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. 2015 Jul 17;75(7):330. doi: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-015-3544-0

Measurement of the top quark mass in the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton channels using s=7 TeV ATLAS data

ATLAS Collaboration180, G Aad 85, B Abbott 113, J Abdallah 152, O Abdinov 11, R Aben 107, M Abolins 90, O S AbouZeid 159, H Abramowicz 154, H Abreu 153, R Abreu 30, Y Abulaiti 147, B S Acharya 165, L Adamczyk 38, D L Adams 25, J Adelman 108, S Adomeit 100, T Adye 131, A A Affolder 74, T Agatonovic-Jovin 13, J A Aguilar-Saavedra 126, S P Ahlen 22, F Ahmadov 65, G Aielli 134, H Akerstedt 147, T P A Åkesson 81, G Akimoto 156, A V Akimov 96, G L Alberghi 20, J Albert 170, S Albrand 55, M J Alconada Verzini 71, M Aleksa 30, I N Aleksandrov 65, C Alexa 26, G Alexander 154, T Alexopoulos 10, M Alhroob 113, G Alimonti 91, L Alio 85, J Alison 31, S P Alkire 35, B M M Allbrooke 18, P P Allport 74, A Aloisio 104, A Alonso 36, F Alonso 71, C Alpigiani 76, A Altheimer 35, B Alvarez Gonzalez 90, D Álvarez Piqueras 168, M G Alviggi 104, B T Amadio 15, K Amako 66, Y Amaral Coutinho 24, C Amelung 23, D Amidei 89, S P Amor Dos Santos 126, A Amorim 126, S Amoroso 48, N Amram 154, G Amundsen 23, C Anastopoulos 140, L S Ancu 49, N Andari 30, T Andeen 35, C F Anders 58, G Anders 30, J K Anders 74, K J Anderson 31, A Andreazza 91, V Andrei 58, 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, M Antonelli 47, A Antonov 98, J Antos 145, 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, L Asquith 150, K Assamagan 25, R Astalos 145, M Atkinson 166, N B Atlay 142, B Auerbach 6, K Augsten 128, M Aurousseau 146, G Avolio 30, B Axen 15, M K Ayoub 117, G Azuelos 95, M A Baak 30, A E Baas 58, C Bacci 135, H Bachacou 137, K Bachas 155, M Backes 30, M Backhaus 30, E Badescu 26, P Bagiacchi 133, P Bagnaia 133, Y Bai 33, T Bain 35, J T Baines 131, O K Baker 177, P Balek 129, T Balestri 149, F Balli 84, E Banas 39, Sw Banerjee 174, A A E Bannoura 176, H S Bansil 18, L Barak 30, S P Baranov 96, E L Barberio 88, D Barberis 50, M Barbero 85, T Barillari 101, M Barisonzi 165, T Barklow 144, N Barlow 28, S L Barnes 84, B M Barnett 131, R M Barnett 15, Z Barnovska 5, A Baroncelli 135, G Barone 49, A J Barr 120, F Barreiro 82, J Barreiro Guimarães da Costa 57, R Bartoldus 144, A E Barton 72, P Bartos 145, A Bassalat 117, A Basye 166, R L Bates 53, S J Batista 159, J R Batley 28, M Battaglia 138, M Bauce 133, F Bauer 137, H S Bawa 144, J B Beacham 111, M D Beattie 72, T Beau 80, P H Beauchemin 162, R Beccherle 124, P Bechtle 21, H P Beck 17, K Becker 120, M Becker 83, S Becker 100, M Beckingham 171, C Becot 117, A J Beddall 19, A Beddall 19, V A Bednyakov 65, C P Bee 149, L J Beemster 107, T A Beermann 176, M Begel 25, J K Behr 120, C Belanger-Champagne 87, P J Bell 49, W H Bell 49, G Bella 154, L Bellagamba 20, A Bellerive 29, M Bellomo 86, K Belotskiy 98, O Beltramello 30, O Benary 154, D Benchekroun 136, M Bender 100, K Bendtz 147, N Benekos 10, Y Benhammou 154, E Benhar Noccioli 49, J A Benitez Garcia 160, D P Benjamin 45, J R Bensinger 23, S Bentvelsen 107, L Beresford 120, M Beretta 47, 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, F Bertolucci 124, C Bertsche 113, D Bertsche 113, M I Besana 91, G J Besjes 106, O Bessidskaia Bylund 147, 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 19, C Bini 133, C W Black 151, J E Black 144, K M Black 22, D Blackburn 139, R E Blair 6, J-B Blanchard 137, J E 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, 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, A Boveia 30, J Boyd 30, I R Boyko 65, I Bozic 13, J Bracinik 18, A Brandt 8, G Brandt 54, O Brandt 58, U Bratzler 157, B Brau 86, J E Brau 116, H M Braun 176, S F Brazzale 165, K Brendlinger 122, A J Brennan 88, L Brenner 107, R Brenner 167, S Bressler 173, K Bristow 146, T M Bristow 46, D Britton 53, D Britzger 42, F M Brochu 28, I Brock 21, R Brock 90, J Bronner 101, G Brooijmans 35, T Brooks 77, W K Brooks 32, 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, 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 25, A Buzatu 53, R Buzykaev 109, S Cabrera Urbán 168, D Caforio 128, V M Cairo 37, 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, P Camarri 134, D Cameron 119, L M Caminada 15, R Caminal Armadans 12, S Campana 30, M Campanelli 78, A Campoverde 149, V Canale 104, 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, R Caputo 83, R Cardarelli 134, T Carli 30, G Carlino 104, L Carminati 91, S Caron 106, E Carquin 32, G D Carrillo-Montoya 8, J R Carter 28, J Carvalho 126, D Casadei 78, M P Casado 12, M Casolino 12, E Castaneda-Miranda 146, A Castelli 107, V Castillo Gimenez 168, N F Castro 126, P Catastini 57, A Catinaccio 30, J R Catmore 119, A Cattai 30, J Caudron 83, V Cavaliere 166, D Cavalli 91, M Cavalli-Sforza 12, V Cavasinni 124, F Ceradini 135, B C Cerio 45, K Cerny 129, A S Cerqueira 24, A Cerri 150, L Cerrito 76, F Cerutti 15, M Cerv 30, A Cervelli 17, S A Cetin 19, A Chafaq 136, D Chakraborty 108, I Chalupkova 129, P Chang 166, B Chapleau 87, J D Chapman 28, 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 33, S Chen 33, X Chen 33, Y Chen 67, H C Cheng 89, Y Cheng 31, A Cheplakov 65, E Cheremushkina 130, R Cherkaoui El Moursli 136, V Chernyatin 25, E Cheu 7, L Chevalier 137, V Chiarella 47, J T Childers 6, G Chiodini 73, A S Chisholm 18, R T Chislett 78, A Chitan 26, M V Chizhov 65, K Choi 61, S Chouridou 9, B K B Chow 100, V Christodoulou 78, D Chromek-Burckhart 30, M L Chu 152, J Chudoba 127, A J Chuinard 87, J J Chwastowski 39, L Chytka 115, G Ciapetti 133, A K Ciftci 4, D Cinca 53, V Cindro 75, I A Cioara 21, A Ciocio 15, Z H Citron 173, M Ciubancan 26, A Clark 49, B L Clark 57, P J Clark 46, R N Clarke 15, W Cleland 125, C Clement 147, Y Coadou 85, M Cobal 165, A Coccaro 139, J Cochran 64, L Coffey 23, J G Cogan 144, B Cole 35, S Cole 108, A P Colijn 107, J Collot 55, T Colombo 58, G Compostella 101, P Conde Muiño 126, E Coniavitis 48, S H Connell 146, I A Connelly 77, S M Consonni 91, V Consorti 48, S Constantinescu 26, C Conta 121, G Conti 30, F Conventi 104, M Cooke 15, B D Cooper 78, A M Cooper-Sarkar 120, T Cornelissen 176, M Corradi 20, F Corriveau 87, A Corso-Radu 164, A Cortes-Gonzalez 12, G Cortiana 101, G Costa 91, M J Costa 168, D 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, M Crispin Ortuzar 120, M Cristinziani 21, V Croft 106, G Crosetti 37, 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, 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, J R Dandoy 31, N P Dang 48, 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, P Davison 78, Y Davygora 58, E Dawe 88, I Dawson 140, R K Daya-Ishmukhametova 86, K De 8, R de Asmundis 104, S De Castro 20, 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, D Delgove 117, F Deliot 137, C M Delitzsch 49, M Deliyergiyev 75, A Dell’Acqua 30, L Dell’Asta 22, M Dell’Orso 124, 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 136, 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, L Di Ciaccio 5, A Di Domenico 133, C Di Donato 104, A Di Girolamo 30, B Di Girolamo 30, A Di Mattia 153, B Di Micco 135, R Di Nardo 47, A Di Simone 48, R Di Sipio 159, D Di Valentino 29, C Diaconu 85, M Diamond 159, F A Dias 46, M A Diaz 32, E B Diehl 89, J Dietrich 16, S Diglio 85, A Dimitrievska 13, J Dingfelder 21, F Dittus 30, F Djama 85, T Djobava 51, J I Djuvsland 58, M A B do Vale 24, D Dobos 30, M Dobre 26, C Doglioni 49, T Dohmae 156, J Dolejsi 129, Z Dolezal 129, B A Dolgoshein 98, M Donadelli 24, S Donati 124, P Dondero 121, J Donini 34, J Dopke 131, A Doria 104, M T Dova 71, A T Doyle 53, E Drechsler 54, M Dris 10, E Dubreuil 34, E Duchovni 173, G Duckeck 100, O A Ducu 26,85, 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 51, D Duschinger 44, M Dyndal 38, C Eckardt 42, K M Ecker 101, R C Edgar 89, 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 136, 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, 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, G Facini 31, R M Fakhrutdinov 130, S 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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 107, 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, 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, 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, A Khanov 114, A G Kharlamov 109, T J Khoo 28, V Khovanskiy 97, E Khramov 65, J Khubua 51, H Y Kim 8, H Kim 147, S H Kim 161, Y Kim 31, N Kimura 155, O M Kind 16, B T King 74, M King 168, R S B King 120, S B King 169, J Kirk 131, A E Kiryunin 101, T Kishimoto 67, D Kisielewska 38, F Kiss 48, K Kiuchi 161, O Kivernyk 137, E Kladiva 145, M H Klein 35, M Klein 74, U Klein 74, K Kleinknecht 83, P Klimek 147, A Klimentov 25, R Klingenberg 43, J A Klinger 84, T Klioutchnikova 30, P F Klok 106, E-E Kluge 58, P Kluit 107, S Kluth 101, E Kneringer 62, E B F G Knoops 85, A Knue 53, A Kobayashi 156, D Kobayashi 158, T Kobayashi 156, M Kobel 44, M Kocian 144, P Kodys 129, T Koffas 29, E Koffeman 107, L A Kogan 120, S Kohlmann 176, Z Kohout 128, T Kohriki 66, T Koi 144, H Kolanoski 16, I Koletsou 5, A A Komar 96, Y Komori 156, T Kondo 66, N Kondrashova 42, K Köneke 48, A C König 106, S König 83, T Kono 66, R Konoplich 110, N Konstantinidis 78, R Kopeliansky 153, S Koperny 38, L Köpke 83, A K Kopp 48, K Korcyl 39, K Kordas 155, A Korn 78, A A Korol 109, I Korolkov 12, E V Korolkova 140, O Kortner 101, S Kortner 101, T Kosek 129, V V Kostyukhin 21, V M Kotov 65, A Kotwal 45, A Kourkoumeli-Charalampidi 155, C Kourkoumelis 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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 87, 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, A Strandlie 119, E Strauss 144, M Strauss 113, P Strizenec 145, 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 4, T Sumida 68, S Sun 57, X Sun 33, J E Sundermann 48, K Suruliz 150, G Susinno 37, M R Sutton 150, S Suzuki 66, Y Suzuki 66, M Svatos 127, S Swedish 169, M Swiatlowski 144, I Sykora 145, T Sykora 129, D Ta 90, C Taccini 135, 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, 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, A Tavares Delgado 126, Y Tayalati 136, F E Taylor 94, G N Taylor 88, W Taylor 160, 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, R P Thun 89, 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, E Torrence 116, H Torres 143, E Torró Pastor 168, J Toth 85, F Touchard 85, D R Tovey 140, 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, P True 90, L Truong 165, M Trzebinski 39, A Trzupek 39, C Tsarouchas 30, J C-L Tseng 120, P V Tsiareshka 92, D Tsionou 155, 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, S Turchikhin 99, D Turecek 128, R Turra 91, A J Turvey 40, P M Tuts 35, A Tykhonov 49, M Tylmad 147, M Tyndel 131, I Ueda 156, R Ueno 29, M Ughetto 147, 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 145, P Urquijo 88, P Urrejola 83, G Usai 8, A Usanova 62, L Vacavant 85, V Vacek 128, B Vachon 87, C Valderanis 83, N Valencic 107, S Valentinetti 20, A Valero 168, L Valery 12, 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 153, P van Gemmeren 6, J Van Nieuwkoop 143, I van Vulpen 107, M C van Woerden 30, M Vanadia 133, W Vandelli 30, R Vanguri 122, A Vaniachine 6, F Vannucci 80, G Vardanyan 178, R Vari 133, E W Varnes 7, T Varol 40, D Varouchas 80, A Vartapetian 8, K E Varvell 151, F Vazeille 34, T Vazquez Schroeder 87, J Veatch 7, F Veloso 126, T Velz 21, S Veneziano 133, A Ventura 73, D Ventura 86, M Venturi 170, N Venturi 159, A Venturini 23, V Vercesi 121, M Verducci 133, W Verkerke 107, J C Vermeulen 107, A Vest 44, M C Vetterli 143, O Viazlo 81, I Vichou 166, T Vickey 140, O E Vickey Boeriu 140, G H A Viehhauser 120, S Viel 15, R Vigne 30, M Villa 20, M Villaplana Perez 91, E Vilucchi 47, M G Vincter 29, V B Vinogradov 65, 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, 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 13, 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 33, F Wang 174, H Wang 15, H Wang 40, J Wang 42, J Wang 33, K Wang 87, R Wang 6, 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, 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 M Wharton 72, A White 8, M J White 1, R White 32, S White 124, D Whiteson 164, 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 107, 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, B K Wosiek 39, J Wotschack 30, M J Woudstra 84, K W Wozniak 39, M Wu 55, M Wu 31, 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 33, B Yabsley 151, S Yacoob 146, 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 33, H Yang 174, Y Yang 152, L Yao 33, W-M Yao 15, Y Yasu 66, E Yatsenko 5, 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, J Zalieckas 14, A Zaman 149, S Zambito 57, L Zanello 133, 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 48, R Zhang 33, X Zhang 33, Z Zhang 117, X Zhao 40, Y Zhao 33,117, Z Zhao 33, A Zhemchugov 65, J Zhong 120, B Zhou 89, C Zhou 45, L Zhou 35, L Zhou 40, N Zhou 164, C G Zhu 33, H Zhu 33, J Zhu 89, Y Zhu 33, X Zhuang 33, K Zhukov 96, A Zibell 175, D Zieminska 61, N I Zimine 65, C Zimmermann 83, S Zimmermann 48, Z Zinonos 54, M Zinser 83, M Ziolkowski 142, L Živković 13, G Zobernig 174, A Zoccoli 20, M zur Nedden 16, G Zurzolo 104, L Zwalinski 30
PMCID: PMC4509706  PMID: 26213487

