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. 2015 May 27;75(5):229. doi: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-015-3406-9

Observation and measurements of the production of prompt and non-prompt Jψ mesons in association with a Z boson in pp collisions at s=8TeV with the ATLAS detector

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Amundsen 23, C Anastopoulos 140, L S Ancu 49, N Andari 30, T Andeen 35, C F Anders 202, G Anders 30, K J Anderson 31, A Andreazza 91,207, V Andrei 58, X S Anduaga 71, S Angelidakis 9, I Angelozzi 107, P Anger 44, A Angerami 35, F Anghinolfi 30, A V Anisenkov 109, N Anjos 12, A Annovi 124,210, M Antonelli 47, A Antonov 98, J Antos 224, F Anulli 133, M Aoki 66, L Aperio Bella 18, G Arabidze 90, Y Arai 66, J P Araque 126, A T H Arce 45, F A Arduh 71, J-F Arguin 95, S Argyropoulos 42, M Arik 19, A J Armbruster 30, O Arnaez 30, V Arnal 82, H Arnold 48, M Arratia 28, O Arslan 21, A Artamonov 97, G Artoni 23, S Asai 156, N Asbah 42, A Ashkenazi 154, B Åsman 147,227, L Asquith 150, K Assamagan 25, R Astalos 224, M Atkinson 166, N B Atlay 142, B Auerbach 6, K Augsten 128, M Aurousseau 225, G Avolio 30, B Axen 15, G Azuelos 95, M A Baak 30, A E Baas 58, C Bacci 135,219, H Bachacou 137, K Bachas 155, M Backes 30, M Backhaus 30, P Bagiacchi 133,217, P Bagnaia 133,217, Y Bai 33, T Bain 35, J T 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86, K Belotskiy 98, O Beltramello 30, O Benary 154, D Benchekroun 136, M Bender 100, K Bendtz 147,227, N Benekos 10, Y Benhammou 154, E Benhar Noccioli 49, J A Benitez Garcia 228, D P Benjamin 45, J R Bensinger 23, S Bentvelsen 107, D Berge 107, E Bergeaas Kuutmann 167, N Berger 5, F Berghaus 170, J Beringer 15, C Bernard 22, N R Bernard 86, C Bernius 110, F U Bernlochner 21, T Berry 77, P Berta 129, C Bertella 83, G Bertoli 147,227, F Bertolucci 124,210, C Bertsche 113, D Bertsche 113, M I Besana 91, G J Besjes 106, O Bessidskaia Bylund 147,227, M Bessner 42, N Besson 137, C Betancourt 48, S Bethke 101, A J Bevan 76, W Bhimji 46, R M Bianchi 125, L Bianchini 23, M Bianco 30, O Biebel 100, S P Bieniek 78, M Biglietti 135, J Bilbao De Mendizabal 49, H Bilokon 47, M Bindi 54, S Binet 117, A Bingul 184, C Bini 133,217, C W Black 151, J E Black 144, K M Black 22, D Blackburn 139, R E Blair 6, J-B Blanchard 137, JE Blanco 77, T Blazek 145, I Bloch 42, C Blocker 23, W Blum 83, U Blumenschein 54, G J Bobbink 107, V S Bobrovnikov 109, S S Bocchetta 81, A Bocci 45, C Bock 100, C R Boddy 120, M Boehler 48, J A Bogaerts 30, A G Bogdanchikov 109, C Bohm 147, V Boisvert 77, T Bold 38, V Boldea 26, A S Boldyrev 99, M Bomben 80, M Bona 76, M Boonekamp 137, A Borisov 130, G Borissov 72, S Borroni 42, J Bortfeldt 100, V Bortolotto 60, K Bos 107, D Boscherini 20, M Bosman 12, J Boudreau 125, J Bouffard 2, E V Bouhova-Thacker 72, D Boumediene 34, C Bourdarios 117, N Bousson 114, S Boutouil 222, A Boveia 30, J Boyd 30, I R Boyko 65, I Bozic 13, J Bracinik 18, A Brandt 8, G Brandt 15, O Brandt 58, U Bratzler 157, B Brau 86, J E Brau 116, H M Braun 176, S F Brazzale 165,230, K Brendlinger 122, A J Brennan 88, L Brenner 107, R Brenner 167, S Bressler 173, K Bristow 226, T M Bristow 46, D Britton 53, F M Brochu 28, I Brock 21, R Brock 90, J Bronner 101, G Brooijmans 35, T Brooks 77, W K Brooks 192, J Brosamer 15, E Brost 116, J Brown 55, P A Bruckman de Renstrom 39, D Bruncko 145, R Bruneliere 48, A Bruni 20, G Bruni 20, M Bruschi 20, L Bryngemark 81, T Buanes 14, Q Buat 143, F Bucci 49, P Buchholz 142, A G Buckley 53, S I Buda 26, I A Budagov 65, F Buehrer 48, L Bugge 119, M K Bugge 119, O Bulekov 98, H Burckhart 30, S Burdin 74, B Burghgrave 108, S Burke 131, I Burmeister 43, E Busato 34, D Büscher 48, V Büscher 83, P Bussey 53, C P Buszello 167, J M Butler 22, A I Butt 3, C M Buttar 53, J M Butterworth 78, P Butti 107, W Buttinger 28, A Buzatu 53, S Cabrera Urbán 168, D Caforio 128, O Cakir 4, P Calafiura 15, A Calandri 137, G Calderini 80, P Calfayan 100, L P Caloba 24, D Calvet 34, S Calvet 34, R Camacho Toro 49, S Camarda 42, D Cameron 119, L M Caminada 15, R Caminal Armadans 12, S Campana 30, M Campanelli 78, A Campoverde 149, V Canale 104,208, A Canepa 160, M Cano Bret 76, J Cantero 82, R Cantrill 126, T Cao 40, M D M Capeans Garrido 30, I Caprini 26, M Caprini 26, M Capua 37,198, R Caputo 83, R Cardarelli 134, T Carli 30, G Carlino 104, L Carminati 91,207, S Caron 106, E Carquin 32, G D Carrillo-Montoya 226, J R Carter 28, J Carvalho 126,212, D Casadei 78, M P Casado 12, M Casolino 12, E Castaneda-Miranda 225, A Castelli 107, V Castillo Gimenez 168, N F Castro 126, P Catastini 57, A Catinaccio 30, J R Catmore 119, A Cattai 30, G Cattani 134,218, J Caudron 83, V Cavaliere 166, D Cavalli 91, M Cavalli-Sforza 12, V Cavasinni 124,210, F Ceradini 135,219, B C Cerio 45, K Cerny 129, A S Cerqueira 24,186, A Cerri 150, L Cerrito 76, F Cerutti 15, M Cerv 30, A Cervelli 17, S A Cetin 183, A Chafaq 136, D Chakraborty 108, I Chalupkova 129, P Chang 166, B Chapleau 87, J D Chapman 28, D Charfeddine 117, D G Charlton 18, C C Chau 159, C A Chavez Barajas 150, S Cheatham 153, A Chegwidden 90, S Chekanov 6, S V Chekulaev 160, G A Chelkov 65, M A Chelstowska 89, C Chen 64, H Chen 25, K Chen 149, L Chen 195, S Chen 194, X Chen 197, Y Chen 67, H C Cheng 89, Y Cheng 31, A Cheplakov 65, E Cheremushkina 130, R Cherkaoui El Moursli 223, V Chernyatin 25, 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Costanzo 140, D Côté 8, G Cottin 28, G Cowan 77, B E Cox 84, K Cranmer 110, G Cree 29, S Crépé-Renaudin 55, F Crescioli 80, W A Cribbs 147,227, M Crispin Ortuzar 120, M Cristinziani 21, V Croft 106, G Crosetti 37,198, T Cuhadar Donszelmann 140, J Cummings 177, M Curatolo 47, C Cuthbert 151, H Czirr 142, P Czodrowski 3, S D’Auria 53, M D’Onofrio 74, M J Da Cunha Sargedas De Sousa 126,211, C Da Via 84, W Dabrowski 38, A Dafinca 120, T Dai 89, O Dale 14, F Dallaire 95, C Dallapiccola 86, M Dam 36, A C Daniells 18, M Danninger 169, M Dano Hoffmann 137, V Dao 48, G Darbo 50, S Darmora 8, J Dassoulas 3, A Dattagupta 61, W Davey 21, C David 170, T Davidek 129, E Davies 120, M Davies 154, O Davignon 80, P Davison 78, Y Davygora 58, E Dawe 143, I Dawson 140, R K Daya-Ishmukhametova 86, K De 8, R de Asmundis 104, S De Castro 20,185, S De Cecco 80, N De Groot 106, P de Jong 107, H De la Torre 82, F De Lorenzi 64, L De Nooij 107, D De Pedis 133, A De Salvo 133, U De Sanctis 150, A De Santo 150, J B De Vivie De Regie 117, W J Dearnaley 72, R Debbe 25, C Debenedetti 138, D V Dedovich 65, I Deigaard 107, J Del Peso 82, T Del Prete 124,210, F Deliot 137, C M Delitzsch 49, M Deliyergiyev 75, A Dell’Acqua 30, L Dell’Asta 22, M Dell’Orso 124,210, M Della Pietra 104, D della Volpe 49, M Delmastro 5, P A Delsart 55, C Deluca 107, D A DeMarco 159, S Demers 177, M Demichev 65, A Demilly 80, S P Denisov 130, D Derendarz 39, J E Derkaoui 222, F Derue 80, P Dervan 74, K Desch 21, C Deterre 42, P O Deviveiros 30, A Dewhurst 131, S Dhaliwal 107, A Di Ciaccio 134,218, L Di Ciaccio 5, A Di Domenico 133,217, C Di Donato 104,208, A Di Girolamo 30, B Di Girolamo 30, A Di Mattia 153, B Di Micco 135,219, R Di Nardo 47, A Di Simone 48, R Di Sipio 20,185, D Di Valentino 29, C Diaconu 85, F A Dias 46, M A Diaz 32, E B Diehl 89, J Dietrich 16, T A Dietzsch 58, S Diglio 85, A Dimitrievska 13, J Dingfelder 21, F Dittus 30, F Djama 85, T Djobava 201, J I Djuvsland 58, M A B do Vale 187, D Dobos 30, M Dobre 26, C Doglioni 49, T Doherty 53, T Dohmae 156, J Dolejsi 129, Z Dolezal 129, B A Dolgoshein 98, M Donadelli 188, S Donati 124,210, P Dondero 121,209, J Donini 34, J Dopke 131, A Doria 104, M T Dova 71, A T Doyle 53, M Dris 10, E Dubreuil 34, E Duchovni 173, G Duckeck 100, O A Ducu 26, D Duda 176, A Dudarev 30, L Duflot 117, L Duguid 77, M Dührssen 30, M Dunford 58, H Duran Yildiz 4, M Düren 52, A Durglishvili 201, D Duschinger 44, M Dwuznik 38, M Dyndal 38, W Edson 2, N C Edwards 46, W Ehrenfeld 21, T Eifert 30, G Eigen 14, K Einsweiler 15, T Ekelof 167, M El Kacimi 221, M Ellert 167, S Elles 5, F Ellinghaus 83, A A Elliot 170, N Ellis 30, J Elmsheuser 100, M Elsing 30, D Emeliyanov 131, Y Enari 156, O C Endner 83, M Endo 118, R Engelmann 149, J Erdmann 43, A Ereditato 17, D Eriksson 147, G Ernis 176, J Ernst 2, M Ernst 25, S Errede 166, E Ertel 83, M Escalier 117, H Esch 43, C Escobar 125, B Esposito 47, A I Etienvre 137, E Etzion 154, H Evans 61, A Ezhilov 123, L Fabbri 20,185, G Facini 31, R M Fakhrutdinov 130, S Falciano 133, R J Falla 78, J Faltova 129, Y Fang 33, M Fanti 91,207, A Farbin 8, A Farilla 135, T Farooque 12, S Farrell 15, S M Farrington 171, P Farthouat 30, F Fassi 223, P Fassnacht 30, D Fassouliotis 9, A Favareto 50,200, L Fayard 117, P Federic 224, O L Fedin 123, W Fedorko 169, S Feigl 30, L Feligioni 85, C Feng 195, E J Feng 6, H Feng 89, A B Fenyuk 130, P Fernandez Martinez 168, S Fernandez Perez 30, S Ferrag 53, J Ferrando 53, A Ferrari 167, P Ferrari 107, R Ferrari 121, D E Ferreira de Lima 53, A Ferrer 168, D Ferrere 49, C Ferretti 89, A Ferretto Parodi 50,200, M Fiascaris 31, F Fiedler 83, A Filipčič 75, M Filipuzzi 42, F Filthaut 106, M Fincke-Keeler 170, K D Finelli 151, M C N Fiolhais 126,212, L Fiorini 168, A Firan 40, A Fischer 2, J Fischer 176, W C Fisher 90, E A Fitzgerald 23, M Flechl 48, I Fleck 142, P Fleischmann 89, S Fleischmann 176, G T Fletcher 140, G Fletcher 76, T Flick 176, A Floderus 81, L R Flores Castillo 60, M J Flowerdew 101, A Formica 137, A Forti 84, D Fournier 117, H Fox 72, S Fracchia 12, P Francavilla 80, M Franchini 20,185, D Francis 30, L Franconi 119, M Franklin 57, M Fraternali 121,209, D Freeborn 78, S T French 28, F Friedrich 44, D Froidevaux 30, J A Frost 120, C Fukunaga 157, E Fullana Torregrosa 83, B G Fulsom 144, J Fuster 168, C Gabaldon 55, O Gabizon 176, A Gabrielli 20,185, A Gabrielli 133,217, S Gadatsch 107, S Gadomski 49, G Gagliardi 50,200, P Gagnon 61, C Galea 106, B Galhardo 126,212, E J Gallas 120, B J Gallop 131, P Gallus 128, G Galster 36, K K Gan 111, J Gao 193, Y S Gao 144, F M Garay Walls 46, F Garberson 177, C García 168, J E García Navarro 168, M Garcia-Sciveres 15, R W Gardner 31, N Garelli 144, V Garonne 30, C Gatti 47, G Gaudio 121, B Gaur 142, L Gauthier 95, P Gauzzi 133,217, I L Gavrilenko 95, C Gay 169, G Gaycken 21, E N Gazis 10, P Ge 195, Z Gecse 169, C N P Gee 131, D A A Geerts 107, Ch Geich-Gimbel 21, C Gemme 50, A