmic rays, events are vetoed if they contain a muon in which the transverse and longitudinal impact track parameters are greater than 0.2 mm and 0.1 mm with respect to the primary vertex, respectively. The vertex resolution is significantly smaller than either of these requirements, typically <0.05 mm. Also vetoed are events with badly measured, non-isolated muons. These muons with large momentum uncertainties are rare in both the signal and background events and can have significant impact on the Inline graphic and razor variables.

During a portion of the run period, a hardware failure resulted in a region of the calorimeter not being read out. For data collected during this period, and for a corresponding fraction of the MC samples, events are rejected if they fail the “smart LAr hole veto” [13]. This ensures that if an event contains one or more jets pointing to the dead region and those jets may contribute substantially to the missing transverse momentum in the event, the event is discarded.

Signal regions are defined after all overlap removal is complete. Events with no baseline leptons and events with the highest-p T lepton below the leading lepton requirement (25 GeV for electrons, 20 GeV for muons) are accepted into the zero-lepton regions. Events with one leading lepton satisfying all requirements, including that on leading lepton p T (above), and no other baseline leptons with p T>10 GeV are accepted into the one-lepton regions. Events with exactly one additional signal lepton above 10 GeV and no other baseline leptons are accepted into the two-lepton regions.

Search technique

After sorting events into the six samples described in the previous section, each sample is further divided in the RInline graphic plane into control regions (CR), which are choosen so that they are dominated by a specific background, and signal regions (SR). Additionally, validation regions (VR) are constructed, which do not constrain the background but are used to evaluate the agreement between data and MC simulation. Table 2 lists these regions, which are also visualised in the RInline graphic plane in Fig. 1. These regions are binned in either R or Inline graphic and then simultaneously fit to MC estimates for background and signal rates with correlations from sample to sample and region to region taken into account. The hadronic (had.) and one-lepton signal regions are divided into events with and without b-tagged jets (“b-tag” and “b-veto,” respectively). The two-lepton events are divided into regions with opposite-sign (OS) and same-sign (SS) leptons and regions with opposite-flavour (OF) and same-flavour (SF) leptons. While some background components are sufficiently constrained by the CRs to be left free in the fit, others are constrained to estimates derived from other techniques or MC simulation. Table 1 summarises the backgrounds, the estimation technique, the source of the estimate, and the normalization uncertainty used in the fit. Finally, systematic uncertainties on all backgrounds are included as nuisance parameters. The result is a maximum likelihood fit that encapsulates all knowledge about the background and signal consistently across all channels.

Table 2.

Background control, signal, and validation regions. All signal regions include the overflow in the highest bin. “N/A” means that there is no requirement. Regions with two leptons are classified as same-sign (SS) or opposite-sign (OS) events and as same-flavor (SF) or opposite-flavor (OF) events. The binning of the validation regions does not affect the results, so they are listed as “N/A”

Name Leptons b-jets N Jets R range Inline graphic range Number of bins
Control regions
Had. b-veto Multijet 0 leptons =0 >5 0.3<R<0.4 Inline graphic 12 in Inline graphic
Had. b-tag Multijet 0 leptons >0 >5 0.2<R<0.3 Inline graphic 10 in Inline graphic
e W+jets 1 electron =0 >5 0<R<0.7 Inline graphic 7 in R
μ W+jets 1 muon =0 >5 0<R<0.7 Inline graphic 7 in R
e Inline graphic 1 electron >0 >5 0<R<0.7 Inline graphic 7 in R
μ Inline graphic 1 muon >0 >5 0<R<0.7 Inline graphic 7 in R
ee Inline graphic 2 OS electrons >0 N/A 0.2<R<0.3 Inline graphic 6 in Inline graphic
μμ Inline graphic 2 OS muons >0 N/A 0.2<R<0.3 Inline graphic 6 in Inline graphic
Inline graphic 2 OS OF leptons >0 N/A R<0.3 Inline graphic 8 in Inline graphic
ee Z 2 OS electrons N/A N/A R<0.4 Inline graphic 9 in Inline graphic
μμ Z 2 OS muons N/A N/A R<0.4 Inline graphic 9 in Inline graphic
ee Charge flip 2 SS electrons N/A N/A R<0.25 Inline graphic 7 in Inline graphic
Signal regions
Had. b-veto 0 leptons =0 >5 R>0.70 Inline graphic 3 in Inline graphic
Had. b-tag 0 leptons >0 >5 R>0.40 Inline graphic 3 in Inline graphic
e b-veto 1 electron =0 >5 R>0.55 Inline graphic 3 in Inline graphic
e b-tag 1 electron >0 >5 R>0.35 Inline graphic 6 in Inline graphic
μ b-veto 1 muon =0 >5 R>0.55 Inline graphic 3 in Inline graphic
μ b-tag 1 muon >0 >5 R>0.35 Inline graphic 4 in Inline graphic
OS-ee 2 OS electrons N/A N/A R>0.40 Inline graphic 4 in Inline graphic
OS-μμ 2 OS muons N/A N/A R>0.40 Inline graphic 4 in Inline graphic
SS-ee 2 SS electrons N/A N/A R>0.25 Inline graphic 4 in Inline graphic
SS-μμ 2 SS muons N/A N/A R>0.25 Inline graphic 4 in Inline graphic
OS- 2 OS OF leptons N/A N/A R>0.40 Inline graphic 4 in Inline graphic
SS- 2 SS OF leptons N/A N/A R>0.25 Inline graphic 4 in Inline graphic
Validation regions
Had. b-veto Multijet 0 leptons =0 >5 0.4<R<0.6 Inline graphic N/A
Had. b-tag Multijet 0 leptons >0 >5 0.3<R<0.4 Inline graphic N/A
1-lep b-veto W+jets 1 lepton =0 >5 N/A Inline graphic N/A
1-lep b-tag Inline graphic 1 lepton >0 >5 N/A Inline graphic N/A
OS-ee/μμ Inline graphic 2 OS SF leptons >0 N/A 0.3<R<0.4 Inline graphic N/A
OS- Inline graphic 2 OS OF leptons >0 N/A 0.3<R<0.4 N/A N/A