Introduction

The mass of the top quark (mtop) is an important parameter of the Standard Model (SM) of particle physics. Precise measurements of mtop provide critical inputs to fits of global electroweak parameters [13] that help assess the internal consistency of the SM. In addition, the value of mtop affects the stability of the SM Higgs potential, which has cosmological implications [46].

Many measurements of mtop were performed by the CDF and D0 collaborations based on Tevatron proton–antiproton collision data corresponding to integrated luminosities of up to 9.7  fb-1. A selection of these measurements was used in the recent Tevatron mtop combination resulting in mtop=174.34±0.37(stat)±0.52(syst)GeV=174.34±0.64 GeV [7]. Since 2010, measurements of mtop from the LHC by the ATLAS and CMS collaborations have become available. They are based on proton–proton (pp) collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of s=7TeV, recorded during 2010 and 2011 for integrated luminosities of up to 4.9 fb-1 [813]. The corresponding LHC combination, based on s=7TeV data and including preliminary results, yields mtop=173.29±0.23(stat)±0.92(syst)GeV=173.29±0.95 GeV [14]. Using the same LHC input measurements and a selection of the mtop results from the Tevatron experiments, the first Tevatron+LHC mtop combination results in mtop=173.34±0.27(stat)±0.71(syst) GeV, with a total uncertainty of 0.76 GeV [15]. Recently, improved individual measurements with a total uncertainty compatible with that achieved in the Tevatron+LHC mtop combination have become available; the most precise single measurement is obtained by the D0 Collaboration using tt¯lepton+jets events and yields mtop=174.98±0.76GeV [16].

This article presents a measurement of mtop using events with one or two isolated charged leptons (electrons or muons) in the final state (the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton decay channels), in 4.6 fb-1 of pp collision data collected by the ATLAS detector at a centre-of-mass energy of s=7 TeV during 2011. It supersedes Ref. [8], where, using a two-dimensional fit to reconstructed observables in the tt¯lepton+jets channel, mtop was determined together with a global jet energy scale factor. The use of this scale factor allows the uncertainty on mtop stemming from imperfect knowledge of the jet energy scale (JES) to be considerably reduced, albeit at the cost of an additional statistical uncertainty component. The single largest systematic uncertainty on mtop in Ref. [8] was due to the relative b-to-light-jet energy scale (bJES) uncertainty, where the terms b-jets and light-jets refer to jets originating from b-quarks and udcs-quarks or gluons, respectively. To reduce this uncertainty in the present analysis, a three-dimensional template fit is used for the first time in the tt¯lepton+jets channel, again replacing the corresponding uncertainty by a statistical uncertainty and a reduced systematic uncertainty. This concept will be even more advantageous with increasing data luminosity. In addition, for the combination of the measurements of mtop in the two decay channels an in-depth investigation of the correlation of the two estimators for all components of the sources of systematic uncertainty is made. This leads to a much smaller total correlation of the two measurements than what is typically assigned, such that their combination yields a very significant improvement in the total uncertainty on mtop. To retain this low correlation, the jet energy scale factors measured in the tt¯lepton+jets channel have not been propagated to the tt¯dilepton channel.

In the tt¯lepton+jets channel, one W boson from the top or antitop quark decays directly or via an intermediate τ decay into an electron or muon and at least one neutrino, while the other W boson decays into a quark–antiquark pair. The tt¯ decay channels with electrons and muons are combined and referred to as the lepton+jets (or as a shorthand +jets) final state. The tt¯dilepton channel corresponds to the case where both W bosons from the top and antitop quarks decay leptonically, directly or via an intermediate τ decay, into an electron or muon and at least one neutrino. The tt¯ decay channels ee,eμ,μμ are combined and referred to as the dilepton final state. For both the +jets and dilepton final states, the measurements are based on the template method [17]. In this technique, Monte Carlo (MC) simulated distributions are constructed for a chosen quantity sensitive to the physics parameter under study, using a number of discrete values of that parameter. These templates are fitted to analytical functions that interpolate between different input values of the physics parameter, fixing all other parameters of the functions. In the final step a likelihood fit to the observed distribution in data is used to obtain the value for the physics parameter that best describes the data. In this procedure the top quark mass determined from data corresponds to the mass definition used in the MC simulation. It is expected that the difference between this mass definition and the pole mass is of order 1 GeV [1821].

In the +jets channel, events are reconstructed using a kinematic fit that assumes a tt¯ topology. A three-dimensional template method is used, where mtop is determined simultaneously with a light-jet energy scale factor (JSF), exploiting the information from the hadronic W decays, and a separate b-to-light-jet energy scale factor (bJSF). The JSF and bJSF account for residual differences of data and simulation in the light-jet and in the relative b-to-light-jet energy scale, respectively, thereby mitigating the corresponding systematic uncertainties on mtop. The analysis in the dilepton channel is based on a one-dimensional template method, where the templates are constructed for the mb observable, defined as the per-event average invariant mass of the two lepton-b-jet systems from the decay of the top quarks. Due to the underconstrained kinematics associated with the dilepton final state, no in situ constraint of the jet energy scales is performed.

This article is organised as follows: after a short description of the ATLAS detector in Sect. 2, the data and MC simulation samples are discussed in Sect. 3. Details of the event selection and reconstruction are given in Sect. 4. The template fits are explained in Sect. 5. The measurement of mtop in the two final states is given in Sect. 6, and the evaluation of the associated systematic uncertainties are discussed in Sect. 7. The results of the combination of the mtop measurements from the individual analyses are reported in Sect. 8. Finally, the summary and conclusions are given in Sect. 9.

The ATLAS detector

The ATLAS detector [22] covers nearly the entire solid angle around the collision point.1 It consists of an inner tracking detector surrounded by a thin superconducting solenoid, electromagnetic and hadronic calorimeters, and a muon spectrometer incorporating three large superconducting toroid magnets. The inner-detector system (ID) is immersed in a 2 T axial magnetic field and provides charged-particle tracking in the range |η|<2.5. The high-granularity silicon pixel detector covers the interaction region and typically provides three measurements per track, the first energy deposit being normally in the innermost layer. It is followed by the silicon microstrip tracker designed to provide four two-dimensional measurement points per track. These silicon detectors are complemented by the transition radiation tracker, which enables radially extended track reconstruction up to |η|=2.0. The transition radiation tracker also provides electron identification information based on the fraction of energy deposits (typically 30 hits in total) above an energy threshold corresponding to transition radiation. The calorimeter system covers the pseudorapidity range |η|<4.9. Within the region |η|<3.2, electromagnetic calorimetry is provided by barrel and endcap high-granularity lead/liquid-argon (LAr) electromagnetic calorimeters, with an additional thin LAr presampler covering |η|<1.8, to correct for energy loss in material upstream of the calorimeters. Hadronic calorimetry is provided by the steel/scintillator-tile calorimeter, segmented into three barrel structures within |η|<1.7, and two copper/LAr hadronic endcap calorimeters. The solid angle coverage is completed with forward copper/LAr and tungsten/LAr calorimeter modules optimised for electromagnetic and hadronic measurements respectively. The muon spectrometer (MS) comprises separate trigger and high-precision tracking chambers measuring the deflection of muons in the magnetic field generated by the toroids. The precision chamber system covers the region |η|<2.7 with three layers of monitored drift tubes, complemented by cathode strip chambers in the forward region. The muon trigger system covers the range |η|<2.4 with resistive plate chambers in the barrel, and thin gap chambers in the endcap regions. A three-level trigger system is used to select interesting events [23]. The Level-1 trigger is implemented in hardware and uses a subset of detector information to reduce the event rate to at most 75 kHz. This is followed by two software-based trigger levels which together reduce the event rate to about 300 Hz.