Gemmell 53, M H Genest 55, S Gentile 133,217, M George 54, S George 77, D Gerbaudo 164, A Gershon 154, H Ghazlane 220, N Ghodbane 34, B Giacobbe 20, S Giagu 133,217, V Giangiobbe 12, P Giannetti 124,210, F Gianotti 30, B Gibbard 25, S M Gibson 77, M Gilchriese 15, T P S Gillam 28, D Gillberg 30, G Gilles 34, D M Gingrich 3, N Giokaris 9, M P Giordani 165,230, F M Giorgi 20, F M Giorgi 16, P F Giraud 137, D Giugni 91, C Giuliani 48, M Giulini 202, B K Gjelsten 119, S Gkaitatzis 155, I Gkialas 155, E L Gkougkousis 117, L K Gladilin 99, C Glasman 82, J Glatzer 30, P C F Glaysher 46, A Glazov 42, G L Glonti 62, M Goblirsch-Kolb 101, J R Goddard 76, J Godlewski 39, S Goldfarb 89, T Golling 49, D Golubkov 130, A Gomes 126,211,213, R Gonçalo 126, J Goncalves Pinto Firmino Da Costa 137, L Gonella 21, S González de la Hoz 168, G Gonzalez Parra 12, S Gonzalez-Sevilla 49, L Goossens 30, P A Gorbounov 97, H A Gordon 25, I Gorelov 105, B Gorini 30, E Gorini 73,206, A Gorišek 75, E Gornicki 39, A T Goshaw 45, C Gössling 43, M I Gostkin 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Jorge 126,211, K D Joshi 84, J Jovicevic 148, X Ju 174, C A Jung 43, P Jussel 62, A Juste Rozas 12, M Kaci 168, A Kaczmarska 39, M Kado 117, H Kagan 111, M Kagan 144, S J Kahn 85, E Kajomovitz 45, C W Kalderon 120, S Kama 40, A Kamenshchikov 130, N Kanaya 156, M Kaneda 30, S Kaneti 28, V A Kantserov 98, J Kanzaki 66, B Kaplan 110, A Kapliy 31, D Kar 53, K Karakostas 10, A Karamaoun 3, N Karastathis 10, M J Kareem 54, M Karnevskiy 83, S N Karpov 65, Z M Karpova 65, K Karthik 110, V Kartvelishvili 72, A N Karyukhin 130, L Kashif 174, G Kasieczka 202, R D Kass 111, A Kastanas 14, Y Kataoka 156, A Katre 49, J Katzy 42, K Kawagoe 70, T Kawamoto 156, G Kawamura 54, S Kazama 156, V F Kazanin 109, M Y Kazarinov 65, R Keeler 170, R Kehoe 40, M Keil 54, J S Keller 42, J J Kempster 77, H Keoshkerian 84, O Kepka 127, B P Kerševan 75, S Kersten 176, R A Keyes 87, F Khalil-zada 11, H Khandanyan 147,227, A Khanov 114, A Kharlamov 109, A Khodinov 98, A Khomich 58, T J Khoo 28, G Khoriauli 21, V 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101, S Kortner 101, T Kosek 129, V V Kostyukhin 21, V M Kotov 65, A Kotwal 45, A Kourkoumeli-Charalampidi 155, C Kourkoumelis 9, V Kouskoura 25, A Koutsman 160, R Kowalewski 170, T Z Kowalski 38, W Kozanecki 137, A S Kozhin 130, V A Kramarenko 99, G Kramberger 75, D Krasnopevtsev 98, M W Krasny 80, A Krasznahorkay 30, J K Kraus 21, A Kravchenko 25, S Kreiss 110, M Kretz 203, J Kretzschmar 74, K Kreutzfeldt 52, P Krieger 159, K Krizka 31, K Kroeninger 43, H Kroha 101, J Kroll 122, J Kroseberg 21, J Krstic 13, U Kruchonak 65, H Krüger 21, N Krumnack 64, Z V Krumshteyn 65, A Kruse 174, M C Kruse 45, M Kruskal 22, T Kubota 88, H Kucuk 78, S Kuday 181, S Kuehn 48, A Kugel 203, F Kuger 175, A Kuhl 138, T Kuhl 42, V Kukhtin 65, Y Kulchitsky 92, S Kuleshov 192, M Kuna 133,217, T Kunigo 68, A Kupco 127, H Kurashige 67, Y A Kurochkin 92, R Kurumida 67, V Kus 127, E S Kuwertz 148, M Kuze 158, J Kvita 115, T Kwan 170, D Kyriazopoulos 140, A La Rosa 49, J L La Rosa Navarro 188, L La Rotonda 37,198, C Lacasta 168, F Lacava 133,217, J Lacey 29, H Lacker 16, D Lacour 80, V R Lacuesta 168, E Ladygin 65, R Lafaye 5, B Laforge 80, T Lagouri 177, S Lai 48, H Laier 58, L Lambourne 78, S Lammers 61, C L Lampen 7, W Lampl 7, E Lançon 137, U Landgraf 48, M P J Landon 76, V S Lang 58, A J Lankford 164, F Lanni 25, K Lantzsch 30, S Laplace 80, C Lapoire 30, J F Laporte 137, T Lari 91, F Lasagni Manghi 20,185, M Lassnig 30, P Laurelli 47, W Lavrijsen 15, A T Law 138, P Laycock 74, O Le Dortz 80, E Le Guirriec 85, E Le Menedeu 12, T LeCompte 6, F Ledroit-Guillon 55, C A Lee 225, S C Lee 152, L Lee 1, G Lefebvre 80, M Lefebvre 170, F Legger 100, C Leggett 15, A Lehan 74, G Lehmann Miotto 30, X Lei 7, W A Leight 29, A Leisos 155, A G Leister 177, M A L Leite 188, R Leitner 129, D Lellouch 173, B Lemmer 54, K J C Leney 78, T Lenz 21, G Lenzen 176, B Lenzi 30, R Leone 7, S Leone 124,210, C Leonidopoulos 46, S Leontsinis 10, C Leroy 95, C G Lester 28, M Levchenko 123, J Levêque 5, D Levin 89, L J Levinson 173, M Levy 18, A Lewis 120, A M Leyko 21, M Leyton 41, B Li 193, B Li 85, H Li 149, H L Li 31, L Li 45, L Li 196, S Li 45, Y Li 194, Z Liang 138, H Liao 34, B Liberti 134, P Lichard 30, K Lie 166, J Liebal 21, W Liebig 14, C Limbach 21, A Limosani 151, S C Lin 152, T H Lin 83, F Linde 107, B E Lindquist 149, J T Linnemann 90, E Lipeles 122, A Lipniacka 14, M Lisovyi 42, T M Liss 166, D Lissauer 25, A Lister 169, A M Litke 138, B Liu 152, D Liu 152, J Liu 85, J B Liu 193, K Liu 193, L Liu 89, M Liu 45, M Liu 193, Y Liu 193, M Livan 121,209, A Lleres 55, J Llorente Merino 82, S L Lloyd 76, F Lo Sterzo 152, E Lobodzinska 42, P Loch 7, W S Lockman 138, F K Loebinger 84, A E Loevschall-Jensen 36, A Loginov 177, T Lohse 16, K Lohwasser 42, M Lokajicek 127, B A Long 22, J D Long 89, R E Long 72, K A Looper 111, L Lopes 126, D Lopez Mateos 57, B Lopez Paredes 140, I Lopez Paz 12, J Lorenz 100, N Lorenzo Martinez 61, M Losada 163, P Loscutoff 15, X Lou 33, A Lounis 117, J Love 6, P A 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R Mellado Garcia 226, F Meloni 17, A Mengarelli 20,185, S Menke 101, E Meoni 162, K M Mercurio 57, S Mergelmeyer 21, N Meric 137, P Mermod 49, L Merola 104,208, C Meroni 91,207, F S Merritt 31, H Merritt 111, A Messina 30, J Metcalfe 25, A S Mete 164, C Meyer 83, C Meyer 122, J-P Meyer 137, J Meyer 30, R P Middleton 131, S Migas 74, S Miglioranzi 165,230, L Mijović 21, G Mikenberg 173, M Mikestikova 127, M Mikuž 75, A Milic 30, D W Miller 31, C Mills 46, A Milov 173, D A Milstead 147,227, A A Minaenko 130, Y Minami 156, I A Minashvili 65, A I Mincer 110, B Mindur 38, M Mineev 65, Y Ming 174, L M Mir 12, G Mirabelli 133, T Mitani 172, J Mitrevski 100, V A Mitsou 168, A Miucci 49, P S Miyagawa 140, J U Mjörnmark 81, T Moa 147,227, K Mochizuki 85, S Mohapatra 35, W Mohr 48, S Molander 147,227, R Moles-Valls 168, K Mönig 42, C Monini 55, J Monk 36, E Monnier 85, J Montejo Berlingen 12, F Monticelli 71, S Monzani 133,217, R W Moore 3, N Morange 63, D Moreno 163, M Moreno Llácer 54, P 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31, C J Oram 160, M J Oreglia 31, Y Oren 154, D Orestano 135,219, N Orlando 73,206, C Oropeza Barrera 53, R S Orr 159, B Osculati 50,200, R Ospanov 84, G Otero y Garzon 27, H Otono 70, M Ouchrif 222, E A Ouellette 170, F Ould-Saada 119, A Ouraou 137, K P Oussoren 107, Q Ouyang 33, A Ovcharova 15, M Owen 53, V E Ozcan 19, N Ozturk 8, K Pachal 120, A Pacheco Pages 12, C Padilla Aranda 12, M Pagáčová 48, S Pagan Griso 15, E Paganis 140, C Pahl 101, F Paige 25, P Pais 86, K Pajchel 119, G Palacino 228, S Palestini 30, M Palka 199, D Pallin 34, A Palma 126,211, Y B Pan 174, E Panagiotopoulou 10, C E Pandini 80, J G Panduro Vazquez 77, P Pani 147,227, N Panikashvili 88, S Panitkin 25, L Paolozzi 134,218, Th D Papadopoulou 10, K Papageorgiou 155, A Paramonov 6, D Paredes Hernandez 155, M A Parker 28, K A Parker 140, F Parodi 50,200, J A Parsons 35, U Parzefall 48, E Pasqualucci 133, S Passaggio 50, F Pastore 135,219, Fr Pastore 77, G Pásztor 29, S Pataraia 176, N D Patel 151, J R Pater 84, T Pauly 30, J Pearce 170, L E Pedersen 36, M Pedersen 119, S Pedraza Lopez 168, R Pedro 126,211, S V Peleganchuk 108, S V Peleganchuk 109, D Pelikan 167, H Peng 193, B Penning 31, J Penwell 61, D V Perepelitsa 25, E Perez Codina 160, M T Pérez García-Estañ 168, L Perini 91,207, H Pernegger 30, S Perrella 104,208, R Peschke 42, V D Peshekhonov 65, K Peters 30, R F Y Peters 84, B A Petersen 30, T C Petersen 36, E Petit 42, A Petridis 147,227, C Petridou 155, E Petrolo 133, F Petrucci 135,219, N E Pettersson 158, R Pezoa 192, P W Phillips 131, G Piacquadio 144, E Pianori 171, A Picazio 49, E Piccaro 76, M Piccinini 20,185, M A Pickering 120, R Piegaia 27, D T Pignotti 111, J E Pilcher 31, A D Pilkington 78, J Pina 126,211,213, M Pinamonti 165,230, J L Pinfold 3, A Pingel 36, B Pinto 126, S Pires 80, M Pitt 173, C Pizio 91,207, L Plazak 224, M-A Pleier 25, V Pleskot 129, E Plotnikova 65, P Plucinski 147,227, D Pluth 64, S Poddar 58, R Poettgen 83, L Poggioli 117, D Pohl 21, M Pohl 49, G Polesello 121, A Policicchio 37,198, R Polifka 159, A Polini 20, C S Pollard 53, V Polychronakos 25, K Pommès 30, L Pontecorvo 133, B G Pope 90, G A Popeneciu 189, D S Popovic 13, A Poppleton 30, S Pospisil 128, K Potamianos 15, I N Potrap 65, C J Potter 150, C T Potter 116, G Poulard 30, J Poveda 30, V Pozdnyakov 65, P Pralavorio 85, A Pranko 15, S Prasad 30, S Prell 64, D Price 84, J Price 74, L E Price 6, D Prieur 125, M Primavera 73, S Prince 87, M Proissl 46, K Prokofiev 205, F Prokoshin 192, E Protopapadaki 137, S Protopopescu 25, J Proudfoot 6, M Przybycien 38, E Ptacek 116, D Puddu 135,219, E Pueschel 86, D Puldon 149, M Purohit 25, P Puzo 117, J Qian 89, G Qin 53, Y Qin 84, A Quadt 54, D R Quarrie 15, W B Quayle 165,229, M Queitsch-Maitland 84, D Quilty 53, A Qureshi 228, V Radeka 25, V Radescu 42, S K Radhakrishnan 149, P Radloff 116, P Rados 88, F Ragusa 91,207, G Rahal 179, S Rajagopalan 25, M Rammensee 30, C Rangel-Smith 167, F Rauscher 100, S Rave 83, T C Rave 48, T Ravenscroft 53, M Raymond 30, A L Read 119, N P Readioff 74, D M Rebuzzi 121,209, A Redelbach 175, G Redlinger 25, R Reece 138, K Reeves 41, L Rehnisch 16, H Reisin 27, M Relich 164, C Rembser 30, H Ren 33, A Renaud 117, M Rescigno 133, S Resconi 91, O L Rezanova 109, P Reznicek 129, R Rezvani 95, R Richter 101, E Richter-Was 199, M Ridel 80, P Rieck 16, J Rieger 54, M Rijssenbeek 149, A Rimoldi 121,209, L Rinaldi 20, E Ritsch 62, I Riu 12, F Rizatdinova 114, E Rizvi 76, S H Robertson 87, A Robichaud-Veronneau 87, D Robinson 28, J E M Robinson 84, A Robson 53, C Roda 124,210, L Rodrigues 30, S Roe 30, O Røhne 119, S Rolli 162, A Romaniouk 98, M Romano 20,185, E Romero Adam 168, N Rompotis 139, M Ronzani 48, L Roos 80, E Ros 168, S Rosati 133, K Rosbach 49, P Rose 138, P L Rosendahl 14, O Rosenthal 142, V Rossetti 147,227, E Rossi 104,208, L P Rossi 50, R Rosten 139, M Rotaru 26, I Roth 173, J Rothberg 139, D Rousseau 117, C R Royon 137, A Rozanov 85, Y Rozen 153, X Ruan 226, F Rubbo 12, I Rubinskiy 42, V I Rud 99, C Rudolph 44, M S Rudolph 159, F Rühr 48, A Ruiz-Martinez 30, Z Rurikova 48, N A Rusakovich 65, A Ruschke 100, H L Russell 139, J P Rutherfoord 7, N Ruthmann 