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

A visual representation of the zero-lepton (top), one-lepton (middle), and two-lepton (bottom) control validation (VR), and signal (SR) regions. The CR and VR regions also indicate the respective dominant background. Regions with two leptons are classified as same-sign (SS) or opposite-sign (OS) events and as same-flavor (SF) or opposite-flavor (OF) events

When evaluating a signal hypothesis, any signal contamination in the control regions is taken into account for each signal point, as the control region fits are performed for each signal hypothesis. Separately, each signal region (one at a time), along with all control regions, is also fit under the background-only hypothesis. This fit is used to characterise agreement in each signal region with the background-only hypothesis and to extract visible cross-section limits and upper limits on the production of events from new physics (N BSM).

The fit considers several independent background components:

  • Inline graphic and single top. A total of five top control regions are defined in the one- and two-lepton channels. The normalisation of this component is allowed to vary freely in the fit.

  • Bosons, except diboson WW. The inclusion of the WZ and ZZ diboson samples is motivated by the dominance of leptonic Z decays in the two-lepton signal regions, the dominance of Zνν in the zero-lepton signal regions, and the dominance of Inline graphic in the one-lepton signal regions. In all of these cases, the experimental uncertainties affect the samples in the same way as they do W+jets or Z+jets, and therefore they are combined in order to treat them as fully correlated. The normalisation of this sample is allowed to vary freely in the fit. Independent validation of the Z+jets background is carried out in two-lepton control regions. The agreement is good between data and MC simulation in both normalisation and shape.

  • Diboson WW. This sample is constrained with a 30 % cross-section systematic uncertainty. The constraint is necessary because of the relatively small contribution of the sample in most signal and control regions and because no WW-dominated control region can be constructed; if the background were allowed to vary freely, then the fit may find a minimum with an unreasonably large or small contribution from diboson WW events and hide some other effect with an artificial WW normalisation.

  • Charge flip. Charge mis-identification can occur due to physical effects, like lepton Bremsstrahlung, and detector effects, especially for high-p T leptons with almost straight tracks. These effects generate background in the same-sign dielectron and electron-muon channels. This background is negligible in the dimuon channel, where the contribution from both physical and detector effects is far smaller. The electron charge-flip rate is measured as a function of η in the data [68], allowing MC simulation to model the lesser dependence on p T. These charge-flip rates are applied to opposite-sign MC simulation events, providing an estimate of the overall contribution from charge flip in these channels. The electron p T is additionally shifted and smeared to mimic the effect of charge mis-identification. This shift in the p T is propagated through to the razor variables. The uncertainty from the charge flip probabilities dominates the uncertainty of this background.

  • Fake leptons. The multijet background in the one-lepton signal regions, as well as the W+jets, semi-leptonic Inline graphic, and multijet background in the two-lepton signal regions, comes predominantly from hadrons faking electrons and muons. This background is estimated using the “matrix method” [13, 68], using the number of baseline leptons not passing signal lepton requirements. The efficiency for a real lepton passing the baseline lepton requirements to pass the signal lepton requirements is estimated using Z MC simulation events. The rejection rate for fake leptons is estimated in data, using samples enriched in fake leptons. For electrons, the factors are derived and applied separately for inclusive samples of events and samples requiring a b-tagged jet. Because this background accounts for all fake background, MC events in the one-lepton (two-lepton) channels are required to have at least one (two) prompt lepton(s) from a τ lepton, W boson, Z boson, or sparticle. The uncertainty on this background estimate has a statistical component from the number of events in the control region and a systematic component from the uncertainty on the scale factors.