Data and Monte Carlo samples

For the measurements described in this document, data from LHC pp collisions at s=7 TeV are used. They correspond to an integrated luminosity of 4.6 fb-1 with an uncertainty of 1.8% [24], and were recorded during 2011 during stable beam conditions and with all relevant ATLAS sub-detector systems operational.

MC simulations are used to model tt¯ and single top quark processes as well as some of the background contributions. Top quark pair and single top quark production (in the s- and Wt-channels) are simulated using the next-to-leading-order (NLO) MC program Powheg-hvq (patch4) [25] with the NLO CT10 [26] parton distribution functions (PDFs). Parton showering, hadronisation and the underlying event are modelled using the Pythia (v6.425) [27] program with the Perugia 2011C (P2011C) MC parameter set (tune) [28] and the corresponding CTEQ6L1 PDFs [29]. The AcerMC (v3.8) generator [30] interfaced with Pythia (v6.425) is used for the simulation of the single top quark t-channel process. The AcerMC and Pythia programs are used with the CTEQ6L1 PDFs and the corresponding P2011C tune.

For the construction of signal templates, the tt¯ and single top quark production samples are generated for different assumed values of mtop, namely 167.5,170,172.5,175,177.5GeV. The tt¯ MC samples are normalised to the predicted tt¯ cross section for each mtop value. The tt¯ cross section for pp collisions at s=7TeV is σtt¯=177-11+10 pb for mtop=172.5 GeV. It was calculated at next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) in QCD including resummation of next-to-next-to-leading-logarithmic (NNLL) soft gluon terms with Top++2.0 [3136]. The PDF+αs uncertainties on the cross section were calculated using the PDF4LHC prescription [37] with the MSTW2008 68% CL NNLO [38, 39], CT10 NNLO [26, 40] and NNPDF2.3 5f FFN [41] PDFs, and added in quadrature to the factorisation and renormalisation scale uncertainty. The NNLO+NNLL value, as implemented in Hathor 1.5 [42], is about 3% larger than the plain NNLO prediction. The single top quark production cross sections are normalised to the approximate NNLO prediction values. For example, for mtop=172.5 GeV, these are 64.6-2.0+2.7 pb [43], 4.6±0.2 pb [44] and 15.7±1.1 pb [45] for the t-, s- and Wt-production channels respectively.

The production of W or Z bosons in association with jets is simulated using the Alpgen (v2.13) generator [46] interfaced to the Herwig (v6.520) [47, 48] and Jimmy (v4.31) [49] packages. The CTEQ6L1 PDFs and the corresponding AUET2 tune [50] are used for the matrix element and parton shower settings. The W+jets events containing heavy-flavour quarks (Wbb+jets, Wcc+jets, and Wc+jets) are generated separately using leading-order matrix elements with massive b- and c-quarks. An overlap-removal procedure is used to avoid double counting of heavy-flavour quarks between the matrix element and the parton shower evolution. Diboson production processes (WW, WZ and ZZ) are produced using the Herwig generator with the AUET2 tune.

Multiple pp interactions generated with Pythia (v6.425) using the AMBT2B tune [51] are added to all MC samples. These simulated events are re-weighted such that the distribution of the number of interactions per bunch crossing (pile-up) in the simulated samples matches that in the data. The average number of interactions per bunch crossing for the data set considered is 8.7. The samples are processed through a simulation of the ATLAS detector [52] based on GEANT4 [53] and through the same reconstruction software as the data.

Event selection and reconstruction

Object selection

In this analysis tt¯ events with one or two isolated charged leptons in the final states are selected. The event selection for both final states is based on the following reconstructed objects in the detector: electron and muon candidates, jets and missing transverse momentum (ETmiss).

An electron candidate is defined as an energy deposit in the electromagnetic calorimeter with an associated well-reconstructed track [54]. Electron candidates are required to have transverse energy ET>25 GeV and |ηcluster|<2.47, where ηcluster is the pseudorapidity of the electromagnetic cluster associated with the electron. Candidates in the transition region between the barrel and endcap calorimeter (1.37<|ηcluster|<1.52) are excluded. Muon candidates are reconstructed from track segments in different layers of the MS [55]. These segments are combined starting from the outermost layer, with a procedure that takes effects of detector material into account, and matched with tracks found in the ID. The final candidates are refitted using the complete track information, and are required to satisfy pT>20 GeV and |η|<2.5. Isolation criteria, which restrict the amount of energy deposited near the lepton candidates, are applied to both the electrons and muons to reduce the backgrounds from heavy-flavour decays inside jets or photon conversions, and the background from hadrons mimicking lepton signatures, in the following referred to as non-prompt and fake-lepton background (NP/fake-lepton background). For electrons, the energy not associated with the electron cluster and contained in a cone of ΔR=0.2 around the electron must not exceed an η-dependent threshold ranging from 1.25 to 3.7 GeV. Similarly, the total transverse momentum of the tracks contained in a cone of ΔR=0.3 must not exceed a threshold ranging from 1.00 to 1.35 GeV, depending on the electron candidate pT and η. For muons, the sum of track transverse momenta in a cone of ΔR=0.3 around the muon is required to be less than 2.5 GeV, and the total energy deposited in a cone of ΔR=0.2 around the muon is required to be less than 4 GeV. The longitudinal impact parameter of each charged lepton along the beam axis is required to be within 2 mm of the reconstructed primary vertex, defined as the vertex with the highest trkpT,trk2, among all candidates with at least five associated tracks with pT,trk>0.4GeV.

Jets are reconstructed with the anti-kt algorithm [56] using a radius parameter of R=0.4, starting from energy clusters of adjacent calorimeter cells called topological clusters [57]. These jets are calibrated first by correcting the jet energy using the scale established for electromagnetic objects (EM scale). They are further corrected to the hadronic energy scale using calibration factors that depend on the jet energy and η, obtained from simulation. Finally, a residual in situ calibration derived from both data and MC simulation is applied [58]. Jet quality criteria are applied to identify and reject jets reconstructed from energy deposits in the calorimeters originating from particles not emerging from the bunch crossing under study [59]. To suppress the contribution from low-pT jets originating from pile-up interactions, tracks associated with the jet and emerging from the primary vertex are required to account for at least 75 % of the scalar sum of the pT of all tracks associated with the jet. Jets with no associated tracks are also accepted.

Muons reconstructed within a ΔR=0.4 cone around a jet satisfying pT>25 GeV are removed to reduce the contamination caused by muons from hadron decays within jets. Subsequently, jets within a ΔR=0.2 cone around an electron candidate are removed to avoid double counting, which can occur because electron clusters are usually also reconstructed as jets. After this jet overlap removal, electrons are rejected if their distance to the closest jet is smaller than ΔR=0.4.

The reconstruction of ETmiss is based on the vector sum of calorimeter energy deposits projected onto the transverse plane. The ETmiss is reconstructed from topological clusters, calibrated at the EM scale and corrected according to the energy scale of the corresponding identified physics objects. Contributions from muons are included by using their momentum as measured by the inner detector and muon spectrometer [60].

The reconstruction of top quark pair events is facilitated by the ability to tag jets originating from b-quarks. For this purpose the neural-network-based MV1 algorithm is applied [61, 62]. In the following, irrespective of their origin, jets tagged by this algorithm are called b-tagged jets, whereas those not tagged are called untagged jets. Similarly, whether they are tagged or not, jets originating from b-quarks and from udcs-quarks or gluons are called b-jets and light-jets, respectively. The MV1 algorithm relies on track impact parameters and the properties of reconstructed secondary vertices such as the decay length significance. The chosen working point corresponds to a b-tagging efficiency of 75 % for b-jets in simulated tt¯ events and a light-jet (c-quark jet) rejection factor of about 60 (4). To match the b-tagging performance in the data, pT- and η-dependent scale factors are applied to MC jets depending on their original flavour. The scale factors are obtained from dijet [62] and tt¯dilepton events. The tt¯-based calibration is obtained using the methodology described in Ref. [63], applied to the 7 TeV data. The scale factors are calculated per jet and finally multiplied to obtain an event weight for any reconstructed distribution.

Event selection

The tt¯lepton+jets signal is characterised by an isolated charged lepton with relatively high pT, ETmiss arising from the neutrino from the leptonic W boson decay, two b-jets and two light-jets from the hadronic W boson decay. The main contributions to the background stem from W+jets production and from the NP/fake-lepton background. The normalisation of the W+jets background is estimated from data, based on the charge-asymmetry method [64], and the shape is obtained from simulation. For the NP/fake-lepton background, both the shape of the distributions and the normalisation are estimated from data by weighting each selected event by the probability of containing a NP/fake lepton. This contribution in both the electron and the muon channel is estimated using a data-driven matrix method based on selecting two categories of events, using loose and tight lepton selection requirements [65]. The contributions from single top quark, Z+jets, and diboson production are taken from simulation, normalised to the best available theoretical cross sections.

The tt¯dilepton events are characterised by the presence of two isolated and oppositely charged leptons with relatively high pT, ETmiss arising from the neutrinos from the leptonic W boson decays, and two b-jets. Background processes with two charged leptons from W- or Z decays in the final state, which are similar to the tt¯dilepton events, are dominated by single top quark production in the Wt-channel. Additional contributions come from Z+jets processes and diboson production with additional jets. In the analysis, these contributions are estimated directly from the MC simulation normalised to the relevant cross sections. Events may also be wrongly reconstructed as tt¯dilepton events due to the presence of NP/fake leptons together with b-tagged jets and ETmiss. As for the tt¯lepton+jets channel, the NP/fake-lepton background is estimated using a data-driven matrix method [65].