48, Y F Ryabov 123, M Rybar 129, G Rybkin 117, N C Ryder 120, A F Saavedra 151, G Sabato 107, S Sacerdoti 27, A Saddique 3, H F-W Sadrozinski 138, R Sadykov 65, F Safai Tehrani 133, M Saimpert 137, H Sakamoto 156, Y Sakurai 172, G Salamanna 135,219, A Salamon 134, M Saleem 113, D Salek 107, P H Sales De Bruin 139, D Salihagic 101, A Salnikov 144, J Salt 168, D Salvatore 37,198, F Salvatore 150, A Salvucci 106, A Salzburger 30, D Sampsonidis 155, A Sanchez 104,208, J Sánchez 168, V Sanchez Martinez 168, H Sandaker 14, R L Sandbach 76, H G Sander 83, M P Sanders 100, M Sandhoff 176, T Sandoval 28, C Sandoval 163, R Sandstroem 101, D P C Sankey 131, A Sansoni 47, C Santoni 34, R Santonico 134,218, H Santos 126, I Santoyo Castillo 150, K Sapp 125, A Sapronov 65, J G Saraiva 126,213, B Sarrazin 21, G 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84, A Schwartzman 144, T A Schwarz 89, Ph Schwegler 101, Ph Schwemling 137, R Schwienhorst 90, J Schwindling 137, T Schwindt 21, M Schwoerer 5, F G Sciacca 17, E Scifo 117, G Sciolla 23, F Scuri 124,210, F Scutti 21, J Searcy 89, G Sedov 42, E Sedykh 123, P Seema 21, S C Seidel 105, A Seiden 138, F Seifert 128, J M Seixas 24, G Sekhniaidze 104, S J Sekula 40, K E Selbach 46, D M Seliverstov 123, N Semprini-Cesari 20,185, C Serfon 30, L Serin 117, L Serkin 54, T Serre 85, R Seuster 160, H Severini 113, T Sfiligoj 75, F Sforza 101, A Sfyrla 30, E Shabalina 54, M Shamim 116, L Y Shan 33, R Shang 166, J T Shank 22, M Shapiro 15, P B Shatalov 97, K Shaw 165,229, A Shcherbakova 147,227, C Y Shehu 150, P Sherwood 78, L Shi 152, S Shimizu 67, C O Shimmin 164, M Shimojima 102, M Shiyakova 65, A Shmeleva 96, D Shoaleh Saadi 95, M J Shochet 31, S Shojaii 91,207, S Shrestha 111, E Shulga 98, M A Shupe 7, S Shushkevich 42, P Sicho 127, O Sidiropoulou 175, D Sidorov 114, A Sidoti 20,185, F Siegert 44, Dj Sijacki 13, J Silva 126,213, Y Silver 154, D Silverstein 144, S B Silverstein 147, V Simak 128, O Simard 5, Lj Simic 13, S Simion 117, E Simioni 83, B Simmons 78, D Simon 34, R Simoniello 91,207, P Sinervo 159, N B Sinev 116, G Siragusa 175, A Sircar 79, A N Sisakyan 65, S Yu Sivoklokov 99, J Sjölin 147,227, T B Sjursen 14, H P Skottowe 57, P Skubic 113, M Slater 18, T Slavicek 128, M Slawinska 107, K Sliwa 162, V Smakhtin 173, B H Smart 46, L Smestad 14, S Yu Smirnov 98, Y Smirnov 98, L N Smirnova 99, O Smirnova 81, K M Smith 53, M Smith 35, M Smizanska 72, K Smolek 128, A A Snesarev 96, G Snidero 76, S Snyder 25, R Sobie 170, F Socher 44, A Soffer 154, D A Soh 152, C A Solans 30, M Solar 128, J Solc 128, E Yu Soldatov 98, U Soldevila 168, A A Solodkov 130, A Soloshenko 65, O V Solovyanov 130, V Solovyev 123, P Sommer 48, H Y Song 193, N Soni 1, A Sood 15, A Sopczak 128, B Sopko 128, V Sopko 128, V Sorin 12, D Sosa 202, M Sosebee 8, R Soualah 165,230, P Soueid 95, A M Soukharev 109, D South 42, S Spagnolo 73,206, F Spanò 77, W R Spearman 57, F Spettel 101, R Spighi 20, G Spigo 30, L A Spiller 88, M Spousta 129, T Spreitzer 159, R D St Denis 53, S Staerz 44, J Stahlman 122, R Stamen 58, S Stamm 16, E Stanecka 39, C Stanescu 135, M Stanescu-Bellu 42, M M Stanitzki 42, S Stapnes 119, E A Starchenko 130, J Stark 55, P Staroba 127, P Starovoitov 42, R Staszewski 39, P Stavina 145, P Steinberg 25, B Stelzer 143, H J Stelzer 30, O Stelzer-Chilton 160, H Stenzel 52, S Stern 101, G A Stewart 53, J A Stillings 21, M C Stockton 87, M Stoebe 86, G Stoicea 26, P Stolte 54, S Stonjek 101, A R Stradling 8, A Straessner 44, M E Stramaglia 17, J Strandberg 148, S Strandberg 147,227, A Strandlie 119, E Strauss 144, M Strauss 113, P Strizenec 224, R Ströhmer 175, D M Strom 116, R Stroynowski 40, A Strubig 106, S A Stucci 17, B Stugu 14, N A Styles 42, D Su 144, J Su 125, R Subramaniam 79, A Succurro 12, Y Sugaya 118, C Suhr 108, M Suk 128, V V Sulin 96, S Sultansoy 182, T Sumida 68, S Sun 57, X Sun 33, J E Sundermann 48, K Suruliz 150, G Susinno 37,198, M R Sutton 150, Y Suzuki 66, M Svatos 127, S Swedish 169, M Swiatlowski 144, I Sykora 145, T Sykora 129, D Ta 90, C Taccini 135,219, K Tackmann 42, J Taenzer 159, A Taffard 164, R Tafirout 160, N Taiblum 154, H Takai 25, R Takashima 69, H Takeda 67, T Takeshita 141, Y Takubo 66, M Talby 85, A A Talyshev 108, J Y C Tam 175, K G Tan 88, J Tanaka 156, R Tanaka 117, S Tanaka 132, S Tanaka 66, A J Tanasijczuk 143, B B Tannenwald 111, N Tannoury 21, S Tapprogge 83, S Tarem 153, F Tarrade 29, G F Tartarelli 91, P Tas 129, M Tasevsky 127, T Tashiro 68, E Tassi 37,198, A Tavares Delgado 126,211, Y Tayalati 222, F E Taylor 94, G N Taylor 88, W Taylor 228, F A Teischinger 30, M Teixeira Dias Castanheira 76, P Teixeira-Dias 77, K K Temming 48, H Ten Kate 30, P K Teng 152, J J Teoh 118, F Tepel 176, S Terada 66, K Terashi 156, J Terron 82, S Terzo 101, M Testa 47, R J Teuscher 159, J Therhaag 21, T Theveneaux-Pelzer 34, J P Thomas 18, J Thomas-Wilsker 77, E N Thompson 35, P D Thompson 18, R J Thompson 84, A S Thompson 53, L A Thomsen 36, E Thomson 122, M Thomson 28, W M Thong 88, R P Thun 89, F Tian 35, M J Tibbetts 15, R E Ticse Torres 85, V O Tikhomirov 96, Yu A Tikhonov 109, S Timoshenko 98, E Tiouchichine 85, P Tipton 177, S Tisserant 85, T Todorov 5, S Todorova-Nova 129, J Tojo 70, S Tokár 145, K Tokushuku 66, K Tollefson 90, E Tolley 57, L Tomlinson 84, M Tomoto 103, L Tompkins 144, K Toms 105, N D Topilin 65, E Torrence 116, H Torres 143, E Torró Pastor 168, J Toth 85, F Touchard 85, D R Tovey 140, H L Tran 117, T Trefzger 175, L Tremblet 30, A Tricoli 30, I M Trigger 160, S Trincaz-Duvoid 80, M F Tripiana 12, W Trischuk 159, B Trocmé 55, C Troncon 91, M Trottier-McDonald 15, M Trovatelli 135,219, P True 90, M Trzebinski 39, A Trzupek 39, C Tsarouchas 30, J C-L Tseng 120, P V Tsiareshka 92, D Tsionou 137, G Tsipolitis 10, N Tsirintanis 9, S Tsiskaridze 12, V Tsiskaridze 48, E G Tskhadadze 51, I I Tsukerman 97, V Tsulaia 15, S Tsuno 66, D Tsybychev 149, A Tudorache 26, V Tudorache 26, A N Tuna 122, S A Tupputi 20,185, S Turchikhin 99, D Turecek 128, I Turk Cakir 181, R Turra 91,207, A J Turvey 40, P M Tuts 35, A Tykhonov 49, M Tylmad 147,227, M Tyndel 131, I Ueda 156, R Ueno 29, M Ughetto 85, M Ugland 14, M Uhlenbrock 21, F Ukegawa 161, G Unal 30, A Undrus 25, G Unel 164, F C Ungaro 48, Y Unno 66, C Unverdorben 100, J Urban 224, P Urquijo 88, P Urrejola 83, G Usai 8, A Usanova 62, L Vacavant 85, V Vacek 128, B Vachon 87, N Valencic 107, S Valentinetti 20,185, A Valero 168, L Valery 34, S Valkar 129, E Valladolid Gallego 168, S Vallecorsa 49, J A Valls Ferrer 168, W Van Den Wollenberg 107, P C Van Der Deijl 107, R van der Geer 107, H van der Graaf 107, R Van Der Leeuw 107, N van Eldik 30, P van Gemmeren 6, J Van Nieuwkoop 143, I van Vulpen 107, M C van Woerden 30, M Vanadia 133,217, W Vandelli 30, R Vanguri 122, A Vaniachine 6, F Vannucci 80, G Vardanyan 178, R Vari 133, E W Varnes 7, T Varol 86, D Varouchas 80, A Vartapetian 8, K E Varvell 151, F Vazeille 34, T Vazquez Schroeder 54, J Veatch 7, F Veloso 126,212, T Velz 21, S Veneziano 133, A Ventura 73,206, D Ventura 86, M Venturi 170, N Venturi 159, A Venturini 23, V Vercesi 121, M Verducci 133,217, W Verkerke 107, J C Vermeulen 107, A Vest 44, M C Vetterli 143, O Viazlo 81, I Vichou 166, T Vickey 226, O E Vickey Boeriu 226, G H A Viehhauser 120, S Viel 15, R Vigne 30, M Villa 20,185, M Villaplana Perez 91,207, E Vilucchi 47, M G Vincter 29, V B Vinogradov 65, J Virzi 15, I Vivarelli 150, F Vives Vaque 3, S Vlachos 10, D Vladoiu 100, M Vlasak 128, M Vogel 32, P Vokac 128, G Volpi 124,210, M Volpi 88, H von der Schmitt 101, H von Radziewski 48, E von Toerne 21, V Vorobel 129, K Vorobev 98, M Vos 168, R Voss 30, J H Vossebeld 74, N Vranjes 137, M Vranjes Milosavljevic 13, V Vrba 127, M Vreeswijk 107, R Vuillermet 30, I Vukotic 31, Z Vykydal 128, P Wagner 21, W Wagner 176, H Wahlberg 71, S Wahrmund 44, J Wakabayashi 103, J Walder 72, R Walker 100, W Walkowiak 142, C Wang 194, F Wang 174, H Wang 15, H Wang 40, J Wang 42, J Wang 33, K Wang 87, R Wang 105, S M Wang 152, T Wang 21, X Wang 177, C Wanotayaroj 116, A Warburton 87, C P Ward 28, D R Wardrope 78, M Warsinsky 48, A Washbrook 46, C Wasicki 42, P M Watkins 18, A T Watson 18, I J Watson 151, M F Watson 18, G Watts 139, S Watts 84, B M Waugh 78, S Webb 84, M S Weber 17, S W Weber 175, J S Webster 31, A R Weidberg 120, B Weinert 61, J Weingarten 54, C Weiser 48, H Weits 107, P S Wells 30, T Wenaus 25, D Wendland 16, T Wengler 30, S Wenig 30, N Wermes 21, M Werner 48, P Werner 30, M Wessels 58, J Wetter 162, K Whalen 29, A White 8, M J White 1, R White 192, S White 124,210, D Whiteson 164, D Wicke 176, F J Wickens 131, W Wiedenmann 174, M Wielers 131, P Wienemann 21, C Wiglesworth 36, L A M Wiik-Fuchs 21, A Wildauer 101, H G Wilkens 30, H H Williams 122, S Williams 28, C Willis 90, S Willocq 86, A Wilson 89, J A Wilson 18, I Wingerter-Seez 5, F Winklmeier 116, B T Winter 21, M Wittgen 144, J Wittkowski 100, S J Wollstadt 83, M W Wolter 39, H Wolters 126,212, B K Wosiek 39, J Wotschack 30, M J Woudstra 84, K W Wozniak 39, M Wu 55, S L Wu 174, X Wu 49, Y Wu 89, T R Wyatt 84, B M Wynne 46, S Xella 36, D Xu 33, L Xu 194, B Yabsley 151, S Yacoob 225, R Yakabe 67, M Yamada 66, Y Yamaguchi 118, A Yamamoto 66, S Yamamoto 156, T Yamanaka 156, K Yamauchi 103, Y Yamazaki 67, Z Yan 22, H Yang 196, H Yang 174, Y Yang 152, S Yanush 93, L Yao 33, W-M Yao 15, Y Yasu 66, E Yatsenko 42, K H Yau Wong 21, J Ye 40, S Ye 25, I Yeletskikh 65, A L Yen 57, E Yildirim 42, K Yorita 172, R Yoshida 6, K Yoshihara 122, C Young 144, C J S Young 30, S Youssef 22, D R Yu 15, J Yu 8, J M Yu 89, J Yu 114, L Yuan 67, A Yurkewicz 108, I Yusuff 28, B Zabinski 39, R Zaidan 63, A M Zaitsev 130, A Zaman 149, S Zambito 23, L Zanello 133,217, D Zanzi 88, C Zeitnitz 176, M Zeman 128, A Zemla 38, K Zengel 23, O Zenin 130, T Ženiš 145, D Zerwas 117, D Zhang 89, F Zhang 174, J Zhang 6, L Zhang 152, R Zhang 193, X Zhang 195, Z Zhang 117, X Zhao 40, Y Zhao 195,117, Z Zhao 193, A Zhemchugov 65, J Zhong 120, B Zhou 89, C Zhou 45, L Zhou 35, L Zhou 40, N Zhou 164, C G Zhu 195, H Zhu 33, J Zhu 89, Y Zhu 193, X Zhuang 33, K Zhukov 96, A Zibell 175, D Zieminska 61, N I Zimine 65, C Zimmermann 83, R Zimmermann 21, S Zimmermann 48, Z Zinonos 54, M Ziolkowski 142, L Živković 13, G Zobernig 174, A Zoccoli 20,185, M zur Nedden 16, G Zurzolo 104,208, L Zwalinski 30; Atlas Collaboration180
PMCID: PMC4445993  PMID: 26041977