    Some fraction of the events with same-sign, baseline leptons in the data may be due to charge flip. Thus, the matrix method overestimates somewhat the fake lepton background in the dilepton channels. In order to correct for this overlap, opposite-sign events in data containing baseline leptons that do not pass the signal lepton requirements are used. Each event is assigned a weight representing the likelihood of that event being subject to charge mis-identification. The weighted events are then presented as a negative component to the same-sign fake background distribution, such that the contribution to the same sign fake background from originally oppositely charged leptons is subtracted.

  • Multijets in zero-lepton channel. Two specific control regions constrain this background, and its normalisation is allowed to vary freely in the fit. Several different approaches are used to cross-check this estimate. Prescaled single jet triggers are used to construct independent multijet-enriched control regions at low Inline graphic that is free from the inefficiency of the H T-based trigger. The observed number of events in this region are then projected into the signal region using transfer factors from MC simulation. Alternatively, in order to model the mis-measurement of jets in the calorimeter, jets in events collected with these single-jet triggers are smeared according to response functions estimated using data [10]. Both of these methods result in an estimate consistent with that derived in the main fit.

The systematic effects included as nuisance parameters in the fit are: the jet energy scale and resolution uncertainties; b-tagging uncertainties; uncertainty on the MC simulation modelling of the JVF; the additional cross-section uncertainty on the production of heavy flavour in association with a vector boson; the uncertainties on trigger efficiency and matching and reconstruction efficiency; a systematic uncertainty on the re-weighting of the W-boson p T; uncertainties on the missing transverse momentum pile-up dependence and the calibration of energy not associated with an object in the event; the matrix method statistical and systematic uncertainties; the charge flip systematic uncertainties; the diboson WW shape systematic uncertainty taken from comparing Herwig to Alpgen. Where the systematic uncertainties affect object definitions, corrections are propagated to the missing transverse momentum and razor variable calculations. The effects of other uncertainties on the final results are negligible. These uncertainties affect the signal yield and shape in the signal regions, as well as the allowed variation in signal-region background estimates after the control region constraints. In most signal regions, the jet energy scale uncertainty is the dominant experimental uncertainty (from 10 % to 25 %).

Background fit

Figure 2 shows the distributions of Inline graphic and jet multiplicity in the zero-lepton multijet control region with a b-tagged jet requirement, with results from the fit to the control regions overlayed. By design, the multijet background is dominant in these regions. The small contribution from Inline graphic and W+jets backgrounds are constrained by other control regions in the simultaneous fit. The hatched area indicates the total systematic uncertainty after the constraints imposed by the fit.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

The distribution of Inline graphic (left) and the number of jets with p T>30 GeV (right) in the multijet control region with a b-tagged jet requirement (dots with error bars), the expectation from the control region fit for various backgrounds (filled), and the systematic uncertainty (hatched)

The distributions of R and jet multiplicty for the backgrounds after the control region fit in the Wμν+jets control region are shown in Fig. 3. The control region at low R is dominated by fake backgrounds, and at moderate-to-high R they are dominated by W+jets. The use of an alternate control region with a cut on transverse mass, which significantly reduces the fake contribution, results in a negligible change in the final search results.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

The distribution of R (left) and the number of jets with p T>30 GeV (right) in the Wμν+jets control region (dots with error bars), the expectation from the control region fit for various backgrounds (filled), and the systematic uncertainty (hatched). Error bands on the ratios are only shown for bins with non-zero MC simulation predictions. In the high jet-multiplicity bins, the MC simulation statistics are poor

Figures 4 and 5 show the one-lepton and two-lepton Inline graphic control regions, respectively. The fit reduces the normalisation of the Inline graphic background in the one-lepton control region by approximately 15–20 % with respect to the unmodified expectation from MC simulation. This shift predominantly affects the semi-leptonic Inline graphic background. In the two-lepton analysis, there is a significant contribution to the background expectation from Z-boson events with heavy flavour, particularly at low Inline graphic. The lowest Inline graphic bin shows the most significant disagreement, which demonstrates the importance of shape profiling by binning the control regions. Although in that lowest bin, particularly in the two-muon channel, the MC simulation underestimates the amount of data, a single-binned normalisation of the Inline graphic background would result in an overestimation of the background at high Inline graphic. The distributions of missing transverse momentum are also shown for the two-lepton control regions.