The selection of tt¯ event candidates consists of a series of requirements on the general event quality and the reconstructed objects designed to select events consistent with the above signal topologies. To suppress non-collision background, events are required to have at least one good primary vertex. It is required that the appropriate single-electron or single-muon trigger has fired; the trigger thresholds are 20 or 22 GeV (depending on the data-taking period) for the electrons and 18 GeV for muons. Candidate events in the +jets final state are required to have exactly one reconstructed charged lepton with ET>25 GeV for electrons, and pT>20 GeV for muons, matching the corresponding trigger object. Exactly two oppositely charged leptons, with at least one matching a trigger object, are required in the dilepton final state. In the μ+jets channel, ETmiss>20 GeV and ETmiss+mTW>60 GeV are required.2 In the e+jets channel more stringent selections on ETmiss and mTW (ETmiss>30 GeV and mTW>30 GeV) are imposed due to the higher level of NP/fake-lepton background. For the ee and μμ channels, in the dilepton final state, ETmiss>60GeV is required. In addition, the invariant mass of the same-flavour charged-lepton pair, m (=ee,μμ), is required to exceed 15 GeV, to reduce background from low-mass resonances decaying into charged lepton–antilepton pairs and Drell–Yan production. Similarly, to reduce the Z+jets background, values of m compatible with the Z boson mass are vetoed by requiring |m-91GeV|>10GeV. In the eμ channel HT>130GeV is required, where HT is the scalar sum of the pT of the two selected charged leptons and the jets. Finally, the event is required to have at least four jets (or at least two jets for the tt¯dilepton channel) with pT>25 GeV and |η|<2.5. At least one of these jets must be b-tagged for the tt¯lepton+jets analysis. In the dilepton final state, events are accepted if they contain exactly one or two b-tagged jets.

These requirements select 61786 and 6661 data events in the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton channels, with expected background fractions of 22 % and 2 %, respectively. Due to their inherent mtop sensitivity, here and in the following, the single top quark processes are accounted for as signal in both analyses, and not included in the quoted background fractions.

Event reconstruction

After the event selection described in the previous section, the events are further reconstructed according to the decay topology of interest, and are subject to additional requirements.

Kinematic reconstruction of the lepton+jets final state

A kinematic likelihood fit [8, 66] is used to fully reconstruct the tt¯lepton+jets kinematics. The algorithm relates the measured kinematics of the reconstructed objects to the leading-order representation of the tt¯ system decay. The event likelihood is constructed as the product of Breit–Wigner (BW) distributions and transfer functions (TF). The W boson BW line-shape functions use the world combined values of the W boson mass and decay width from Ref. [3]. A common mass parameter, mtopreco, is used for the BW distributions describing the leptonically and hadronically decaying top quarks, and this is fitted event-by-event. The top quark width varies with mtopreco and it is calculated according to the SM prediction [3]. The TF are derived from the Powheg+Pythiatt¯ signal MC simulation sample at an input mass of mtop=172.5 GeV. They represent the experimental resolutions in terms of the probability that the observed energy at reconstruction level is produced by a given parton-level object for the leading-order decay topology.

The input objects to the likelihood are: the reconstructed charged lepton, the missing transverse momentum and four jets. For the sample with one b-tagged jet these are the b-tagged jet and the three untagged jets with the highest pT. For the sample with at least two b-tagged jets these are the two highest-pTb-tagged jets, and the two highest-pT remaining jets. The x- and y-components of the missing transverse momentum are used as starting values for the neutrino transverse momentum components, with its longitudinal component (pν,z) as a free parameter in the kinematic likelihood fit. Its starting value is computed from the Wν mass constraint. If there are no real solutions for pν,z a starting value of zero is used. If there are two real solutions, the one giving the largest likelihood value is taken.

Maximising the event-by-event likelihood as a function of mtopreco establishes the best assignment of reconstructed jets to partons from the tt¯lepton+jets decay. The maximisation is performed by testing all possible permutations, assigning jets to partons. The likelihood is extended by including the probability for a jet to be b-tagged, given the parton from the top quark decay it is associated with, to construct an event probability. The b-tagging efficiencies and rejection factors are used to favour permutations for which a b-tagged jet is assigned to a b-quark and penalise those where a b-tagged jet is assigned to a light quark. The permutation of jets with the highest likelihood value is retained.

The value of mtopreco obtained from the kinematic likelihood fit is used as the observable primarily sensitive to the underlying mtop. The invariant mass of the hadronically decaying W boson (mWreco) is calculated from the assigned jets of the chosen permutation. Finally, an observable called Rbqreco, designed to be sensitive to the relative b-to-light-jet energy scale, is computed in the following way. For events with only one b-tagged jet, Rbqreco is defined as the ratio of the transverse momentum of the b-tagged jet to the average transverse momentum of the two jets of the hadronic W boson decay. For events with two or more b-tagged jets, Rbqreco is defined as the scalar sum of the transverse momenta of the b-tagged jets assigned to the leptonically and hadronically decaying top quarks divided by the scalar sum of the transverse momenta of the two jets associated with the hadronic W boson decay. The values of mWreco and Rbqreco are computed from the jet four-vectors as given by the jet reconstruction to keep the maximum sensitivity to changes of the jet energy scale for light-jets and b-jets.

In view of the template parameterisation described in Sect. 5 additional selection criteria are applied. Events in which a b-tagged jet is assigned to the W decay by the likelihood fit are discarded. This is needed to prevent mixing effects between the information provided by the mWreco and Rbqreco distributions. The measured mtopreco is required to be in the range 125–225 GeV for events with one b-tagged jet, and in the range 130–220 GeV for events with at least two b-tagged jets. In addition, mWreco is required to be in the range 55–110 GeV and finally, Rbqreco is required to be in the range 0.3–3.0. The fraction of data events which pass these requirements is 35 %. Although removing a large fraction of data, these requirements remove events in the tails of the three distributions, which are typically poorly reconstructed with small likelihood values and do not contain significant information on mtop. In addition, the templates then have simpler shapes which are easier to model analytically with fewer parameters.

Reconstruction of the dilepton final state

In the tt¯dilepton channel the kinematics are under-constrained due to the presence of at least two undetected neutrinos. Consequently, instead of attempting a full reconstruction, the mtop-sensitive observable mb is defined based on the invariant mass of the two charged-lepton+b-jet pairs.

The preselected events contain two charged leptons, at least two jets, of which either exactly one or exactly two are b-tagged. For events with exactly two b-tagged jets the charged-lepton+b-tagged jet pairs can be built directly. In the case of events with only one b-tagged jet the missing second b-jet is identified with the untagged jet carrying the highest MV1 weight. For both classes of events, when using the two selected jets and the two charged leptons, there are two possible assignments for the jet-lepton pairs, each leading to two values for the corresponding pair invariant masses. The assignment resulting in the lowest average mass is retained, and this mass is taken as the mbreco estimator of the event. The measured mbreco is required to be in the range 30–170 GeV. This extra selection retains 97 % of the data candidate events.

Event yields

The numbers of events observed and expected after the above selections are reported in Table 1 for the +jets and dilepton final states. The observed numbers of events are well described by the sum of the signal and background estimates within uncertainties. The latter are estimated as the sum in quadrature of the statistical uncertainty, the uncertainty on the b-tagging efficiencies, a 1.8% uncertainty on the integrated luminosity [24], the uncertainties on the tt¯ and single top quark theoretical cross sections, a 30% uncertainty on the W+jets and Z+jets normalisation, and finally a 50% uncertainty on the NP/fake-lepton background normalisation. The distribution of several kinematic variables in the data were inspected and found to be well described by the signal-plus-background prediction, within uncertainties. As examples, Fig. 1 (left) shows the distribution of the untagged and b-tagged jets pT observed in the +jets final state. Similarly, the pT distributions for the charged leptons and b-tagged jets in the dilepton final state are shown on the right of Fig. 1. In all cases the data are compared with the MC predictions, assuming an input top quark mass of 172.5 GeV.

Table 1.

The observed numbers of events, according to the b-tagged jet multiplicity, in the +jets and dilepton final states in 4.6 fb-1 of s=7 TeV data. In addition, the expected numbers of signal and background events corresponding to the integrated luminosity of the data are given. The predictions are quoted using two significant digits for their uncertainty. The MC estimates assume SM cross sections. The W+jets and NP/fake-lepton background contributions are estimated from data. The uncertainties for the estimates include the components detailed in Sect. 4.3.3. Values smaller than 0.005 are listed as 0.00

+jets final state
Process One b-tagged jet At least two b-tagged jets Sum
   tt¯ signal 9890 ± 630 8210 ± 560 18100 ± 1100
   Single top quark (signal) 756 ± 41 296 ± 19 1052 ± 57
   W+jets (data) 2250 ± 680 153 ± 49 2400 ± 730
   Z+jets 284 ± 87 18.5 ± 6.1 303 ± 93
   WW / WZ / ZZ 43.5 ± 2.3 4.65 ± 0.48 48.2 ± 2.6
   NP/fake leptons (data) 700 ± 350 80 ± 41 780 ± 390
   Signal+background 13920 ± 1000 8760 ± 560 22700 ± 1400
   Data 12979 8784 21763
   Exp. Bkg. frac. 0.25 ± 0.02 0.03 ± 0.00 0.16 ± 0.01
   Data/MC 0.93 ± 0.07 1.00 ± 0.07 0.96 ± 0.06
Dilepton final state
Process One b-tagged jet Two b-tagged jets Sum
   tt¯ signal 2840 ± 180 2950 ± 210 5790 ± 360
   Single top quark (signal) 181 ± 10 82.5 ± 5.7 264 ± 15
   Z+jets 34 ± 11 4.1 ± 1.5 38 ± 12
   WW / WZ / ZZ 7.01 ± 0.63 0.61 ± 0.15 7.62 ± 0.67
   NP/fake leptons (data) 52 ± 28 2.6 ± 8.4 55 ± 30
   Signal+background 3110 ± 180 3040 ± 210 6150 ± 360
   Data 3227 3249 6476
   Exp. Bkg. frac. 0.03 ± 0.00 0.00 ± 0.00 0.02 ± 0.00
   Data/MC 1.04 ± 0.06 1.07 ± 0.07 1.05 ± 0.06
Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Distributions of the transverse momentum of the untagged and b-tagged jets in the tt¯lepton+jets analysis (a, c) and of the charged lepton and b-tagged jets pT in the tt¯dilepton analysis (b, d). The data are shown by thepoints and the signal-plus-background prediction by the solid histogram. The hatched area is the combined uncertainty on the prediction described in Sect. 4.3.3, and the rightmost bin contains the overflow if present. For each figure, the ratio of the data to the MC prediction is also presented

Analysis method

The observables exploited in the mtop analyses are: mtopreco, mWreco, Rbqreco in the tt¯lepton+jets channel and mbreco in the tt¯dilepton channel.

In the tt¯lepton+jets channel, templates of mtopreco are constructed as a function of the top quark mass used in the MC generation in the range 167.5–177.5 GeV, in steps of 2.5 GeV. In addition, for the central mass point, templates of mtopreco are constructed for an input value of the light-jet energy scale factor (JSF) in the range 0.95–1.05 in steps of 2.5 % and for an input value for the relative b-to-light-jet energy scale factor (bJSF) in the same range. Independent MC samples are used for the different mtop mass points, and from those samples templates with different values of JSF and bJSF are extracted by appropriately scaling the four-momentum of the jets in each sample. The input value for the JSF is applied to all jets, whilst the input value for the bJSF is applied to all b-jets according to the information about the generated quark flavour. This scaling is performed after the various correction steps of the jet calibration and before any event selection. This results in different events entering the final selection from one energy scale variation to another. Similarly, templates of mWreco are constructed as a function of an input JSF combining the samples from all mtop mass points. Finally, templates of Rbqreco are constructed as a function of mtop, and as a function of an input bJSF at the central mass point.