Abstract

The production of a Z boson in association with a J/ψ meson in proton–proton collisions probes the production mechanisms of quarkonium and heavy flavour in association with vector bosons, and allows studies of multiple parton scattering. Using 20.3fb-1 of data collected with the ATLAS experiment at the LHC in pp collisions at s=8TeV, the first measurement of associated Z+J/ψ production is presented for both prompt and non-prompt J/ψ production, with both signatures having a significance in excess of 5σ. The inclusive production cross-sections for Z boson production (analysed in μ+μ- or e+e- decay modes) in association with prompt and non-prompt J/ψ(μ+μ-) are measured relative to the inclusive production rate of Z bosons in the same fiducial volume to be (36.8±6.7±2.5)×10-7 and (65.8±9.2±4.2)×10-7 respectively. Normalised differential production cross-section ratios are also determined as a function of the Jψ transverse momentum. The fraction of signal events arising from single and double parton scattering is estimated, and a lower limit of 5.3(3.7)mb at 68(95)% confidence level is placed on the effective cross-section regulating double parton interactions.

Introduction

In the Standard Model, a single parton–parton interaction can produce a J/ψ meson in association with a Z boson either through a “prompt” QCD subprocess, or through the production of a Z boson with a b-quark and its subsequent decay into a J/ψ (“non-prompt” production). The same classification into prompt/non-prompt applies to any feed-down into Jψ production from the decays of excited charmonium states (expected to be approximately 20–30 % of the total inclusive rate), depending on the production mechanism for those states. In addition, this final state may also result from the production of a Z boson and a J/ψ (either promptly or non-promptly produced) from two distinct parton–parton interactions within the same proton–proton collision. Previous searches for the related processes W+Υ(1S) and Z+Υ(1S) by CDF saw no evidence for the associated-production of vector-bosons and quarkonia and set limits on the production rate [1, 2]. The production of a prompt Jψ in association with a W boson was observed previously [3] by the ATLAS experiment.

The mechanisms responsible for the production of prompt J/ψ, and indeed all quarkonia, are not fully understood in hadron collisions. While the rate of hadroproduction of the Jψ [47] and ψ(2S) [710], as a function of their transverse momentum, pT, is now modelled well by predictions in the non-relativistic QCD (NRQCD) [1113] framework up to transverse momenta of 100 GeV, predictions of related observables such as charmonium spin-alignment [14, 15] remain challenging to model simultaneously with the production rate, in part due to the number of free parameters which are not calculable and must be constrained from data. The study of additional observables and new final states provides further constraints on the contributions from colour-singlet [1622] and colour-octet production processes, and their properties. The production of a gauge boson in association with a Jψ sets a high energy scale for the scattering process and results in an improvement in the perturbative convergence of the calculations [23, 24] that has troubled the accuracy of quarkonium production models in the past [25]. Recent literature [24] has suggested that colour-octet contributions should dominate the total production rate and that next-to-leading-order (NLO) contributions enhance the cross-section over leading-order (LO) predictions, while other groups [23] state that colour-singlet processes may be important.