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

The distribution of R in the one-lepton Inline graphic control regions (dots with error bars), the expectation after the control region fit for various backgrounds (filled), and the systematic uncertainty (hatched)

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

The distribution of Inline graphic (left) and missing transverse momentum (right) in the two-lepton Inline graphic control regions (dots with error bars), the expectation after the control region fit for various backgrounds (filled), and the systematic uncertainty (hatched)

The distributions of Inline graphic for the two Z+jets control regions are shown in Fig. 6. After the control region fit, good agreement is observed in both the electron and muon channels.

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

Top, the distribution of Inline graphic in the Z+jets control regions. Bottom, the distribution of Inline graphic (left) and dilepton mass (right) in the charge flip control region (dots with error bars), the expectation after the control region fit for various backgrounds (filled), and the systematic uncertainty (hatched)

The charge flip background is significant in the same-sign two-electron channel. Figure 6 also shows the distribution of Inline graphic in a charge flip enriched control region. There remain significant uncertainties on the background even after the control region fit, since it is dominated by charge flip and fake leptons, both of which have large systematic uncertainties associated with them. The distribution of dilepton mass is also shown.

The contributions to each of the control regions before and after the fit to the control regions are shown in Tables 3 and 4.

Table 3.

The number of observed events and the results of the background-only fit to the control regions in the zero- and one-lepton control regions, for an integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb−1. Nominal MC expectations (normalised to MC cross-sections) are given for comparison. The errors shown are the statistical plus systematic uncertainties

Control region Had. b-veto Multijet Had. b-tag Multijet e W+jets μ W+jets e Inline graphic μ Inline graphic
Observed events 1032 2153 1833 1413 3783 3479
Fitted background events 1030±30 2150±50 1840±40 1410±30 3820±60 3470±50
Fitted background decomposition
Fitted top events 21±7 170±19 280±30 290±30 2800±60 2800±60
Fitted W/Z events 90±10 26±4 670±40 690±50 210±20 240±30
Fitted WW diboson events 0.54±0.18 0.14±0.05 4.2±1.8 4.5±1.9 1.2±0.5 1.0±0.4
Fitted multijet events 920±30 1960±50 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0
Fitted charge flip events 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0
Fitted fake lepton events 0±0 0±0 890±50 430±40 810±70 440±60
Expected background events 990 2670 2110 1560 4300 3790
Expected background decomposition
MC exp. top events 52 245 450 470 3300 3250
MC exp. W/Z events 110 28 740 760 200 220
MC exp. WW diboson events 0.61 0.18 4.6 4.6 1.4 1.1
MC exp. multijet events 830 2400 0 0 0 0
Charge flip events (estimated from data) 0 0 0 0 0 0
Fake lepton events (estimated from data) 0 0 910 330 800 310

Table 4.

The number of observed events and the results of the background-only fit to the control regions in the two-lepton control regions, for an integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb−1. Nominal MC expectations (normalised to MC cross-sections) are given for comparison. The errors shown are the statistical plus systematic uncertainties

Control region ee Inline graphic μμ Inline graphic Inline graphic ee Z μμ Z ee Charge flip
Observed events 272 347 1340 3688 4579 183
Fitted background events 277±14 310±10 1320±30 3670±60 4590±70 183±13
Fitted background decomposition
Fitted top events 198±7 237±8 1090±30 220±9 281±11 0.104±0.011
Fitted W/Z events 45±4 51±5 3.5±0.3 3090±90 4220±80 1.06±0.11
Fitted WW diboson events 0.22±0.08 0.10±0.15 1.3±0.5 6±3 8±5 1.2±0.6
Fitted multijet events 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0
Fitted charge flip events 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 94±14
Fitted fake lepton events 34±15 22±8 220±40 360±100 80±50 87±19
Expected background events 305 336 1340 3920 5050 148
Expected background decomposition
MC exp. top events 225 276 1220 278 357 0.094
MC exp. W/Z events 41 47 3.1 3360 4600 1.14
MC exp. WW diboson events 0.21 0.09 1.2 6 8 1.2
MC exp. multijet events 0 0 0 0 0 0
Charge flip events (estimated from data) 0 0 0 0 0 94
Fake lepton events (estimated from data) 39 13 120 270 80 51

Various tests of the fit are carried out in order to ensure its stability. As a test of the multijet background constraint and the validity of fitting the Inline graphic distributions in those control regions, the control region fit is instead performed in the number of jets with p T>30 GeV. The p T cut is raised from the baseline selection to make the fit less sensitive to pile-up effects. The expectation for the multijet background in the signal regions is consistent with the main result.

The yields and distributions in the validation regions show good agreement with the Standard Model expectation. The significance of the deviation of the observation from the expectation in each of the signal and validation regions are shown in Fig. 7. There is some tension in the pre-fit results between the same-flavour and opposite-flavour dilepton Inline graphic validation regions, but there is no indication of a systematic mis-modelling of any of the major backgrounds. The yields of all validation regions are within 1.2σ of the SM expectations.