In the tt¯dilepton channel, signal templates for mbreco are constructed as a function of the top quark mass used in the MC generation in the range 167.5–177.5 GeV, using separate samples for each of the five mass points.

The dependencies of the mtopreco and mbreco distributions on the underlying mtop used in the MC simulation are shown Fig. 2a and b, for events with at least (exactly) two b-tagged jets, for the tt¯lepton+jets (tt¯dilepton) channel. The mtopreco and mbreco distributions shown in Fig. 2c–f, exhibit sizeable sensitivity to global shifts of the JSF and the bJSF. These effects introduce large systematic uncertainties on mtop originating from the uncertainties on the JES and bJES, unless additional information is exploited. As shown for the tt¯lepton+jets channel in Fig. 3a, c and e, the mWreco distribution is sensitive to changes of the JSF, while preserving its shape under variations of the input mtop and bJSF. As originally proposed in Ref. [17], a simultaneous fit to mtopreco and mWreco is used to mitigate the JES uncertainty. The Rbqreco distributions show substantial sensitivity to the bJSF, and some dependence on the assumed mtop in the simulation, Fig. 3b, d and f. Complementing the information carried by the mtopreco and mWreco observables, Rbqreco is used in an unbinned likelihood fit to the data to simultaneously determine mtop, JSF, and bJSF. The per-event correlations of any pair of observables (mtopreco, mWreco, and Rbqreco) are found to be smaller than 0.15 and are neglected in this procedure.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Distributions of mtopreco in the tt¯lepton+jets channel (left) and mbreco in the tt¯dilepton channel (right) and their template parameterisations for the signal, composed of simulated tt¯ and single top quark production events. The expected sensitivities of mtopreco and mbreco are shown for events with at least two (or exactly two) b-tagged jets. Figures a and b report the distributions for different values of the input mtop (167.5, 172.5 and 177.5 GeV). Figures c, d and e, f show the mtopreco and mbreco distribution for mtop = 172.5 GeV, obtained with JSF or bJSF of 0.95, 1.00 and 1.05, respectively. Each distribution is overlaid with the corresponding probability density function that is obtained from the combined fit to all signal templates for all abservables

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Distributions of mWreco (left) and Rbqreco (right) in the tt¯lepton+jets channel and their template parameterisations for the signal, composed of simulated tt¯ and single top quark production events. The expected sensitivity of mWreco and Rbqreco are shown for events with at least two b-tagged jets. Figures a and b report the distributions for different values of the input mtop (167.5, 172.5 and 177.5 GeV). Figures c, d and e, f show the mWreco and Rbqreco distribution for mtop = 172.5 GeV, obtained with JSF or bJSF of 0.95, 1.00 and 1.05, respectively. Each distribution is overlaid with the corresponding probability density function that is obtained from the combined fit to all signal templates for all abservables

Templates and fits in the tt¯lepton+jets channel

Signal templates are derived for the three observables for all mtop-dependent samples, consisting of the tt¯ signal events, together with single top quark production events. The signal templates for the mtopreco, mWreco and Rbqreco distributions are fitted to the sum of a Gaussian function and a Landau function for mtopreco and Rbqreco, and to a sum of two Gaussian functions for mWreco (Figs. 2, 3). For the background, the mtopreco distribution is fitted to a Landau function, while both the mWreco and the Rbqreco distributions are fitted to the sum of two Gaussian functions. To exploit the different sensitivities to the underlying mtop, JSF and bJSF, all template fits are performed separately for events with one b-tagged jet, and for events with at least two b-tagged jets.

From individual fits to all signal templates listed above, it was verified that the parameters of the fitting functions depend linearly on the respective parameter mtop, JSF or bJSF. Consequently, this linearity is imposed when parametrising the fitting functions for the combined fit to all signal templates for the three observables. For the signal, the parameters of the fitting functions for mtopreco depend linearly on mtop, JSF and bJSF. The parameters of the fitting functions of mWreco depend linearly on the JSF. Finally, the parameters of the fitting functions of Rbqreco depend linearly on the bJSF and on mtop. As shown in Fig. 3, the dependencies of mWreco on mtop and bJSF, and of Rbqreco on JSF are negligible. For the background, the parameter dependencies of the fitting functions are the same except that, by construction, they do not depend on mtop.

Signal and background probability density functions Psig and Pbkg for the mtopreco, mWreco and Rbqreco distributions are used in an unbinned likelihood fit to the data for all events, i=1,N. The likelihood function maximised is:

Lshape+jets(mtop,JSF,bJSF,fbkg)=i=1NPtop(mtopreco,i|mtop,JSF,bJSF,fbkg)×PW(mWreco,i|JSF,fbkg)×Pbq(Rbqreco,i|mtop,bJSF,fbkg), 1

with:

Ptop(mtopreco,i|mtop,JSF,bJSF,fbkg)=(1-fbkg)·Ptopsig(mtopreco,i|mtop,JSF,bJSF)+fbkg·Ptopbkg(mtopreco,i|JSF,bJSF),PW(mWreco,i|JSF,fbkg)=(1-fbkg)·PWsig(mWreco,i|JSF)+fbkg·PWbkg(mWreco,i|JSF),Pbq(Rbqreco,i|mtop,bJSF,fbkg)=(1-fbkg)·Pbqsig(Rbqreco,i|mtop,bJSF)+fbkg·Pbqbkg(Rbqreco,i|bJSF)

where the fraction of background events is denoted by fbkg. The parameters to be determined by the fit are mtop, JSF, bJSF and fbkg, where fbkg is determined separately for the tt¯lepton+jets data sets with exactly one or at least two b-tagged jets.

Pseudo-experiments are used to verify the internal consistency of the fitting procedure and to obtain the expected statistical uncertainty corresponding to a data sample of 4.6 fb-1. For each choice of the input parameters, 500 pseudo-experiments are generated. To retain the correlation of the analysis observables, individual MC events drawn from the full simulated event samples are used, rather than sampling from the separate mtopreco, mWreco, and Rbqreco distributions. For all five parameters, good linearity is found between the input parameters used to perform the pseudo-experiments, and the results of the fits. Within their statistical uncertainties, the mean values and widths of the pull distributions are consistent with the expectations of zero and one, respectively. This means the method is unbiased with appropriate statistical uncertainties. The expected statistical uncertainties on mtop including the statistical contributions from the simultaneous fit of the JSF and bJSF obtained from pseudo-experiments at an input top quark mass of mtop=172.5GeV, and for a luminosity of 4.6fb-1, are 1.50±0.06GeV and 0.89±0.01GeV for the case of one b-tagged jet and for the case of at least two b-tagged jets, respectively. The results correspond to the mean value and the standard deviation of the distribution of the statistical uncertainties of the fitted masses from the pseudo-experiments. The different expected statistical uncertainties on mtop for the samples with different numbers of b-tagged jets, which are obtained from samples containing similar numbers of events (see Table 1), are mainly a consequence of the different resolution on mtop.

Templates and fits in the tt¯dilepton channel

The signal mbreco templates comprise both the tt¯ and the single top quark production processes, and are fitted to the sum of a Gaussian function and a Landau function, while the background distribution is fitted to a Landau function. Similarly to the tt¯lepton+jets channel, all template fits are performed separately for events with one b-tagged jet, and for events with exactly two b-tagged jets. In Fig. 2b the sensitivity of the mbreco observable to the input value of the top quark mass is shown for the events with exactly two b-tagged jets, by the superposition of the signal templates and their fits for three input mtop values. For the signal templates, the parameters of the fitting functions of mbreco depend linearly on mtop.

Signal and background probability density functions for the mbreco estimator are built, and used in an unbinned likelihood fit to the data for all events, i=1,N. The likelihood function maximised is:

Lshapedilepton(mtop,fbkg)=i=1N[(1-fbkg)·Ptopsig(mbreco,i|mtop)+fbkg·Ptopbkg(mbreco,i)], 2

where, as for the tt¯lepton+jets case, Ptopsig and Ptopbkg are the signal and background probability density functions and fbkg is the fraction of background events in the selected data set.

Using pseudo-experiments, also for this decay channel good linearity is found between the input top quark mass used to perform the pseudo-experiments, and the results of the fits. Within their statistical uncertainties, the mean values and widths of the pull distributions are consistent with the expectations of zero and one, respectively. The expected statistical uncertainties on mtop obtained from pseudo-experiments for an input top quark mass of mtop=172.5 GeV, and for a luminosity of 4.6 fb-1, are 0.95±0.04GeV and 0.65±0.02GeV for events with exactly one or two b-tagged jets, respectively. As for the +jets channel, the different expected statistical uncertainties on mtop for the samples with different numbers of b-tagged jets, which are obtained from samples containing similar numbers of events (see Table 1), are mainly a consequence of the different resolution on mtop.

Combined likelihood fit to the event samples

The final results for both the +jets and dilepton final states are obtained combining at the likelihood level the events with one or more b-tagged jets. The measured mtop is assumed to be the same in these two sub-samples per decay channel. Similarly, the JSF and the bJSF are taken to be the same for the samples of the tt¯lepton+jets analysis with different b-tagged jet multiplicities. On the contrary, the background fractions for the two decay channels, and for the samples with different numbers of b-tagged jets, are kept independent, corresponding to four individual parameters (fbkg+jets,1b, fbkg+jets,2b, fbkgdil,1b, fbkgdil,2b).

The combined likelihood fit allows the statistical uncertainties on the fitted parameters to be reduced, while mitigating some systematic effects. The expected statistical precision on mtop, for an input top quark mass of mtop=172.5 GeV, a luminosity of 4.6 fb-1, and in the combined one or more b-tagged jets event sample, is 0.76±0.01GeV and 0.54±0.01GeV for the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton analyses, respectively.

Top quark mass measurements

The results of the fits for the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton analyses are:

mtop+jets=172.33±0.75(stat+JSF+bJSF)GeV,JSF=1.019±0.003(stat),bJSF=1.003±0.008(stat),mtopdil=173.79±0.54(stat)GeV.

For the tt¯lepton+jets channel, the fitted background fractions amount to 18.4±2.2% and 2.4±1.5% for one b-tagged jet and the at least two b-tagged jets samples respectively. The corresponding values for the tt¯dilepton analysis are 3.5±3.7% and 1.4±2.2% for one b-tagged jet and the two b-tagged jets samples respectively. All quoted uncertainties are statistical only. These fractions are consistent with the expectations given in Table 1. The correlation matrices for the fitted parameters in the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton analyses are reported in Table 2.

Table 2.