Contributions to the total Z+J/ψ production rate can come from non-prompt J/ψ originating from the decay of a b-hadron. Measurement of this contribution provides a new opportunity for studying heavy-flavour production in association with a Z boson [26, 27]. Beyond the study of quarkonium production mechanisms, measurement of the Z+ prompt J/ψ rate may be relevant for the study of ZZ production in a kinematic regime complementary to that previously studied at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [28, 29] where one on-shell Z boson is produced along with a highly virtual boson that fragments into a cc¯ pair. Measurement of Z+ prompt Jψ production also represents an important background to the search for the rare Z+-Jψ three-body decay [3032]. In the future, Z+ prompt J/ψ may prove to be a compelling mode for the study of rare decays of the Higgs boson in quarkonia and associated vector-boson decay modes, proposed in Refs. [33, 34] and more recently in Refs. [35, 36]. Such decays have received renewed attention as a promising mode for the study of Higgs boson charm couplings [37] and its CP properties [38], and also as a possible background to HZZ decay [39]. The production of a Z boson in association with a J/ψ can also contribute to the search for new physics [35, 4043].

In addition to the production of Z+Jψ via single parton scattering (SPS) processes, double parton scattering (DPS) interactions [4450] are expected to constitute a significant proportion of the observed signal. While DPS processes are not distinguishable event-by-event from SPS interactions, azimuthal angular correlations between the Z and the Jψ are expected to be starkly different for the two processes, allowing information on their relative contributions to be extracted. These data can be used to tune the modelling of multiple interactions in other high-energy hadron–hadron processes.

This paper presents a measurement of the cross-section for the associated-production of Z and J/ψ relative to inclusive Z production. The results are shown as fiducial cross-section ratios defined in a restricted phase-space of the muons from J/ψ decay, and also as inclusive cross-section ratios after correcting for the J/ψ kinematic acceptance of these muons, for the range of J/ψ transverse momentum 8.5–100 GeV and rapidity |yJψ|<2.1. The contributions from prompt and non-prompt J/ψ production are presented separately. The cross-section ratio for single parton scattering is obtained after estimating and subtracting the contribution due to double parton scattering. A lower limit on the effective cross-section regulating double parton interactions is presented. Differential cross-section ratios as a function of the transverse momentum pT of the J/ψ are shown for prompt and non-prompt production, inclusive and DPS modes.

The ATLAS detector

The ATLAS detector [51] is a general-purpose detector with a cylindrical geometry1 and forward–backward symmetric coverage in pseudorapidity η. The detector consists of inner tracking detectors, calorimeters and a muon spectrometer, and has a three-level trigger system. The inner tracking detector (ID) is composed of a silicon pixel detector, a semiconductor microstrip detector (SCT) and a transition radiation tracker (TRT). The ID directly surrounds the beam pipe and is immersed in a 2 T axial magnetic field generated by a superconducting solenoid.

The calorimeter system surrounds the solenoid and consists of a highly granular liquid-argon electromagnetic calorimeter (EM) and a steel/scintillator tile hadronic calorimeter. The EM calorimeter has three layers: the first consists of fine-grained strips in the η direction, the second collects most of the energy deposited in the calorimeter by photon and electron showers, and the third provides measurements of energy deposited in the tails of these showers. Two complementary presampler detectors complete the EM, correcting for energy lost in the material before the calorimeter. This fine segmentation provides electron identification in conjunction with the inner detector in the region |η|<2.5.

The muon spectrometer (MS) surrounds the calorimeters and consists of three large air-core superconducting magnets (each with eight coils), which generate a toroidal magnetic field. The MS is instrumented in three layers with detectors (monitored drift tubes and cathode strip chambers) that provide precision muon tracking covering |η|<2.7 and fast trigger detectors (resistive plate chambers and thin gap chambers) covering the range |η|<2.4.

The ATLAS trigger is a three-level system [52] (Level-1, Level-2 and Event Filter) used to reduce the 20 MHz proton bunch collision rate to a several-hundred Hz event transfer rate recorded to mass storage. The system consists of a Level-1 trigger implemented in hardware and a software-based two-stage High Level Trigger (HLT). The Level-1 system provides a rough measurement of lepton candidate position in “regions of interest” (RoI) with a spatial granularity of Δφ×Δη0.1×0.1. These RoI are used to seed HLT algorithms that use higher precision MS, ID and EM measurements to reconstruct lepton trigger objects.

Event selection and reconstruction

Events are collected by triggers requiring at least one lepton with pT>24GeV. These triggers are highly efficient in collecting Z+- decays and were not prescaled during the 2012 data-taking period. Triggered events are required to satisfy certain standardised data-quality requirements, which exclude events taken when temporary faults in detector systems compromise the reconstruction. The total integrated luminosity of proton–proton collisions used in this measurement, after data-quality requirements are applied, is 20.3fb-1.

The final state of this measurement is Z(+-)+J/ψ(μ+μ-), where =μ,e, and therefore candidate events are required to have two pairs of leptons with opposite charge. Each pair of leptons is then fitted to a common vertex, with the invariant mass of the first pair required to be close to the Z boson mass and that of the second pair to be near the J/ψ mass. For events with more than four leptons, all possible combinations of +- and μ+μ- pairs are considered. In rare cases where ambiguous solutions are found, the pairings giving the dilepton combination with mass closest to the particle (Z or J/ψ) world-average mass are chosen.

Lepton reconstruction

Muons are identified [53] by tracks (or track segments) reconstructed in the MS, matched to tracks reconstructed in the ID. Track reconstruction in the inner detector uses the measurements from the pixel, SCT and TRT detectors. The “inside-out” reconstruction strategy starts by finding a track candidate in the pixel and SCT detectors and then extends the trajectories of successfully fitted tracks to the TRT to reconstruct a full inner detector track. Outside of the TRT acceptance (|η|>2.0) only pixel and SCT information is used.

The muon momentum is calculated by statistically combining the information from the ID and the MS, applying a parameterised correction for the energy loss in the calorimeter. Such muons are referred to as combined muons. In some cases it is possible to match an ID track to a signal in the MS, but not possible to perform the combination because the MS track segment contains too few hits. In such cases, the ID track is used as an identified muon candidate. Muons that cross only the first layers of MS chambers, either due to low transverse momentum or because they fall in an area of reduced MS acceptance, can be identified in this less stringent category. The inclusion of these segment-tagged muons provides useful additional kinematic acceptance at low pT for the reconstruction of particles with low invariant mass, such as the Jψ.

Muons originating from the Z boson are required to be combined muons and have pT>15GeV and |η|<2.5. For the J/ψ muons, one must be combined and the other can either be combined or segment-tagged. At least one of these two muons must have pT>4GeV. Muons with |η|>1.3 are required to have pT>2.5GeV and muons with |η|<1.3 must have pT>3.5GeV.

Electrons are reconstructed [54] from energy deposits in the electromagnetic calorimeter that are matched to a track in the inner detector. Candidate electron tracks are fitted using a dedicated tracking algorithm to account for bremsstrahlung energy losses, and the track pattern recognition and global χ2 fit take into account the electron track hypothesis as an alternative to the default pion hypothesis. Both electrons coming from the Z boson decay need to have pT>15GeV, |η|<2.47 and satisfy the loose identification criteria described in Ref. [54].

In order to reject non-prompt leptons from the decay of heavy quarks, electrons from conversions of bremsstrahlung photons and fake electrons from misidentified jets, the leptons that form the Z boson candidate must satisfy isolation requirements based on tracking information. The scalar sum of the transverse momenta of inner detector tracks inside an ηϕ cone of size ΔR=0.2 around the lepton, excluding the track associated with the lepton itself, is required to be no more than 15 % of the lepton pT.

At least one of the Z boson candidate’s leptons must have been responsible for firing the trigger. This criterion is assessed by requiring one of the reconstructed muons (electrons) from the boson to be less than ΔR<0.1(0.15) from a relevant muon (electron) trigger object. The offline reconstructed pT of the candidate matching the trigger must satisfy pT>25GeV. In addition, triggered muons must satisfy |η|<2.4 and electrons must satisfy the medium identification criteria, as described in Ref. [54].

Z+J/ψ candidate selection

Same-flavour, opposite-sign lepton pairs are combined to reconstruct the Z(+-) and J/ψ(μ+μ-) candidates. Candidate Z+Jψ events are retained if the Jψ invariant mass falls in the range 2.6–3.6 GeV and the Z boson candidate has an invariant mass within 10 GeV of the Z mass world-average value (mPDGZ) [55]. In addition, the Jψ candidate is required to satisfy pT>8.5GeV and |yJψ|<2.1. The measurements in the di-electron and di-muon decay channels of the Z boson are performed in slightly different phase spaces and combined into a common phase-space for measurement of the fiducial production cross-sections as summarised in Table 1. The inclusive phase-space definition is identical except for the omission of requirements on the leptons from the Jψ decay.

Table 1.

Phase-space definition of the measured fiducial production cross-section following the geometrical acceptance of the ATLAS detector

graphic file with name 10052_2015_3406_Tab1_HTML.jpg

The Z boson and J/ψ lepton pairs are used to build two dilepton vertices. In the case of the J/ψ candidate the ID tracks alone are used in this vertex fit, whereas for the Zμ+μ- the combined tracks (which are built from hits in both the ID and the MS) are used. For Ze+e- decays, ID tracks corrected by a dedicated tracking algorithm are used, as described above. To reduce contamination from pileup, where a Z boson and a J/ψ are produced from two separate proton–proton collisions in the same proton–proton bunch crossing, the candidate vertices must not be separated in the z-direction by more than 10 mm.

Figure 1a shows a scatter plot of the masses of candidates satisfying these selections. In total, 290 candidate events are selected, of which 139 are observed with Zμ+μ- decays and 151 with Ze+e- decays.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Selected Z+J/ψ candidates in a Z boson mass versus J/ψ boson mass, with =e,μ and b Jψ pseudo-proper time versus Jψ invariant mass, discussed in Sect. 4.1. Z boson candidates decaying to muons are shown with full circles and to electrons with empty circles. The horizontal dotted lines indicate the signal region considered in the analysis

Inclusive Z candidate selection

An inclusive Z sample is formed by selecting all events that satisfy the Z part of the Z+J/ψ selection, including the trigger requirements. This sample is used in the measurement of the ratio of the Z+J/ψ to Z cross-sections, and in the estimates of double parton scattering and the pileup background in the associated-production sample.

An estimate of the background in the inclusive Z sample is obtained using a mixture of Monte Carlo (MC) models and data-driven techniques. The NLO generator Powheg (r1556) [5658], interfaced to Pythia (8.160) [59], is used to model the signal, as well as Drell–Yan contributions away from the Z peak and Zττ or Wν backgrounds. These samples use the CT10 PDF set [60] and the ATLAS AU2 tune [61]. The LO multi-leg generator Sherpa v1.4.1 [62] is used as an alternative signal model. Top quark processes involving tt¯ or single top production are modelled with the NLO generator MC@NLO (4.03) [63, 64], interfaced to Herwig (6.52) [65] for parton showering and Jimmy (4.31) [66] for the underlying-event modelling with the ATLAS AUET2 tune [67] and the CT10 PDFs. The single-top Wt process is modelled with the AcerMC (3.8) [68] generator, using the CTEQ6L1 PDF set [69] and interfaced to Pythia (6.42) [70]. Diboson (WZ, WW and ZZ) production is modelled using the Herwig (6.52) and Jimmy generators with the ATLAS AUET2 tune and the CTEQ6L1 PDF set. The detector response is modelled using the ATLAS simulation infrastructure [71] based on the Geant4 toolkit [72]. Background contributions arising from multi-jet events and from misidentified leptons are obtained directly from the data. This is achieved by inverting the isolation requirements on the leptons, providing a multi-jet background template, which can be used for comparison with the Z+J/ψ sample. The total background in the mPDGZ±10GeV window is estimated to be 0.4±0.4% (including systematic uncertainties), giving a sample of 16.15 million Z boson candidates after background subtraction, of which 8.20 million are observed with Zμ+μ- and 7.95 million with Ze+e-. The di-muon to di-electron ratios of the associated-production Z+J/ψ sample and the inclusive Z sample are compared and found to be consistent within statistical uncertainties (0.92±0.11 and 1.03±0.01, respectively).