Fig. 7.

Fig. 7

Pull distributions of the numbers of events in the validation regions (VR) and signal regions (SR). The filled (dashed) bars show the agreement after (before) the background-only fit to the control regions has been performed

The numbers of expected events in each signal region before and after the fit to the control regions are shown in Tables 5 and 6. Additionally, the probability (p 0-value) that a background-only pseudo-experiment is more signal-like than observed is given for each individual signal region. To obtain these p 0-values, the fit in the signal region proceeds in the same way as the control-region-only fit, except that the number of events observed in the signal region is included as an input to the fit. Then, an additional parameter for the non-Standard-Model signal strength, constrained to be non-negative, is fitted. The shape of the distributions in the signal region is neglected in this fit. Therefore, in order to provide tighter constraints on non-Standard-Model production, in some of the high-count signal regions the Inline graphic requirements are tightened. In all other ways, these signal regions follow the definitions in Table 2. Within the fiducial region defined using the same requirements on lepton and jet multiplicities and the razor variables, but using the MC event generator output to define all objects, the typical efficiencies for the models studied are near 100 %. The observed number of events in each of these regions is then compared to the expectation from the Standard Model backgrounds. The significance of the excess is given, along with the model-independent upper limit on the number of events and cross-section times acceptance times efficiency from non-Standard-Model production.

Table 5.

The number of observed events and the results of the background-only fit to the control regions in the zero- and one-lepton signal regions, for an integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb−1. Nominal MC expectations (normalised to MC cross-sections) are given for comparison. The errors shown are the statistical plus systematic uncertainties. The p 0-values and significances are given for single-bin signal regions with somewhat tighter Inline graphic cuts, along with the 95 % Confidence Level upper limit on the number events, N BSM, and cross-section, σ, for non-Standard-Model production within each signal region. In parentheses are given the expected upper limit and the upper limit under a one-σ upward (↑) or downward (↓) fluctuation in the observation

Signal region Had. b-veto Had. b-tag e b-veto e b-tag μ b-veto μ b-tag
Observed events 4 30 6 13 9 4
Fitted background events 5.5±1.5 39±7 10±2 6.6±1.7 5.5±1.7 4.4±1.3
Fitted background decomposition
Fitted top events 0.40±0.14 21±3 2.7±0.9 5.0±1.3 1.7±0.6 3.7±1.1
Fitted W/Z events 4.9±1.3 3.8±0.7 7.2±1.7 1.2±0.5 3.8±1.3 0.6±0.5
Fitted WW diboson events 0.03±0.02 0.029±0.010 0.01±0.02 0.000±0.009 0.001±0.008 0.010±0.005
Fitted multijet events 0.25±0.10 14±5 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0
Fitted charge flip events 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0
Fitted fake lepton events 0±0 0±0 0.3±0.3 0.5±0.6 0±0 0±0
Expected background events 6.7 55 14 8.5 9.5 5.1
Expected background decomposition
MC exp. top events 0.88 30 5.7 6.3 3.4 4.6
MC exp. W/Z events 5.6 4.0 8.5 1.8 6.1 0.5
MC exp. WW diboson events 0.04 0.046 0.01 0.000 0.012 0.010
MC exp. multijet events 0.20 21 0 0 0 0
Charge flip events (estimated from data) 0 0 0 0 0 0
Fake lepton events (estimated from data) 0 0 0.3 0.5 0 0
Tight Inline graphic cut (GeV) 600 1100 600 1100 600 1100
Observed events 4 5 5 6 2 4
Background events 6.2±1.8 13±3 5.3±1.6 2.4±1.0 2.4±1.0 1.9±0.8
p 0-value (Gauss. σ) 0.72 (−0.57) 0.91 (−1.35) 0.53 (−0.07) 0.07 (1.50) 0.54 (−0.10) 0.16 (0.98)
Upper limit on N BSM 5.2 (Inline graphic) 6.5 (Inline graphic) 6.3 (Inline graphic) 9.0 (Inline graphic) 4.4 (Inline graphic) 6.8 (Inline graphic)
Upper limit on σ (fb) 1.1 (Inline graphic) 1.4 (Inline graphic) 1.3 (Inline graphic) 1.9 (Inline graphic) 0.9 (Inline graphic) 1.4 (Inline graphic)

Table 6.