The correlations of the fitted parameters used in the likelihood maximisation of the tt¯lepton+jets analysis (top) and the tt¯dilepton analysis (bottom)

mtop+jets JSF bJSF fbkg+jets,1b fbkg+jets,2b
mtop+jets 1.00
JSF -0.36 1.00
bJSF -0.89 0.03 1.00
fbkg+jets,1b -0.03 -0.01 0.06 1.00
fbkg+jets,2b -0.06 -0.09 0.09 0.01 1.00
mtopdil fbkgdil,1b fbkgdil,2b
mtopdil 1.00
fbkgdil,1b 0.07 1.00
fbkgdil,2b -0.14 -0.01 1.00

Figure 4 shows the mtopreco, mWreco, Rbqreco and mbreco distributions in the data together with the corresponding fitted probability density functions for the background alone and for the sum of signal and background. The uncertainty bands are obtained by varying the three fitted parameters mtop, JSF, and bJSF within ±1σ of their full uncertainties taking into account their correlation, while keeping the background fractions fixed. The individual systematic uncertainties and the correlations are discussed in Sects. 7 and  8, respectively. The band shown is the envelope of all probability density functions obtained from 500 pseudo-experiments varying the parameters. Within this band, the data are well described by the fitted probability density function.

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

The fitted distributions in the data, showing a mtopreco, b mWreco, c Rbqreco, and d mbreco. The fitted probability density functions for the background alone and for signal-plus-background are also shown. The uncertainty bands indicate the total uncertainty on the signal-plus-background fit obtained from pseudo-experiments as explained in the text. Figures ac refer to the tt¯lepton+jets analysis, figure d to the tt¯dilepton analysis

For the tt¯lepton+jets analysis, the measured values of the three observables (mtop+jets, JSF, and bJSF), together with two-dimensional statistical uncertainty contours (±1σ), including the statistical components from the JSF and bJSF determination, are shown in Fig. 5a–c. Correspondingly, the likelihood profile as a function of mtopdil is reported in Fig. 5d, for the sample with one b-tagged jet, the sample with two b-tagged jets and the combined tt¯dilepton result. These results demonstrate the good agreement between the parameter values measured in the samples with different b-tagged jet multiplicities.

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

Likelihood contours showing the correlation determined in data of the measured mtop+jets to a the JSF and b the bJSF, and c the correlation of the two scales JSF and bJSF, within the tt¯lepton+jets analysis. Figures ac show the results using the events with one b-tagged jet only (grey ellipses), with at least two b-tagged jets (red ellipses) and finally with all selected events, i.e. the ones with at least one b-tagged jet (blue ellipses). The ellipses correspond to the ±1σ (statistical) uncertainties, including the statistical components from the JSF and bJSF determination. While tracing the contours the additional parameters of the likelihood are fixed to their best fit values. Figure d reports the likelihood profile as a function of mtopdil for the sample with one b-tagged jet, the sample with two b-tagged jets and the combined result. The colour coding is analogous to figures ac

Uncertainties affecting the mtop determination

Several sources of systematic uncertainty are considered. Their effects on the +jets and dilepton measurements are listed in Table 3, together with the result of the combination of the two channels discussed in Sect. 8. Each source of uncertainty considered is investigated, when possible, by varying the relevant quantities by ±1σ with respect to their default values. Using the changed parameters, 500 pseudo-experiments are performed using events drawn from the full simulated samples. The difference of the average mtop computed from pseudo-experiments based on the standard MC sample, and the varied sample under consideration, both evaluated with the original template parameterisations, is used to determine the corresponding uncertainty. Unless stated otherwise, the systematic uncertainties arising from the different modelling sources are calculated as half of the difference of the results of the upward and downward variations. The systematic uncertainties for the measured JSF and bJSF in the tt¯lepton+jets final state are also estimated. Following Ref. [67], the actual observed difference is quoted as the systematic uncertainty on the corresponding source, even if it is smaller than its associated statistical precision. The latter is estimated taking into account the statistical correlation of the MC samples used in the comparison. The total uncertainty is calculated as the sum in quadrature of all individual contributions, i.e. neglecting possible correlations (small by construction). The estimation of the uncertainties for the individual contributions is described in the following.

Table 3.

The measured values of mtop and the contributions of various sources to the uncertainty in the tt¯lepton+jets and the tt¯dilepton analyses. The corresponding uncertainties in the measured values of the JSF and bJSF are also shown for the tt¯lepton+jets analysis. The statistical uncertainties associated with these values are typically 0.001 or smaller. The result of the mtop combination is shown in the rightmost columns, together with the correlation (ρ) within each uncertainty group as described in Sect. 8. The symbol n/a stands for not applicable. Values quoted as 0.00 are smaller than 0.005. Finally, the last line refers to the sum in quadrature of the statistical and systematic uncertainty components

Results tt¯lepton+jets tt¯dilepton Combination
mtop+jets [GeV] JSF bJSF mtopdil [GeV] mtopcomb [GeV] ρ
172.33 1.019 1.003 173.79 172.99
Statistics 0.75 0.003 0.008 0.54 0.48 0
   Stat. comp. (mtop) 0.23 n/a n/a 0.54
   Stat. comp. (JSF) 0.25 0.003 n/a n/a
    Stat. comp. (bJSF) 0.67 0.000 0.008 n/a
Method 0.11 ± 0.10 0.001 0.001 0.09 ± 0.07 0.07 0
Signal MC 0.22 ± 0.21 0.004 0.002 0.26 ± 0.16 0.24 +1.00
Hadronisation 0.18 ± 0.12 0.007 0.013 0.53 ± 0.09 0.34 +1.00
ISR/FSR 0.32 ± 0.06 0.017 0.007 0.47 ± 0.05 0.04 -1.00
Underlying event 0.15 ± 0.07 0.001 0.003 0.05 ± 0.05 0.06 -1.00
Colour reconnection 0.11 ± 0.07 0.001 0.002 0.14 ± 0.05 0.01 -1.00
PDF 0.25 ± 0.00 0.001 0.002 0.11 ± 0.00 0.17 +0.57
W/Z+jets norm 0.02 ± 0.00 0.000 0.000 0.01 ± 0.00 0.02 +1.00
W/Z+jets shape 0.29 ± 0.00 0.000 0.004 0.00 ± 0.00 0.16 0
NP/fake-lepton norm. 0.10 ± 0.00 0.000 0.001 0.04 ± 0.00 0.07 +1.00
NP/fake-lepton shape 0.05 ± 0.00 0.000 0.001 0.01 ± 0.00 0.03 +0.23
Jet energy scale 0.58 ± 0.11 0.018 0.009 0.75 ± 0.08 0.41 -0.23
b-Jet energy scale 0.06 ± 0.03 0.000 0.010 0.68 ± 0.02 0.34 +1.00
Jet resolution 0.22 ± 0.11 0.007 0.001 0.19 ± 0.04 0.03 -1.00
Jet efficiency 0.12 ± 0.00 0.000 0.002 0.07 ± 0.00 0.10 +1.00
Jet vertex fraction 0.01 ± 0.00 0.000 0.000 0.00 ± 0.00 0.00 -1.00
b-tagging 0.50 ± 0.00 0.001 0.007 0.07 ± 0.00 0.25 -0.77
ETmiss 0.15 ± 0.04 0.000 0.001 0.04 ± 0.03 0.08 -0.15
Leptons 0.04 ± 0.00 0.001 0.001 0.13 ± 0.00 0.05 -0.34
Pile-up 0.02 ± 0.01 0.000 0.000 0.01 ± 0.00 0.01 0
Total 1.27 ± 0.33 0.027 0.024 1.41 ± 0.24 0.91 -0.07

Statistics and method calibration

Statistical components due to the jet energy scale factors

The statistical uncertainty quoted for the tt¯lepton+jets analysis is made up of three parts: a purely statistical component on mtop and the contributions stemming from the simultaneous determination of the JSF and bJSF. The former is obtained from a one-dimensional template method exploiting only the mtopreco observable (fixing the values of the JSF and bJSF to the results of the three-dimensional analysis). The contribution to the statistical uncertainty on the fitted parameters due to the simultaneous fit of mtop and JSF, is estimated as the difference in quadrature of the statistical uncertainty of a two-dimensional (mtopreco and mWreco, fixing the value of bJSF) fit and the one-dimensional fit to the data described above. Analogously, the contribution of the statistical uncertainty due to the simultaneous fit of bJSF together with mtop and JSF, is defined as the difference in quadrature of the statistical uncertainties obtained in the three-dimensional and the two-dimensional (fixing bJSF) fits to the data. This separation allows a direct comparison of the sensitivity of the mtop estimator for any analysis, irrespective of the number of observables exploited by the fit. In addition, the sensitivity of the estimators for the global jet energy scales can be directly compared. These uncertainties can be treated as uncorrelated uncertainties in mtop combinations. Together with the systematic components of the residual jet energy scale uncertainty discussed in Sect. 7.4 below, they directly replace the uncertainty on mtop from the jet energy scale variations present without the in situ determination.

Method calibration

This uncertainty takes into account the effect of any bias introduced in the fit by the presence of correlations among the observables (neglected in the fit for the tt¯lepton+jets analysis) as well as the impact of the limited size of the MC samples (for both analyses). This leads to a systematic uncertainty in the template fit, which is reflected in the residual mass differences of the fitted mass and the input mass for a given MC sample. The largest average difference observed in the pseudo-experiments carried out varying the underlying top quark mass, the JSF and the bJSF with respect to the respective input parameter, is taken as the uncertainty from this source.

tt¯ modelling

Signal Monte Carlo generator

The systematic uncertainty related to the choice of tt¯ signal generator program is determined by comparing the results of pseudo-experiments performed with either the MC@NLO  [68, 69] samples or the Powheg samples, both generated with mtop=172.5 GeV and using the Herwig program to perform the hadronisation. This choice is supported by the observation that these MC@NLO and Powheg samples exhibit very different jet multiplicities for the tt¯lepton+jets channel which bracket those observed in data [70]. The full difference of the results averaged over all pseudo experiments is quoted as the systematic uncertainty.

The impact of changing the factorisation and renormalisation scales (μF/R) in Powheg was also checked. The resulting mtop systematic uncertainties amount to 0.15±0.07GeV and 0.14±0.05GeV for the tt¯lepton+jets channel, and tt¯dilepton analysis respectively. Within the quoted statistical uncertainties, the μF/R systematic uncertainties are consistent with those originating from the comparison of MC@NLO and Powheg, which are used here.

Hadronisation

Signal samples for mtop=172.5 GeV from the Powheg event generator are produced performing the parton showering and the hadronisation with either Pythia with the P2011C tune or Herwig and Jimmy with the ATLAS AUET2 tune [50]. The full difference of the results averaged over all pseudo experiments is quoted as the systematic uncertainty.

Initial- and final-state QCD radiation

Different amounts of initial- and final-state QCD radiation can alter the jet energies and multiplicities of the events, introducing distortions into the measured mtopreco, mWreco, Rbqreco and mbreco distributions. This effect is evaluated by performing pseudo-experiments using two dedicated signal samples generated with AcerMC  [30] in combination with Pythia P2011C for hadronisation and parton showering. In these samples some Pythia P2011C parameters that control the showering are varied in ranges that are compatible with a study of additional jets in tt¯ events [71], and half the difference of these two extremes is used as the systematic uncertainty.