Signal and background extraction

The selected Z+Jψ candidates arise from a variety of signal and background sources. In addition to associated Z boson and J/ψ production from SPS and DPS, Z boson and J/ψ candidates can be produced from pileup. Genuine J/ψ may also be paired with fake Z boson candidates in the same proton–proton collision, or vice-versa. Associated-production candidates may also occur from the production of a Z boson in association with b-quarks, where one of the b-quarks hadronises into a b-hadron that subsequently decays into a J/ψ. This section discusses the means by which the contributions from the prompt and non-prompt signal components are distinguished and separated from the prompt and non-prompt background sources.

Separation of prompt and non-prompt J/ψ

The J/ψμ+μ- candidates originate from prompt and non-prompt production sources, backgrounds with real and fake muon combinations, and real muon pairs producing an invariant mass in the continuum under the J/ψ peak. These various components can be separated into categories using the pseudo-proper time distribution of the J/ψ candidates in combination with the Jψ invariant mass distribution, where the pseudo-proper time, τ, is defined by:

τ:=LxymJ/ψpTJ/ψ 1

with Lxy defined as Lxy=L·pTJ/ψ/pTJ/ψ, L the vector from the primary vertex to the J/ψ decay vertex, mJ/ψ the world-average mass of the J/ψ meson [55], pTJ/ψ the transverse momentum of the J/ψ and pTJ/ψ=|pTJ/ψ| its magnitude. The invariant mass and pseudo-proper time of the selected J/ψ candidates produced in association with a Z boson are shown in Fig. 1b.

Promptly produced J/ψ mesons, which are created directly in the hard interaction or feed-down from prompt excited charmonium states produced by the colliding protons, have small pseudo-proper times (distributed around zero due to detector resolution). Background from opposite-sign muon pairs with invariant mass close to the J/ψ mass and short reconstructed pseudo-proper times can mimic prompt J/ψ mesons and forms the prompt background. The second component of the background arises from non-prompt muon pairs, with a vertex displacement that is related to b-hadron decays. Similarly, the signal from non-prompt J/ψ production exhibits a longer pseudo-proper time distribution reflecting the lifetime of b-hadrons, although the distributions of non-prompt signal and background are not necessarily equal. In total, four terms are used for signal and background to fit the pseudo-proper time distribution simultaneously with the invariant mass distribution of the muon pair. The mass regions either side of the J/ψ mass peak are used to constrain the background components.

The pseudo-proper time of the signal prompt component is modelled by a double Gaussian distribution. For the background prompt component, a double-sided exponential convolved with the prompt signal function, accounting for resolution effects, is used. The non-prompt signal component is modelled with a single-sided exponential convolved with the prompt signal function and for the non-prompt background component the sum of a single-sided and a double-sided exponential convolved with the signal function is used. The dimuon invariant mass is modelled with a double Gaussian distribution both for the prompt and non-prompt signal components and exponential functions for the backgrounds (again, prompt and non-prompt). The fit is performed in two separate rapidity regions, the barrel (|yJ/ψ|<1.0) and the endcap (1.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1). The mass resolution is different between the two regions, due to increased multiple scattering and the decrease of the magnetic field integral at high rapidity.

In order to improve the stability of the fit process, the pseudo-proper time and invariant mass of the associated-production J/ψ candidates are fitted simultaneously with a sample of 100k inclusive J/ψ candidates, selected with the same requirements on the J/ψ and its daughter muons as applied to the Z+J/ψ signal sample (see Table 1). The parameters that determine the shape of the pseudo-proper time and invariant mass distributions are linked between the two samples in this fit, leaving only the normalisations free between the two samples. Fig. 2 shows the mass and pseudo-proper time distributions of the J/ψ candidates, produced in association with a Z boson, with the signal and background fits. Applying the fit model to the sample of Z bosons produced in association with a J/ψ candidate results in 56±10 promptly produced J/ψ mesons and 95±12 non-prompt.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Projections of the unbinned mass and pseudo-proper time maximum-likelihood fit in a invariant mass and b pseudo-proper time of the associated-production sample. The fit is used to extract the prompt and non-prompt signal fractions and is performed in two rapidity regions: |yJ/ψ|<1.0 and 1.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1. The results are combined, presenting the mass and pseudo-proper time of all candidates inside the analysis phase-space

After the fit is performed in the J/ψ mass and pseudo-proper time, the sPlot tool [73] is used to assign a weight to each event for each of the components included in the fit model (prompt signal, non-prompt signal, prompt background and non-prompt background). This technique allows the determination of distributions of observables associated with a specific contribution, e.g. prompt J/ψ, while removing the contamination from the other components. As the sPlot technique relies on the assumption that the control variable is uncorrelated with the discriminating variables, the correlations between the J/ψ mass and pseudo-proper time, on one side, and the variables that the weights will be applied to, on the other, were checked, and found to be negligible. The invariant mass distribution of Z boson candidates, after application of the sPlot weights, is shown in Fig. 3a, b for prompt J/ψ and non-prompt J/ψ events, respectively.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Ze+e- (left) and Zμ+μ- (right) candidate invariant mass distributions after the application of the sPlot weights coming from the a prompt and b non-prompt J/ψ component of the fit. Projections of the unbinned maximum likelihood template fit, for the signal and background components derived from MC simulation and data respectively, are overlaid on the sPlot-weighted distributions. The vertical dot-dashed lines indicate the signal region considered in the analysis

Properties of the Z boson candidates

Signal and multi-jet background templates for the dilepton mass were extracted separately for Ze+e- and Zμ+μ- from the Powheg MC generator described in Sect. 3.3 and the data. The signal templates are parameterised with a Gaussian distribution convolved with a Breit–Wigner function, with an additional Gaussian, with smaller mean value compared to the core Gaussian, to model the radiative tails. The multi-jet templates are modelled with an exponential function. The normalisations of the two templates are extracted from a fit to the sPlot-weighted Z invariant mass distributions (Fig. 3). The numbers of background events estimated in the Z signal region, defined as mPDGZ±10GeV, are 0±4(1±4) and 1±5(0±5) for the Ze+e-(μ+μ-) candidates associated with prompt and non-prompt J/ψ, respectively, supporting the hypothesis that the sample is dominated by genuine Z+J/ψ events. The background estimation procedure was verified with toy MC simulation.

Pileup background

During the 2012 data-taking period the average number of pp interactions per bunch crossing at ATLAS was 20.7. While the most likely scenario is that all but one of these inelastic collisions are low-pT background events, there is a certain probability that two or more of these produce a hard scatter. Of these cases, some produce a Z from one scatter, and a J/ψ from another. To exclude as many as possible of these background events, the two dilepton vertices are required to be separated along the z-axis by less than 10 mm. The remaining contamination can be estimated using four ingredients: the spread of the beam spot in z for the data-taking period of relevance; the J/ψ production cross-sections (prompt or non-prompt) from pp collisions at 8 TeV; the number of Z candidates; and the mean number of inelastic interactions per proton–proton bunch crossing, μ. This latter quantity is calculated from the instantaneous luminosity, L, as μ=Lσinel/nbfr, where σinel is the pp inelastic cross-section (equal to 73 mb [74]), nb is the number of colliding bunches and fr is the LHC revolution frequency.

To estimate the mean number of pileup collisions occurring within 10 mm of a given Z vertex, an MC procedure is used. A number of pileup vertices are sampled from the luminosity-weighted distribution of μ. These vertices are distributed according to a Gaussian function with width 48±3mm, equal to the measured width of the proton beam spread in the z-coordinate. The number of additional vertices which lie within 10 mm of a randomly selected vertex, is determined to be Nextra=2.3±0.2.

As it has been verified that the J/ψ reconstruction efficiency is independent of the number of interactions per bunch crossing, the probability for a J/ψ to be produced at a given pileup vertex is

PJ/ψij=σJ/ψij/σinel 2

where σJ/ψij is the cross-section for Jψ production in the appropriate pT (i) and rapidity (j) bin. Although σJ/ψij has not been measured in the fiducial region used in this measurement at centre-of-mass energies of s=8TeV, it can be estimated using an existing non-prompt J/ψ fraction measurement at s=7TeV [4] and the fixed-order next-to-leading-logarithm [75, 76] (FONLL) prediction for the non-prompt J/ψ cross-section at s=8TeV. This extrapolation to 8TeV is based on the observation [4] that the variation in the ratio of non-prompt to prompt J/ψ production with pT appears to be independent of the collision energy, and also on the excellent agreement between the ATLAS measurement and the FONLL predictions of the non-prompt cross-section.

The number of pileup candidates can be evaluated using the number of Z candidates in the fiducial region, NZ, according to Npileupij=NextraNZPJ/ψij, giving a total of i,jNpileupij=5.2-1.3+1.8 and 2.7-0.6+0.9 events in the prompt and non-prompt samples, respectively. The uncertainty on the final result includes contributions from the estimated J/ψ cross-section at s=8TeV, the number of inclusive Z events and the number of extra vertices. The dependence of μ and PJ/ψ on σinel cancels in the determination of Npileup.

Double parton scattering

The DPS contribution to the Z+J/ψ sample is counted as part of the signal. The effective cross-section for double parton interactions σeff measured by ATLAS in W+2-jet events [77], and the ppJ/ψ prompt and non-prompt cross-sections, are used to estimate the number of signal candidates from this source. Based on the assumptions that σeff is process-independent, and that the two hard scatters are uncorrelated, for a collision where a Z boson is produced, the probability that a J/ψ is produced in addition due to a second hard process is

PJ/ψ|Zij=σJ/ψij/σeff 3

where σeff is taken to be σeff=15±3(stat.)-3+5(sys.)mb according to the ATLAS measurement. The estimated numbers of DPS events in the associated-production Z+J/ψ sample are 11.1-5.0+5.7 for the prompt component and 5.8-2.6+2.8 for the non-prompt component. Uncertainties from the J/ψ cross-section at s=8TeV, the number of inclusive Z events and the DPS effective cross-section contribute to the total uncertainty.

Figure 4 shows the azimuthal angle between the Z boson and the J/ψ momentum vectors, Δϕ, after the application of sPlot weights to separate the prompt and non-prompt J/ψ signal components from each other and from background sources. The estimated contributions of double parton scattering and pileup to the observed signal yields for prompt and non-prompt production are also overlaid. DPS events are expected to be distributed uniformly in Δϕ because the Z and the J/ψ are produced by two independent processes. On the contrary, SPS events are expected to display a back-to-back correlation of the Z and the J/ψ (Δϕ=π) since the two particles come from a single interaction of two partons. This back-to-back behaviour is smeared by the presence of additional gluons in the final state, radiation from the leptons, detector effects and by the intrinsic properties of the protons; the measured data are consistent with a combination of a smeared Δϕ=π peak from SPS and a flat DPS contribution with σeff taken from the ATLAS W+2-jet measurement.

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

Azimuthal angle between the Z boson and the J/ψ meson after the application of the sPlot weights to separate the prompt (left) and non-prompt (right) yield from background contributions. The estimated DPS (yellow band) and pileup (cyan band) contributions to the observed data are overlaid. The hashed region show the DPS and pileup uncertainties added in quadrature

Detector effects and acceptance corrections

The efficiency for reconstructing muons in the ATLAS detector is very high [53] and depends on the kinematics of the muon. In order to correct the measurements for detector effects, a per-event weight is applied, based on the pseudorapidity and transverse momentum of both muons coming from the J/ψ decay. These weights are extracted using large inclusive J/ψμ+μ- and Zμ+μ- data samples and have been validated with MC simulation [53]. Small inefficiencies resulting from the requirement on separation of Z and J/ψ vertices are corrected using MC simulations.

It was verified using MC simulation that detector resolution effects causing reconstructed Z boson candidates to migrate in and out of the phase space defined in Table 1 do not produce visible effects on the measured relative production rates.