The number of observed events and the results of the background-only fit to the control regions in the two-lepton signal regions, for an integrated luminosity of 4.7 fb−1. Nominal MC expectations (normalised to MC cross-sections) are given for comparison. The errors shown are the statistical plus systematic uncertainties. The p 0-values and significances are given for single-bin signal regions, along with the 95 % Confidence Level upper limit on the number events, N BSM, and cross-section, σ, for non-Standard-Model production within each signal region. In parentheses are given the expected upper limit and the upper limit under a one-σ upward (↑) or downward (↓) fluctuation in the observation

Signal region OS-ee OS-μμ SS-ee SS-μμ OS- SS-
Observed events 10 15 11 8 18 18
Fitted background events 12±2 13±2 6±4 4±3 20.±3 14±8
Fitted background decomposition
Fitted top events 10.2±1.5 10.7±1.6 0.12±0.04 0.39±0.17 19±2 0.7±0.2
Fitted W/Z events 0.54±0.10 0.6±0.2 0.16±0.04 0.10±0.04 0.26±0.04 0.33±0.07
Fitted WW diboson events 0.4±0.4 0.4±0.5 0.6±0.3 0.6±0.5 0.5±1.0 1.2±0.7
Fitted multijet events 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0 0±0
Fitted charge flip events 0±0 0±0 1.6±0.4 0±0 0±0 1.1±0.2
Fitted fake lepton events 1.2±1.3 1.3±1.1 3±4 3±3 0.6±0.6 10.±8
Expected background events 15 16 6 5 24 14
Expected background decomposition
MC exp. top events 13.1 14.7 0.13 0.49 23 0.6
MC exp. W/Z events 0.67 0.4 0.19 0.21 0.27 0.36
MC exp. WW diboson events 0.4 0.4 0.7 0.7 0.5 1.2
MC exp. multijet events 0 0 0 0 0 0
Charge flip events (estimated from data) 0 0 1.6 0 0 1.0
Fake lepton events (estimated from data) 1.2 1.3 3 3 0.6 11
p 0-value (Gauss. σ) 0.71 (−0.56) 0.32 (0.46) 0.15 (1.05) 0.18 (0.93) 0.68 (−0.48) 0.29 (0.54)
Upper limit on N BSM 7.3 (Inline graphic) 11.1 (Inline graphic) 14.0 (Inline graphic) 11.4 (Inline graphic) 9.4 (Inline graphic) 17.7 (Inline graphic)
Upper limit on σ (fb) 1.6 (Inline graphic) 2.4 (Inline graphic) 3.0 (Inline graphic) 2.4 (Inline graphic) 2.0 (Inline graphic) 3.8 (Inline graphic)

The distributions in all signal regions as a function of Inline graphic of background expectations, after the fit to the control region has been performed, are shown in Figs. 8 and 9. No significant deviations from the expected background are found. The most significant excess is 1.50 standard deviations from the expectation, in the one electron, b-tagged jet signal region.

Fig. 8.

Fig. 8

The all-hadronic (top) and one-lepton (bottom) signal regions with a b-tagged jet veto (left) and requirement (right), after the fit to the control regions has been performed

Fig. 9.

Fig. 9

The two-lepton signal regions for same-flavour (top) and opposite-flavour (bottom) leptons of the same sign (left) and opposite sign (right), after the fit to the control regions has been performed

Exclusion results

Using these signal regions, the CLS [69] prescription is applied to find 95 % Confidence Level (CL) one-sided limits on the production of SUSY events in various models. The limits on visible cross-section derived in the previous section can be applied to any new physics model. However, in order to compare the exclusion power of the regions to previously published ATLAS results, model-dependent limits are produced. In each case, the exclusion limits are compared to the strongest published ATLAS result. This comparison provides valuable information about the relative strengths of comparable searches using kinematically independent regions. However, as the overlap of the signal regions in this search and the others (discussed in more detail below) is non-zero, a rigorous statistical combination with previously published results is complex and not attempted here.

A likelihood is constructed, taking into account signal shape information provided by the binning of the signal regions. All fitted nuisance parameters, with their correlations, are included in the likelihood. Because the typical Inline graphic of the signal may vary across a signal grid, the use of shape information results in an observed exclusion that is not consistently above or below the expected. The observed limits for the separate zero-, one-, and two-lepton signal regions are also constructed additionally, with all control regions included as constraints.

Figure 10 shows exclusion contours for a simplified model with gluino pair-production, where the gluinos decay to a chargino and two quarks and the chargino subsequently decays to a W boson and the LSP. Two planes are shown for this simplified model. The first fixes the chargino mass to be exactly half-way between the LSP and gluino mass and shows the exclusion in the gluino-mass–LSP-mass plane. The production cross-section falls smoothly and exponentially with m heavy, while Inline graphic and therefore the acceptance times efficiency for a signal region typically rises with the mass splitting, m heavym LSP. In the second plane, the LSP mass is fixed to 60 GeV and the exclusion is shown in the gluino mass-x plane, where x=(m charginom LSP)/(m gluinom LSP). The zero- and one-lepton signal regions with a b-tagged jet requirement do not contribute to the exclusion because these simplified models have only light quarks in the matrix element final state.