Underlying event and colour reconnection

These systematic uncertainties are estimated using samples simulated with Powheg-hvq and Pythia. The underlying-event uncertainty is obtained by comparing a sample with the Perugia 2012 tune (P2012) to a sample with the P2012 mpiHi tune [28]. The full difference in the fitted mass of the two models is taken as the systematic uncertainty for this source. Similarly, the colour reconnection systematic uncertainty is assigned as the difference in the fitted parameters of samples obtained with the P2012 and P2012 loCR tunes [28]. The same matrix-element-level Powheg-hvq events generated with the CT10 PDFs are used for the three MC samples. The P2012 mpiHi tune is a variation of the P2012 tune with more semi-hard multiple parton interactions. The colour reconnection parameters were kept fixed to the P2012 tune values. Compared to the standard P2012 tune the P2012 loCR tune leads to significantly less activity in the transverse region with respect to the leading charged-particle as measured in Ref. [51]. In addition to assessing the effect of colour reconnection, this tune is therefore also used to estimate the systematic uncertainty associated with the particle spectra in the underlying event.

Parton distribution functions

The signal samples are generated using the CT10 PDFs. These PDFs, obtained from experimental data, have an uncertainty that is reflected in 26 pairs of possible PDF variations provided by the CTEQ group. To evaluate the impact of the PDF uncertainty on the tt¯ signal templates, the events, from a sample generated using MC@NLO with Herwig fragmentation, are re-weighted with the corresponding ratio of PDFs, and 26 pairs of signal templates are constructed, one pair per PDF uncertainty. For each pair, the average measured mtop is obtained from 500 pseudo-experiments each for the upward and downward variations of the PDF uncertainty. The corresponding uncertainty is obtained as half the difference of the two values. From those the CT10 contribution is calculated as the sum in quadrature of the 26 uncertainties and amounts to 0.13 GeV and 0.10 GeV for the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton analysis respectively.

In addition, the signal tt¯ samples are re-weighted to match the central PDFs for either the MSTW2008 [38] or the NNPDF23 [41] PDFs. The corresponding differences, taken as uncertainties, are 0.03 GeV and 0.21 GeV for the tt¯lepton+jets analysis, and 0.01 GeV and 0.01 GeV for the tt¯dilepton analysis. The final PDF systematic uncertainty is the sum in quadrature of the three contributions discussed above.

Modelling of non-tt¯ processes

The uncertainty in the modelling of non-tt¯ processes is taken into account by varying the normalisation and the shape of the distributions of several contributions.

The uncertainty on the W+jets background determined from data [64] is dominated by the uncertainty on the heavy-flavour content of these events and amounts to ±30% of the overall normalisation. The same normalisation uncertainty is assigned to the Z+jets background normalisation. Uncertainties related to the W+jets background shape are also considered. These stem from the variation of the heavy-flavour composition of the samples and from re-weightings of the distributions to match the predictions of Alpgen. For the re-weighting, parameters are varied which affect the functional form of the factorisation and renormalisation scales, and the threshold for the matching scale used to connect the matrix-element calculation to the parton shower.

The estimate of the background from NP/fake leptons determined from data is varied by ±50% to account for the uncertainty of this background source [65]. Uncertainties affecting the shape of this background are also included. For the NP/fake-electron background, the effects on the shape arising from the efficiency uncertainties for real and fake electrons are evaluated and added in quadrature. For the NP/fake-muon background, two different matrix methods were used and averaged: their difference is taken as the systematic uncertainty.

In addition, the impact of changing the normalisation of the single top quark processes according to the uncertainty on the corresponding theoretical cross sections is considered. This yields a negligible systematic uncertainty in both the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton analyses.

Detector modelling

Jet energy scale

The JES is derived using information from test-beam data, LHC collision data, and simulation. The relative JES uncertainty varies from about 1 % to 3 % depending on jet pT and η as given in Ref. [58]. Since the estimation of the jet energy scale involves a number of steps, the JES uncertainty has various components originating from the calibration method, the calorimeter response, the detector simulation, and the specific choice of parameters in the physics model employed in the MC event generator. The total uncertainty is expressed in terms of 21 pT- and η-dependent components which are considered uncorrelated [58]. The uncertainties for the individual components and their sum are given in Table 4 in Appendix A. Despite the simultaneous fit of mtop, JSF and bJSF in the tt¯lepton+jets channel there is a non-negligible residual JES uncertainty. This is introduced by the variation of the jet energy scale corrections and their uncertainties with jet kinematics, which cannot be fully captured by global scale factors (JSF, bJSF). However the overall JES uncertainty is a factor of two smaller than in a one-dimensional analysis exploiting only templates of mtopreco. In the tt¯dilepton channel, the contribution from the JES uncertainty constitutes the main component of systematic uncertainty on mtop.

Table 4.

The individual components of the JES uncertainty according to Ref. [58], together with the corresponding uncertainties on mtop+jets, JSF, bJSF, mtopdil, and mtopcomb. Some components listed are calculated as the sum in quadrature of several sub-components. The corresponding measurement correlations per group described in Sect. 8 are also reported

tt¯lepton+jets tt¯dilepton Combination
Δmtop+jets [GeV] ΔJSF ΔbJSF Δmtopdil [GeV] Δmtopcomb [GeV] ρ
Statistical (total) 0.18±0.04 0.003 0.001 0.16±0.03 0.11 -0.25
   Statistical NP1 -0.17±0.02 +0.002 +0.001 +0.01±0.02 0.09 -1.00
   Statistical NP2 +0.02±0.00 +0.001 -0.000 +0.05±0.00 0.03 +1.00
   Statistical NP3 -0.01±0.02 +0.001 +0.001 +0.12±0.02 0.05 -1.00
   η inter-calibration (stat.) -0.07±0.02 +0.001 +0.001 +0.10±0.02 0.01 -1.00
Modelling (total) 0.31±0.06 0.009 0.002 0.52±0.04 0.26 -0.18
   Modelling NP1 -0.30±0.03 +0.006 +0.001 +0.22±0.02 0.07 -1.00
   Modelling NP2 +0.03±0.02 +0.002 -0.000 +0.14±0.02 0.08 +1.00
   Modelling NP3 -0.01±0.02 -0.002 -0.000 -0.15±0.02 0.07 +1.00
   Modelling NP4 -0.01±0.00 +0.000 +0.000 +0.02±0.00 0.00 -1.00
   η inter-calibration (model) +0.07±0.04 +0.007 -0.001 +0.43±0.03 0.23 +1.00
Detector (total) 0.05±0.03 0.007 0.001 0.45±0.04 0.20 -0.19
   Detector NP1 -0.01±0.03 +0.007 +0.001 +0.45±0.02 0.20 -1.00
   Detector NP2 -0.05±0.00 +0.000 +0.001 +0.03±0.00 0.02 -1.00
Mixed (total) 0.02±0.02 0.001 0.001 0.03±0.02 0.01 -0.80
   Mixed NP1 -0.02±0.00 +0.000 +0.001 +0.02±0.00 0.00 -1.00
   Mixed NP2 +0.00±0.02 +0.001 -0.000 +0.02±0.02 0.01 +1.00
Single particle high-pT +0.00±0.00 +0.000 -0.000 +0.00±0.00 0.00 +1.00
Relative non-closure MC +0.00±0.02 +0.001 -0.000 +0.03±0.02 0.02 +1.00
Pile-up (total) 0.15±0.04 0.001 0.002 0.04±0.03 0.09 +0.03
   Pile-up: Offset(μ) -0.11±0.02 -0.001 +0.001 -0.02±0.02 0.07 +1.00
   Pile-up: Offset(nvtx) -0.10±0.04 -0.000 +0.001 +0.03±0.03 0.04 -1.00
Flavour (total) 0.36±0.04 0.012 0.008 0.03±0.03 0.20 -0.17
   Flavour composition -0.24±0.02 +0.006 -0.002 -0.02±0.02 0.14 +1.00
   Flavour response -0.28±0.03 +0.011 -0.008 +0.03±0.02 0.14 -1.00
Close-by jets -0.22±0.04 +0.005 +0.002 +0.25±0.03 0.01 -1.00
b-Jet energy scale +0.06±0.03 +0.000 +0.010 +0.68±0.02 0.34 +1.00
Total (without bJES) 0.58 ± 0.11 0.018 0.009 0.75 ± 0.08 0.41 -0.23

b-Jet energy scale

This uncertainty is uncorrelated with the JES uncertainty and accounts for the remaining differences of b-jets and light-jets after the global JES was determined. For this, an extra uncertainty ranging from 0.7 % to 1.8 % and depending on jet pT and η is assigned to b-jets, due to differences between jets containing b-hadrons and the inclusive jet sample [58]. This additional systematic uncertainty was obtained from MC simulation and was verified using b-tagged jets in data. The validation of the b-jet energy scale uncertainty is based on the comparison of the jet transverse momentum as measured in the calorimeter to the total transverse momentum of charged-particles associated with the jet. These transverse momenta are evaluated in the data and in MC simulated events for all jets and for b-jets [58]. In addition, a validation using tt¯lepton+jets events was performed. Effects stemming from b-quark fragmentation, hadronisation and underlying soft radiation were studied using different MC event generation models [58]. Thanks to the simultaneous fit to Rbqreco together with mWreco and mtopreco, the tt¯lepton+jets three-dimensional analysis method mitigates the impact of this uncertainty, and reduces it to 0.06 GeV, instead of 0.88 GeV in a two-dimensional analysis method (exploiting two-dimensional templates of mtopreco and mWreco, as in Ref. [8]), albeit at the cost of an additional statistical component of 0.67 GeV. In the tt¯dilepton channel, the contribution from the bJES uncertainty represents the second largest component of systematic uncertainty on mtop.

Jet energy resolution

To assess the impact of this uncertainty, before performing the event selection, the energy of each reconstructed jet in the simulation is smeared by a Gaussian function such that the width of the resulting Gaussian distribution corresponds to the one including the uncertainty on the jet energy resolution [72]. The fit is performed using smeared jets and the deviation from the central result is assigned as a systematic uncertainty.

Jet reconstruction efficiency

The jet reconstruction efficiency for data and the MC simulation is found to be in agreement with an accuracy of better than ±2%  [73]. To account for the residual uncertainties, 2 % of jets with pT<30 GeV are randomly removed from MC simulated events. The event selection and the fit are repeated on the changed sample. The changes in the fitted parameters relative to the nominal MC sample are assigned as systematic uncertainty.