In addition to corrections applied for reconstruction efficiency (approximately 90 % depending on the pT of the J/ψ), the detector acceptance needs to be taken into account. The spin-alignment profile of the J/ψ meson produced in association with a Z boson might be different from the known profile of inclusive J/ψ mesons [78]. The modified angular distributions of muons from the decay of alternatively-polarised Jψ mesons can cause changes in acceptance in the fiducial region defined by the selection requirements (see Table 1). For various extreme polarisation states of the J/ψ [79], the J/ψ rate is corrected for muons that fall outside the detector acceptance in transverse momentum and pseudorapidity.

Systematic uncertainties

Systematic uncertainties coming from the fit are calculated by varying the probability density functions for the Jψ mass and pseudo-proper time distributions. In addition to the model described in Sect. 4, an alternative model was used, changing the parameterisation for the mass and lifetime resolution and the shapes of the background components. This model parameterised the mass with a Gaussian function for the J/ψ signal and exponential (or polynomial) functions for the combinatorial background, and parameterised the pseudo-proper time with the sum of a Gaussian and a double-sided exponential function convolved with a Gaussian resolution function for the prompt J/ψ and prompt combinatorial background component, and an exponential function convolved with a Gaussian resolution function for the non-prompt J/ψ and non-prompt combinatorial background. The shape-related parameters are linked between the Z+J/ψ sample and the inclusive J/ψ sample in the model used for the signal extraction. This assumption neglects the possible difference in kinematics between J/ψ mesons that are produced inclusively and J/ψ mesons produced in association with a Z boson and needs to be taken into account. This effect is evaluated by removing the link between the parameters and repeating the fit, using the main fit model and the alternative considered for the systematic study. The systematic uncertainty associated with the fit procedure was determined with a toy MC simulation technique. A large number of simulated data samples were generated for the two rapidity bins and then fitted with all the available fit procedures. The uncertainties were evaluated from the maximal variation in mean yield extracted from each of the three fit models, relative to the nominal model. This uncertainty was found to be 3 % for prompt production and 4–8 % (depending on the rapidity of the Jψ candidate) for non-prompt production.

In the measurement of the cross-section ratios, it is assumed that the efficiency and acceptance for the Z boson are the same when the Z is produced in association with a J/ψ as when it is produced inclusively. In the absence of reliable signal Monte Carlo samples for the SPS or DPS processes, systematic uncertainties that arise from this assumption are calculated using a data-driven approach. The reconstruction and trigger efficiencies calculated for the associated-production data sample and an inclusive Z sample, re-weighted to match the observed Z+J/ψpT spectrum, are compared. The non-cancellation of efficiencies and acceptance between inclusively-produced Z bosons and those produced in association with a Jψ is found to be (1±1)%.

The reconstruction efficiencies of the J/ψ muons used for the correction and calculation of the inclusive cross-section are extracted from Zμ+μ- and J/ψμ+μ- decays using a tag-and-probe method [53]. These efficiencies and their uncertainties depend on the muon pseudorapidity and pT and are applied to the data in the form of two-dimensional maps. In order to calculate the systematic uncertainty, each bin of the efficiency map is allowed to vary within its uncertainty and the effect on the extracted yield is examined. The systematic uncertainty from the muon reconstruction efficiency is of the order of 1 %.

In the selection requirements applied to the dataset, the Z and J/ψ vertices are required to be within 10 mm along the z-axis. This choice could cause a potential bias in the measurement of the prompt and the non-prompt yield since it affects the pseudo-proper time distribution of the J/ψ. This cut is loosened to 20 mm and the difference in the extracted yield, again assessed using data-driven pseudoexperiments, determined after the pileup subtraction and correction for the expected change in signal efficiency from MC simulations, is taken as a systematic uncertainty. This variation is found to be between 2 and 16 %, depending on the rapidity of the J/ψ.

A possible contribution from the decay of Z+-J/ψ [3032] might lead to an enhancement of the measured yields over contributions from Z+Jψ. This possible enhancement is studied by considering the change in the prompt yield after subtracting events for which the mass of the +-J/ψ lies within 10 GeV of the world-average value of the Z boson mass; the effect was found to be negligible.

The kinematic acceptance of Z bosons is dependent on the average Z boson polarisation. Due to the high detector acceptance for Z boson decays, the possible effect of modification of the average polarisation of the Z boson in associated production relative to inclusive production is considered negligible in this study.

Uncertainties linked with the luminosity measurement and the Z trigger efficiencies cancel in the ratio of Z+J/ψ to inclusive Z cross-sections. The contributions of all non-negligible systematic uncertainties are summarised in Table 2.

Table 2.

Summary of experimental systematic uncertainties

Source Prompt (%) Non-prompt (%)
|yJ/ψ|<1.0 1.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1 |yJ/ψ|<1.0 1.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1
Fit procedure 3 3 4 8
Z boson kinematics 1 1 1 1
μJ/ψ efficiency 1 1 1 1
Vertex separation 7 16 2 15

Results

The results of the two-dimensional maximum likelihood fit are shown in Table 3 for the two rapidity regions.

Table 3.

Results of the fit with statistical (first) and systematic (second) uncertainties. The total number of background events is measured in the 2.6<mμμ<3.6GeV window. The last column presents the expected number of pileup events for the prompt and non-prompt component, and their statistical uncertainty

Process |yJ/ψ|<1.0 1.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1 Total
Events found From pileup
Prompt signal 24±6±2 32±8±5 56±10±5 5.2-1.3+1.8
Non-prompt signal 54±9±3 41±8±7 95±12±8 2.7-0.6+0.9
Background 61±11±6 77±13±7 138±17±9

The signal significances for both the prompt and non-prompt final states were calculated by performing pseudo-experiments and taking into account the pileup background contribution. Events were generated with a di-muon invariant mass and a pseudo-proper time according to the background-only hypothesis, then fitted with the background-only and signal+background hypotheses, which allowed the likelihood ratio of the two hypotheses to be calculated and compared with the likelihood ratio of the data. Using this method, the background-only hypothesis for both the prompt and non-prompt final states was excluded at 5σ significance. To allow for an assessment of the significance beyond that possible using pseudoexperiments, the significance was extracted as -2×lnL, where L is the likelihood ratio of the background-only and signal plus background hypotheses. Both methods yielded consistent results, the outcome being that the background-only hypothesis is excluded at 5σ significance for the Z+promptJ/ψ final state, and 9σ significance for the non-prompt J/ψ signature.

After background subtraction, significant signals for the associated-production of Z+ prompt J/ψ and Z+ non-prompt J/ψ are observed. The background-subtracted Z+ prompt J/ψ and Z+ non-prompt Jψ candidate yields are corrected for detector efficiency effects, and production cross-sections are determined in a restricted fiducial volume given by the criteria in Table 1. The measured Z+Jψ cross-sections are normalised by the inclusive Z production cross-section determined in the same Z boson fiducial volume as the Z+Jψ measurement, benefiting from the cancellation of some systematic uncertainties to allow a more precise determination of production cross-sections.

Fiducial cross-section ratio measurements

The fiducial cross-section ratio, as described in Table 1 (normalised to the inclusive Z boson cross-section), RZ+Jψfid, is measured without applying corrections for the incomplete geometric acceptance for the J/ψ decay muons, nor for the Z boson acceptance and is defined as2:

RZ+Jψfid=B(J/ψμ+μ-)σfid(ppZ+J/ψ)σfid(ppZ)=1N(Z)pTbins[Nec(Z+J/ψ)-Npileupec],

where B(J/ψμ+μ-) is the branching ratio for the decay J/ψμ+μ- [55], Nec(Z+J/ψ) is the yield of Z+ (prompt/non-prompt) J/ψ events after corrections for Jψ muon reconstruction efficiency, N(Z) is the background-subtracted yield of inclusive Z events and Npileupec is the efficiency-corrected expected pileup background contribution in the fiducial J/ψ acceptance. For prompt and non-prompt production, the cross-section ratios were measured to be:

prompt:\ pRZ+Jψfid=(36.8±6.7±2.5)×10-7non-prompt:\ npRZ+Jψfid=(65.8±9.2±4.2)×10-7

for 8.5GeV<pTJ/ψ<100GeV and |yJ/ψ|<2.1, where the first uncertainty is statistical and the second is systematic in origin. The results are summarised in Fig. 5. Production of a Jψμ+μ- meson in association with a Z boson occurs approximately ten times per million Z bosons produced in the fiducial volume defined in Table 1.

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

Production cross-sections ratios of J/ψ in association with a Z boson, relative to inclusive Z production, for prompt and non-prompt J/ψ production. The first point indicates the total integrated cross-section ratio measured in the defined fiducial volume, the second point shows the same quantity corrected for detector acceptance effects on the Jψ reconstruction, and the third point illustrates the corrected cross-section ratio after subtraction of the double parton scattering contribution as discussed in the text. The inner error bars represent statistical uncertainties and the outer error bars represent statistical and systematic uncertainties added in quadrature. Also shown are LO [23] and NLO [24] predictions for the inclusive SPS production rates in the colour-singlet (CS) and colour-octet (CO) formalisms

The differential fiducial cross-section ratios dRZ+J/ψfid/dy for prompt and non-prompt Z+Jψ production are also determined in two bins, for central Jψ rapidities (|yJ/ψ|<1) and forward Jψ rapidities (1<|yJ/ψ|<2.1), and are reported in Table 4.

Table 4.

The fiducial, inclusive (SPS + DPS) and DPS-subtracted differential cross-section ratio dRZ+J/ψ/dy as a function of yJ/ψ for prompt and non-prompt J/ψ

yJ/ψ Fiducial (×10-7) Inclusive (×10-7) DPS-subtracted (×10-7)
value ±(stat)±(syst) value ±(stat)±(syst)±(spin) value ±(stat)±(syst)±(spin)
Prompt cross-section ratio
|yJ/ψ|<1.01.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1 7.6±2.1±0.59.8±2.2±1.3 13.9±4.6±0.8±3.415.8±4.5±2.1±3.5 9.4±4.6±1.1±3.412.0±4.5±2.7±3.5
Non-prompt cross-section ratio
|yJ/ψ|<1.01.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1 18.0±3.3±0.613.5±2.9±1.9 29.9±5.0±0.9±1.119.3±5.0±2.1±0.8 27.8±5.0±1.0±1.117.5±5.0±2.1±0.8

Inclusive cross-section ratio measurements

Theoretical predictions for the production rates of Jψ are often presented within a limited Jψ phase-space, but without any kinematic requirements on the decay products. To allow comparison of theoretical and experimentally measured production rates, corrections derived from simulation are applied to the measured fiducial cross-sections to account for the geometrical acceptance loss due to the muon pT and η requirements detailed in Table 1. These corrections are dependent on the pT and rapidity of the Jψ meson and on the angular distribution of the dilepton system in the decay of prompt Jψ. The angular distribution is dependent on the spin-alignment state of the produced Jψ mesons. While the spin-alignment has been measured for inclusive prompt Jψ production [78] and found to be consistent with an isotropic angular distribution hypothesis, Jψ produced in association with a Z boson may have a different polarisation, leading to different decay kinematics. The central value is determined assuming unpolarised decays, with the effect of the most extreme polarisation scenarios assigned as a systematic uncertainty. The largest change in acceptance obtained considering the extreme polarisation scenarios is used as an additional systematic uncertainty in the determination of inclusive production cross-section for prompt J/ψ production, and is equal to ±24% for |yJ/ψ|<1.0 and ±23% for 1.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1. The range of variation for non-prompt production was reduced to about 10 % of the full range as suggested by the measurement of the J/ψ polarisation in b-decays [80] and the uncertainty was found to be ±3% for |yJ/ψ|<1.0 and ±2% for 1.0<|yJ/ψ|<2.1.