Fig. 10.

Fig. 10

The observed and expected exclusion in a simplified model with gluino pair-production, where the gluinos decay to a chargino via the emission of two quarks and the chargino decays to the LSP and a W boson. Top, for the chargino mass exactly half-way between the gluino and LSP mass, in the gluino mass–LSP mass plane, and bottom, for the LSP mass fixed to 60 GeV, in the gluino mass-x plane, with x=(m charginom LSP)/(m gluinom LSP). The exclusion is shown for the combination, as well as for each individual channel (labelled 0-lepton, 1-lepton, and 2-lepton). The observed and expected limit of the ATLAS single leptons search [13] (ATLAS 1-lep. (obs.) and ATLAS 1-lep. (exp.), respectively) are indicated as separate contours

At high x, although the leptons have high-p T, the larger branching fraction of the W to quarks allows the zero-lepton channel to dominate. At moderate x, the leptons allow better discrimination between signal and background in the one- and two-lepton channels. At low x, the leptons have too low p T, and the zero-lepton channel again dominates. At high x, the limit set by this analysis exceeds somewhat that of the dedicated 0-lepton and 1-lepton ATLAS searches [10, 13], which have strong Inline graphic requirements and use M eff to define signal regions. At low x the limit is weaker. This dependence on x observed in this analysis, which is not apparent in the other ATLAS searches, is produced by differences in kinematics in these two regions of the plane. At high x, the charginos are almost at rest in the lab frame, and the event topology is dominated by a two-body decay, Inline graphic. At low x, on the other hand, the chargino is highly boosted, and the topology is dominated by a three-body decay, Inline graphic. Thus, the high-x events typically have a higher R than the low-x events, and the two have approximately the same Inline graphic distribution.

Figure 11 shows exclusion contours in simplified models with gluino pair-production, where the gluinos decay to the LSP via the emission of a Inline graphic pair. The exclusion is presented in the gluino mass–LSP mass plane, and, since all top quarks are required to be on-shell, only points with m gluino>m LSP+2×m top are considered. The zero- and one-lepton signal regions with a b-tagged jet veto do not contribute to the exclusion, because these models include four top quarks per event. At small mass splitting, the limits here are somewhat stronger than the ATLAS dedicated multi-b-jet analysis [12]. At larger mass splittings, the three b-tagged jet requirement suppresses the background substantially while preserving the signal acceptance because of the four tops in the event. The combined limit on LSP mass falls more quickly than that of the multi-b-jet analysis because Inline graphic is proportional to the mass splitting in the event, here m gluinom LSP. The zero-lepton razor analysis is limited in this case by the use of the H T trigger, which was chosen to avoid a bias in the Inline graphic distribution.

Fig. 11.

Fig. 11

The observed and expected exclusion in a simplified model with gluino pair-production, where the gluinos decay to the LSP via the emission of a Inline graphic pair. The exclusion is shown for the combination, as well as for each individual channel (labelled 0-lepton, 1-lepton, and 2-lepton). The observed and expected limit of the ATLAS 3 b-jets search [12] (ATLAS 3 b-jets (obs.) and ATLAS 3 b-jets (exp.), respectively) are indicated as separate contours

Finally, Fig. 12 shows exclusion contours in a plane of MSUGRA with tan(β)=10, A 0=0, and μ>0. At low m 0, where squark pair-production is dominant, the zero-lepton channel dominates the exclusion, although it is affected somewhat by the jet multiplicity requirement that is not applied in the dedicated signal region of Ref. [10], which therefore has more stringent limits. The leptonic channels enter at high m 0, particularly where longer decay chains are common. The robustness of the individual limits have also been cross checked by removing some of the control regions. For example, removing the zero- and one-lepton control regions from the calculation of the two-lepton limit, the MSUGRA limit changes by less than 20 GeV in m 1/2. In the m gluinom squark region, these limits are consistent with those of earlier ATLAS analyses [10, 11, 13], which rely on transverse information only. In this region, the single mass-splitting scale of the main strong production modes should produce a somewhat sharper peak in Inline graphic, allowing an improved limit in the shape fit. At large m 0, the high Inline graphic requirement of the all-hadronic signal regions, resulting from the H T trigger use, produce a somewhat weaker limit than the ATLAS multijet analysis [11].

Fig. 12.