Jet vertex fraction

Residual differences between data and MC in the description of the fraction of the jet momentum associated with tracks from the primary vertex (used to suppress pile-up interactions) is corrected by applying scale factors. These scale factors, varied according to their uncertainty, are applied to MC simulation events as a function of the jet pT. The resulting variation in the measured top quark mass in the tt¯lepton+jets analysis is 10  MeV, while it is negligible for the tt¯dilepton analysis.

b-Tagging efficiency and mistag rate

To account for potential mismodelling of the b-tagging efficiency and the mistag rate, b-tagging scale factors, together with their uncertainties, are derived per jet [6163, 74]. They are applied to the MC events and depend on the jet pT and η and the underlying quark flavour. In this analysis these correction factors are obtained from dijet [62] and tt¯dilepton events. The same b-tagging calibrations are applied to both the +jets and dilepton final states. The tt¯-based calibrations are obtained using the methodology described in Ref. [63], applied to the 7 TeV data. The statistical correlation stemming from the use of partially overlapping data sets for the tt¯dileptonmtop analysis and the b-tagging calibration is estimated to be negligible. The correlation of those systematic uncertainties that are in common for the b-tagging calibration and the present analyses is taken into account. Similarly to the JES uncertainty, the uncertainty on the correction factors for the b-tagging efficiency is separated into ten uncorrelated components. The systematic uncertainty is assessed by changing the correction factor central values by ±1σ for each component, and performing the fit. The final uncertainty due to the b-tagging efficiency is calculated as the sum in quadrature of all contributions. A similar procedure is applied for the mistag rates for c-jets, albeit using four separate components. In addition, the correction factors and mistag rates for light-jets are varied within their uncertainty, and the corresponding shifts in the measured quantities are summed in quadrature. The size of the b-tagging systematic uncertainty of 0.50 GeV observed in the tt¯lepton+jets analysis is mostly driven by the induced change in shape of the Rbqreco distribution.

Lepton momentum and missing transverse momentum

The lepton momentum and the ETmiss are used in the event selection and reconstruction. For the leptons, the momentum scale, resolution and identification efficiency are measured using high-purity Z data [60, 60]. The uncertainty due to any possible miscalibration is propagated to the analyses by changing the measured reconstruction efficiency, lepton pT, and the corresponding resolution, within uncertainties.

The uncertainties from the energy scale and resolution corrections for leptons and jets are propagated to the ETmiss. The systematic uncertainty related to the ETmiss accounts for uncertainties in the energies of calorimeter cells not associated with the reconstructed objects, and from cells associated with low-pT jets (7 GeV<pT< 20 GeV), as well as for the dependence of their energy on the number of pile-up interactions [60].

Pile-up

The residual systematic uncertainty due to pile-up was assessed by determining the dependence of the fitted top quark mass on the amount of pile-up activity, combined with uncertainties in modelling the amount of pile-up in the sample.

Summary

The resulting sizes of all uncertainties and their sum in quadrature are given in Table 3. The total uncertainties on mtop+jets, JSF, bJSF and mtopdil, amount to 1.27GeV, 0.027, 0.024 and 1.41GeV, respectively. Within uncertainties, the fitted values of JSF and bJSF are consistent with unity.

Combination of the mtop results

The results of the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton analyses listed in Table 3 are combined using the Best Linear Unbiased Estimate (BLUE) method [75, 76], implemented as described in Refs. [77, 78]. The BLUE method determines the coefficients (weights) to be used in a linear combination of the input measurements by minimising the total uncertainty of the combined result. In the algorithm, both the statistical and systematic uncertainties, and the correlations (ρ) of the measurements, are taken into account, while assuming that all uncertainties are distributed according to Gaussian probability density functions.

Correlation of the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton measurements

To perform the combination, for each source of systematic uncertainty, the uncertainties as well as the correlation of the measurements of mtop were evaluated.

The measurements are taken as uncorrelated for the statistical, the method calibration and the pile-up uncertainties. For the remaining uncertainty components there are two possible situations. Either the measurements are fully correlated, ρ=+1, i.e. a simultaneous upward variation of the systematic uncertainty results in a positive (or negative) shift of mtop for both measurements, or fully anti-correlated, ρ=-1. In the latter case one measurement exhibits a positive shift and the other a negative one.

Figure 6a shows the two dimensional distribution of the systematic uncertainties, denoted by Δmtop+jets and Δmtopdil, obtained in the +jets and dilepton analyses for all components of the sources of systematic uncertainty for which the measurements are correlated. The points show the estimated size of the uncertainties, and the error bars represent the statistical uncertainties on the estimates. Some uncertainty sources in Table 3, such as the uncertainty related to the choice of MC generator for signal events, contain only a single component. For these type of sources, the correlation is either ρ=+1 (red points) or ρ=-1 (blue points). The size of the uncertainty bars in Fig. 6a indicates that the distinction between ρ=+1 and ρ=-1 can be unambiguously made for all components that significantly contribute to the systematic uncertainty on mtop.

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

The systematic uncertainties of mtop in the +jets analysis versus those of the dilepton analysis. Figures ac refer to the results evaluated for the three-dimensional analysis  (3d), two-dimensional analysis  (2d) and one-dimensional analysis  (1d). The points show the estimated systematic uncertainties on mtop for the two analyses, and the uncertainty bars reflect the corresponding statistical uncertainties. The different colours reflect the different correlations described in Sect. 8.1

For uncertainty sources that contain multiple components such as the JES uncertainty described in Appendix A, the correlations given in Table 3 differ from ρ=±1. For these cases the correlation is obtained by adding the corresponding covariance terms of the components and dividing by the respective total uncertainties of the source.

For each systematic uncertainty, the size of Δmtop+jets and Δmtopdil, and the correlation of the measurements depend on the details of the analyses. This can be seen from Fig. 6b and c where the same information as in Fig. 6a is shown, but for different implementations of the +jets analysis, while leaving the dilepton analysis unchanged. Figure 6b corresponds to a two-dimensional analysis, similar to Ref. [8], which is realised by fixing the bJSF to unity. Finally, Fig. 6c shows the result of a one-dimensional analysis, in which the values of the JSF and bJSF are fixed to unity. For this implementation, as for the dilepton analysis, only mtop is obtained from the fit to data. Compared to the two-dimensional analysis, the three-dimensional analysis reduces some sources of uncertainty on mtop. As an example, the rightmost red point in Fig. 6b, which corresponds to the bJES uncertainty, lies close to the vertical line in Fig. 6a, i.e. for the +jets analysis the impact of this source was considerably reduced by the bJSF determination from data. The change in the correlations of the measurements for specific sources of uncertainty, caused by a variation of the analysis strategy, is apparent from Fig. 6c, where for both analyses only mtop is obtained from the data. In this case the exploited observables are much more similar and consequently, the measurements of mtop are fully correlated for all sources of uncertainty that significantly contribute to the total uncertainty. This demonstrates that the three-dimensional analysis not only reduces the impact of some sources of uncertainty, mainly the JES and bJES uncertainties, but also makes the two measurements less correlated, thus increasing the gain in the combination of the two estimates of mtop.

To best profit from the combination of the two measurements, their correlation should be as small as possible, see Ref. [78]. Consequently, the jet energy scale factors measured in the +jets analysis have not been propagated to the dilepton analysis, as was first done in Ref. [79]. Transferring the scales would require adding an additional systematic uncertainty to the dilepton analysis to account for the different jet energy scale factors caused by different kinematical selections and jet topologies of the two analyses. The two final states contain either two or four jets that have different distributions in jet pT, and different amounts of final state QCD radiation. Most notably, this would also result in a large correlation of the measurements, similar to that observed for the one-dimensional analyses shown in Fig. 6c. Consequently, the knowledge of mtop from the +jets analysis would not significantly improve when including a dilepton measurement obtained with transferred jet energy scales. For an example of such a situation see Table VI of Ref. [79].

Using the correlations determined above, the combination of the mtop results of the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton analyses yields:

mtopcomb=172.99±0.48(stat)±0.78(syst)GeV=172.99±0.91GeV.

This value corresponds to a 28% gain in precision with respect to the more precise +jets measurement. The compatibility of the input measurements is very good, and corresponds to 0.75σ (mtop+jets-mtopdil=-1.47±1.96GeV). The BLUE weights of the results of the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton analyses are 54.8 % and 45.2 %, respectively. The total correlation of the input measurements is -7% and the χ2 probability of the combination is 45.5 %. The list of all uncertainties of the combined result, together with the correlation of the measurements for each group of uncertainties, is provided in Table 3. The current precision is mostly limited by systematic uncertainties related to the MC modelling of tt¯ events, and to the calibration of the jet energy scales.

Stability of the results

The dependence of the combined result on the statistical uncertainties of the evaluated systematic uncertainties is investigated by performing one thousand BLUE combinations in which all input uncertainties are independently smeared using Gaussian functions centred at the expected values, and with a width corresponding to their statistical uncertainties. Using the smeared uncertainties, the correlations are re-evaluated for each pseudo-experiment. The combined mtop and its total uncertainty are distributed according to Gaussian functions of width 37  MeV and 43  MeV, respectively. Similarly, the BLUE combination weights and the total correlation are Gaussian distributed, with widths of 2.5 % and 6.1 %, respectively. These effects are found to be negligible compared to the total uncertainty of the combined result. Consequently, no additional systematic uncertainty is assigned.

Conclusion

The top quark mass was measured via a three-dimensional template method in the tt¯lepton+jets final state, and using a one-dimensional template method in the tt¯dilepton channel. Both analyses are based on s=7 TeV proton–proton collision ATLAS data from the 2011 LHC run corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.6 fb-1. In the +jets analysis, mtop is determined together with a global jet energy scale factor (JSF) and a residual b-to-light-jet energy scale factor (bJSF). The measured values are:

mtop+jets=172.33±0.75(stat+JSF+bJSF)±1.02(syst)GeV,JSF=1.019±0.003(stat)±0.027(syst),bJSF=1.003±0.008(stat)±0.023(syst),mtopdil=173.79±0.54(stat)±1.30(syst)GeV.

These measurements are consistent with the ATLAS measurement in the fully hadronic decay channel [13], and supersede the previous result described in Ref. [8].

A combination of the tt¯lepton+jets and tt¯dilepton results is performed using the BLUE technique, exploiting the full uncertainty breakdown, and taking into account the correlation of the measurements for all sources of the systematic uncertainty. The result is:

mtopcomb=172.99±0.48(stat)±0.78(syst)GeV=172.99±0.91GeV.

This corresponds to a gain in precision with respect to the more precise +jets measurement of 28%. The total uncertainty of the combination corresponds to 0.91 GeV and is currently dominated by systematic uncertainties due to jet calibration and modelling of the tt¯ events.

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.

Appendix A: Jet energy scale uncertainty: detailed components

The relative JES uncertainty varies from about 1 % to 3 % depending on jet properties as given in Section 13 of Ref. [58]. These components correspond to the eigenvectors of the reduced covariance matrix for the JES uncertainties, as described in Section 13.3 of Ref. [58]. The initial sources of nuisance parameters (NP) originating from the in-situ determination of the JES are listed in Table 10 of Ref. [58]. According to their nature, they are categorised into the classes: detector description, physics modelling, statistics and method, mixed detector and modelling. Finally, following Section 13.6 of Ref. [58], a reduction of the number of nuisance parameters is performed for each category giving various components. Their pT dependences are given in Fig. 42 of Ref. [58]. The total JES uncertainty is provided together with its 21 sub-components in Table 4. Their separate effects on the fitted top quark mass are summed in quadrature to determine the total jet energy scale uncertainty given in Table 3. For further details about each component, see Ref. [58].

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 upwards. 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). Angular distances are defined as ΔR(Δη)2+(Δϕ)2.

2

Here mTW is the W boson transverse mass, defined as 2pT,pT,ν[1-cos(ϕ-ϕν)], where the measured ETmiss vector provides the neutrino (ν) information.

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