The acceptance-corrected inclusive production cross-section ratio, RZ+Jψincl, is defined as:

RZ+Jψincl=B(J/ψμ+μ-)σincl(ppZ+J/ψ)σincl(ppZ)=1N(Z)pTbins[Nec+ac(Z+J/ψ)-Npileupec+ac],

where Nec+ac(Z+J/ψ) is the yield of Z+ (prompt/non-prompt) J/ψ events after J/ψ acceptance corrections and efficiency corrections for both muons from the Jψ decay, Npileupec+ac is the expected pileup contribution in the full J/ψ decay phase-space, and other variables are the same as for RZ+Jψfid. The production cross-section ratio is measured to be:

prompt:\ pRZ+Jψincl=(63±13±5±10)×10-7non-prompt:\ npRZ+Jψincl=(102±15±5±3)×10-7

for 8.5GeV<pTJ/ψ<100GeV and |yJ/ψ|<2.1, where the first uncertainty is statistical, the second uncertainty is systematic, and the third uncertainty is due to the unknown J/ψ spin-alignment in Z+J/ψ production.

The differential fiducial cross-section ratios dRZ+J/ψincl/dy for prompt and non-prompt Z+Jψ production are also determined in two bins, for central Jψ rapidities (|yJ/ψ|<1) and forward Jψ rapidities (1<|yJ/ψ|<2.1), and are reported in Table 4.

Comparison with theoretical calculations and double parton scattering contributions

Double parton scattering interactions are expected to contribute significantly to the measured inclusive production cross-sections. Using the relation in Eq. 3 and a σeff value of 15±3(stat.)-3+5(syst.) mb, an estimate of the double parton scattering component of the observed signal for both prompt and non-prompt production can be derived in any kinematic interval of the measurement. Subtracting this DPS contribution from RZ+Jψincl gives an estimate RZ+JψDPS\ sub of the single parton scattering cross-section ratio for prompt Jψ production:

pRZ+JψDPS\ sub=(45±13±6±10)×10-7

and non-prompt Jψ production:

npRZ+JψDPS\ sub=(94±15±5±3)×10-7

for 8.5GeV<pTJ/ψ<100GeV and |yJ/ψ|<2.1, where the first uncertainty is statistical, the second uncertainty is systematic, taking into account uncertainties from the DPS estimate, and the third uncertainty is due to the unknown J/ψ spin-alignment in Z+J/ψ production. Figure 5 summarises the fiducial, inclusive and DPS-subtracted cross-section ratios for prompt and non-prompt production and Table 4 presents the differential cross-section ratios in the central and forward Jψ rapidity intervals. The DPS fraction is (29±9)% for the Z+ prompt J/ψ signal and (8±2)% for the non-prompt signal, in the kinematic region studied in this measurement.

The production cross-section ratios for Z+ prompt Jψ production are compared to LO colour-singlet [23] predictions, as well as the contributions from colour-singlet (CS) and colour-octet (CO) processes in the non-relativistic QCD (NRQCD) formalism [24].

All theoretical calculations consider only single parton scattering processes in which the J/ψ mesons are produced directly from the parton interaction, without any feed-down from excited charmonium states. To allow direct comparison to the measured DPS-subtracted cross-section ratios, these predictions are normalised to NNLO calculations of the Z boson fiducial production cross-section (533.4pb), determined using fewz [81, 82].

LO colour-singlet mechanism (CSM) predictions for the production cross-section (normalised to the inclusive Z production rate) vary between (11.6±3.2)×10-8 (from Ref. [23]) and (46.2-6.5+6.0)×10-8 (from Ref. [24]). The NLO NRQCD prediction [24] for the colour-singlet rate is (45.7-9.6+10.5)×10-8. NRQCD colour-octet contributions to the normalised production rate (that should be added to the corresponding colour-singlet rates to provide the total NRQCD prediction) shown in Fig. 5 are predicted to be (25.1-3.5+3.3)×10-8 at LO and (86-18+20)×10-8 at NLO accuracy, approximately a factor of two larger than the contribution from colour-singlet production at the same order in the perturbative expansion. Uncertainties in the predictions arise from a variation of the renormalisation and factorisation scales up and down by a factor of two from their nominal values, and uncertainties on the charm quark mass. The variation in the predictions for the colour-singlet rate at LO from different groups arises from a different choice of scale for the central prediction, either taking the Z mass, mZ, or the Jψ transverse mass, mT(Jψ)=mJψ2+pT(Jψ), the appropriateness of which is the subject of some discussion [23, 24]. The CO predictions presented here use the values for the NRQCD long-distance matrix elements as discussed in Ref. [24], but do not include uncertainties related to the determination of these matrix elements [83].

The effective cross-section regulating multiple parton interactions is expected to be a dynamical quantity dependent on the probed scale of the interactions, and thus should be x-dependent (where xpparton/pbeam) [84]. Recent theoretical studies [85] have suggested that vector-boson production in association with jets may have σeff values as high as 15–25 mb. In this paper, the ATLAS W+2-jet measurement of σeff=15±3(stat.)-3+5(sys.)mb is used to estimate the DPS contribution, and is found to be consistent, within the still sizeable uncertainties, with the observed rates and the plateau observed at small azimuthal separations between the produced Z bosons and Jψ, illustrated in Fig. 4.

The small Δϕ(Z,J/ψ) region is sensitive to DPS contributions and can be used to limit the maximum allowed double parton scattering contribution to the observed signal, which corresponds to a lower limit on σeff, by conservatively assuming that all observed signal in the first bin (Δϕ(Z,J/ψ)<π/5 region) is due to DPS. As the estimated relative signal contribution from DPS processes is largest in prompt production, the data from Z+ prompt Jψ provides the most stringent limit on the rate of DPS interactions. The data uncertainties and uncertainties inherent in the DPS estimate allow a lower limit σeff>5.3mb(3.7mb) at 68%(95%) confidence level to be extracted from the Z+ prompt J/ψ data.

A model-independent upper limit on σeff cannot be extracted from these data, as such a limit corresponds to a minimum rate of DPS contribution at small Δϕ(Z,J/ψ). While SPS contributions are largest at wide angles, a significant SPS contribution is possible at low angles due to high-order processes [86].

Differential production cross-section measurements

Extending upon the measurement of the total inclusive production ratios RZ+Jψincl and determination of the DPS contribution, the differential cross-section ratio dRZ+Jψincl/dpT is measured as a function of the transverse momentum of the J/ψ for both the prompt and non-prompt signals, using the sPlot weights obtained from the fit procedure. The differential DPS contribution (using σeff=15mb) is shown together with the inclusive cross-section ratio in each kinematic interval in Fig. 6 and in Table 5. The observed pT dependence is significantly harder than for inclusive Jψ production [4].

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

Production cross-section of J/ψ in association with a Z boson as a function of the pT of prompt J/ψ, and non-prompt J/ψ, normalised to the inclusive Z cross-section. Overlaid on the measurement is the contribution to the total signal originating from double parton scattering (DPS) interactions. Theoretical predictions at NLO accuracy for the SPS contributions from colour-singlet (CS) and colour-octet (CO) processes are added to the DPS estimate and presented in comparison to the data as solid bands

Table 5.

The inclusive (SPS + DPS) cross-section ratio dRZ+J/ψincl/dpT for prompt and non-prompt J/ψ. Estimated DPS contributions for each bin, based on the assumptions made in this study, are presented

pTJ/ψ(GeV) Inclusive prompt ratio (×10-7/GeV) Estimated DPS (×10-7/GeV)
value ±(stat)±(syst)±(spin) assuming σeff=15mb
(8.5,10)(10,14)(14,18)(18,30)(30,100) 10.8±5.6±1.9±3.15.6±1.9±0.8±1.21.9±1.1±0.1±0.30.87±0.37±0.12±0.090.090±0.037±0.012±0.006 5.5±2.11.7±0.60.4±0.10.05±0.020.0004±0.0002
pTJ/ψ(GeV) Inclusive non-prompt ratio (×10-7/GeV) Estimated DPS (×10-7/GeV)
value ±(stat)±(syst)±(spin) assuming σeff=15mb
(8.5,10)(10,14)(14,18)(18,30)(30,100) 5.1±4.2±0.9±0.39.2±2.5±1.2±0.33.3±1.2±0.4±0.13.04±0.59±0.04±0.040.115±0.039±0.002±0.001 2.07±0.770.85±0.300.26±0.090.05±0.020.0015±0.0005

The measured differential production cross-section ratio for prompt Jψ production is compared to NLO colour-singlet and colour-octet predictions. As these predictions are for single parton scattering rates, the estimated DPS contribution is added to the theoretical predictions to allow like-for-like comparison between theory and data. Theory predicts that colour-octet contributions exceed the production rate from singlet processes by approximately a factor of two, with colour-octet processes becoming increasingly dominant for higher pT of the Jψ. The combination of DPS and NLO NRQCD contributions tends to underestimate the production rate observed in data, with the discrepancy increasing with transverse momentum and reaching a factor of 4–5 at pTJ/ψ>18GeV. A significant SPS contribution to Z+ non-prompt Jψ production rate from Z+b-jet production, where the jet contains a Jψ meson, is expected but has not been evaluated for this article. The data presented here offer the opportunity to test Z+b-jet production at low transverse momentum.

Conclusions

This paper documents the first observation and measurement of both associated Z+promptJ/ψ and Z+ non-prompt Jψ production, with the background-only hypothesis being excluded at 5σ significance for prompt Z+Jψ production and at 9σ significance for non-prompt J/ψ production, using 20.3fb-1 of proton–proton collisions recorded in the ATLAS detector at the LHC, at a centre-of-mass energy of 8 TeV.

Fiducial cross-sections of the production rate of the two final states were measured as ratios to the inclusive Z boson production rate in the same fiducial volume, and found to be (36.8±6.7±2.5)×10-7 and (65.8±9.2±4.2)×10-7 for Z bosons produced in association with a prompt and non-prompt Jψ, respectively, where the first uncertainty is statistical and the second is systematic. Ratios, corrected for the limited geometrical acceptance for the muons from the Jψ decay in the Jψ fiducial volume, are also presented. For prompt production this correction factor depends on the spin-alignment state of Jψ produced in association with a Z boson, which may differ from the spin-alignment observed in inclusive Jψ production. The measured Z+ prompt J/ψ production rates are compared to theoretical predictions at LO and NLO for colour-singlet and colour-octet prompt production processes. A higher production rate is predicted through colour-octet transitions than through colour-singlet processes, but the expected production rate from the sum of singlet and octet contributions is lower than the data by a factor of 2 to 5 in the pTJ/ψ range studied.

Measurements of the azimuthal angle between the Z boson and J/ψ meson suggest that both single and double parton scattering contributions may be present in the data. Using the effective cross-section regulating double parton scattering rates as measured by ATLAS in the W+2-jet final state, the fraction of the inclusive production rate arising from double parton scattering interactions is estimated to be (29±9)% for prompt production and (8±2)% for non-prompt production. An independent limit on the maximum rate of double parton scattering contributing to the signal is set, corresponding to a lower limit on the effective cross-section of 5.3mb(3.7mb) at 68%(95%) confidence level. The measured production cross-section ratios of inclusive Z+ prompt Jψ and Z+ non-prompt Jψ production, and the estimated contribution from double parton scattering, are shown differentially in five intervals of the JψpT, with the differential production rates compared to NLO predictions from colour-singlet and colour-octet processes.

Acknowledgments

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; BMWFW 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; RGC, Hong Kong SAR, China; ISF, MINERVA, GIF, I-CORE and Benoziyo Center, Israel; INFN, Italy; MEXT and JSPS, Japan; CNRST, Morocco; FOM and NWO, Netherlands; BRF and RCN, Norway; MNiSW and NCN, Poland; GRICES and FCT, Portugal; MNE/IFA, Romania; MES of Russia and NRC KI, Russian Federation; JINR; MSTD, Serbia; MSSR, Slovakia; ARRS and MIZŠ, Slovenia; DST/NRF, South Africa; MINECO, 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.

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 η is defined in terms of the polar angle θ as η=-lntan(θ/2) and the transverse momentum pT is defined as pT=psinθ. The rapidity is defined as y=0.5ln((E+pz)/(E-pz)), where E and pz refer to energy and longitudinal momentum, respectively. The ηϕ distance between two particles is defined as ΔR=(Δη)2+(Δϕ)2.

2

The equation used is slightly different to that used in the W+J/ψ analysis [3], which was normalised to unit rapidity.

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