Fig. 12

The observed and expected exclusion in a plane of the constrained minimal supersymmetric model. The exclusion is shown for the combination, as well as for each individual channel (labelled 0-lepton, 1-lepton, and 2-lepton). The observed and expected limit of the ATLAS 0-lepton search [10] (ATLAS 0-lepton (obs.) and ATLAS 3 0-lepton (exp.), respectively) are indicated as separate contours

The complementarity of a search using razor variables can be quantified by studying the overlap of the signal regions with the dedicated searches. Various signal models have been studied to understand this overlap, including both simplified models and full SUSY production models. The overlap between the signal regions presented here and other searches in ATLAS [10, 11, 13, 70] is typically 10–50 %, with similar overlaps in the data. The signal regions of this search access kinematic regions that are different from those of the standard searches. In simplified models in particular, the overlap between the dominant signal regions in the standard ATLAS analyses and the signal regions presented here is below 10–15 %. Thus, the regions of SUSY parameter space and kinematic phase space excluded by this search complement those excluded by earlier ATLAS searches using the same data sample.

In the control regions, the overlaps between this analysis and the others are much larger, as they all attempt to select dominant backgrounds with reasonable statistics. The fits that are performed in the various searches, however, look at different properties of the control regions to understand the agreement between data and MC simulation, and therefore the post-fit results may differ somewhat. The background treatments in this search and those previously published are similar enough to consider them correlated in control regions. However, the edges of kinematic phase space explored by the signal regions in these searches may suffer from different features or mis-modelings in MC event generators. Moreover, the treatment of systematic uncertainties and backgrounds varies somewhat between analyses, and because in a simultaneous fit the effects of these uncertainties are convolved, a combination of the various analyses discussed here is beyond the scope of this paper.

Summary

A search for supersymmetry including final states with zero, one, and two leptons, with and without b-tagged jets, in 4.7 fb−1 of Inline graphic pp collisions has been presented. Mutually exclusive signal regions exploiting these final states are combined with the use of variables that include both transverse and longitudinal event information. No significant excess of events beyond the Standard Model background expectation was observed in any signal region. Fiducial cross section upper limits on the production of new physics beyond the Standard Model are shown. Exclusion contours at 95 % CL are provided in SUSY-inspired simplified models and in the constrained minimal supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model.

Acknowledgements

We thank CERN for the very successful operation of the LHC, as well as the support staff from our institutions without whom ATLAS could not be operated efficiently.

We acknowledge the support of ANPCyT, Argentina; YerPhI, Armenia; ARC, Australia; BMWF and FWF, Austria; ANAS, Azerbaijan; SSTC, Belarus; CNPq and FAPESP, Brazil; NSERC, NRC and CFI, Canada; CERN; CONICYT, Chile; CAS, MOST and NSFC, China; COLCIENCIAS, Colombia; MSMT CR, MPO CR and VSC CR, Czech Republic; DNRF, DNSRC and Lundbeck Foundation, Denmark; EPLANET, ERC and NSRF, European Union; IN2P3-CNRS, CEA-DSM/IRFU, France; GNSF, Georgia; BMBF, DFG, HGF, MPG and AvH Foundation, Germany; GSRT and NSRF, Greece; ISF, MINERVA, GIF, DIP and Benoziyo Center, Israel; INFN, Italy; MEXT and JSPS, Japan; CNRST, Morocco; FOM and NWO, Netherlands; BRF and RCN, Norway; MNiSW, Poland; GRICES and FCT, Portugal; MERYS (MECTS), Romania; MES of Russia and ROSATOM, Russian Federation; JINR; MSTD, Serbia; MSSR, Slovakia; ARRS and MVZT, Slovenia; DST/NRF, South Africa; MICINN, Spain; SRC and Wallenberg Foundation, Sweden; SER, SNSF and Cantons of Bern and Geneva, Switzerland; NSC, Taiwan; TAEK, Turkey; STFC, the Royal Society and Leverhulme Trust, United Kingdom; DOE and NSF, United States of America.

The crucial computing support from all WLCG partners is acknowledged gratefully, in particular from CERN and the ATLAS Tier-1 facilities at TRIUMF (Canada), NDGF (Denmark, Norway, Sweden), CC-IN2P3 (France), KIT/GridKA (Germany), INFN-CNAF (Italy), NL-T1 (Netherlands), PIC (Spain), ASGC (Taiwan), RAL (UK) and BNL (USA) and in the Tier-2 facilities worldwide.

Open Access

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.

Footnotes

1

ATLAS uses a right-handed coordinate system with its origin at the nominal interaction point (IP) in the centre of the detector and the z-axis along the beam pipe. The x-axis points from the IP to the centre of the LHC ring, and the y-axis points upward. Cylindrical coordinates (r,ϕ) are used in the transverse plane, ϕ being the azimuthal angle around the beam pipe. The pseudorapidity is defined in terms of the polar angle θ as η=−lntan(θ/2).

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