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. 2019 Mar 23;79(3):269. doi: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-019-6752-1

Measurement of associated production of a W boson and a charm quark in proton–proton collisions at s=13Te

A M Sirunyan 1, A Tumasyan 1, W Adam 2, F Ambrogi 2, E Asilar 2, T Bergauer 2, J Brandstetter 2, M Dragicevic 2, J Erö 2, A Escalante Del Valle 2, M Flechl 2, R Frühwirth 2, V M Ghete 2, J Hrubec 2, M Jeitler 2, N Krammer 2, I Krätschmer 2, D Liko 2, T Madlener 2, I Mikulec 2, N Rad 2, H Rohringer 2, J Schieck 2, R Schöfbeck 2, M Spanring 2, D Spitzbart 2, A Taurok 2, W Waltenberger 2, J Wittmann 2, C-E Wulz 2, M Zarucki 2, V Chekhovsky 3, V Mossolov 3, J Suarez Gonzalez 3, E A De Wolf 4, D Di Croce 4, X Janssen 4, J Lauwers 4, M Pieters 4, H Van Haevermaet 4, P Van Mechelen 4, N Van Remortel 4, S Abu Zeid 5, F Blekman 5, J D’Hondt 5, I De Bruyn 5, J De Clercq 5, K Deroover 5, G Flouris 5, D Lontkovskyi 5, S Lowette 5, I Marchesini 5, S Moortgat 5, L Moreels 5, Q Python 5, K Skovpen 5, S Tavernier 5, W Van Doninck 5, P Van Mulders 5, I Van Parijs 5, D Beghin 6, B Bilin 6, H Brun 6, B Clerbaux 6, G De Lentdecker 6, H Delannoy 6, B Dorney 6, G Fasanella 6, L Favart 6, R Goldouzian 6, A Grebenyuk 6, A K Kalsi 6, T Lenzi 6, J Luetic 6, N Postiau 6, E Starling 6, L Thomas 6, C Vander Velde 6, P Vanlaer 6, D Vannerom 6, Q Wang 6, T Cornelis 7, D Dobur 7, A Fagot 7, M Gul 7, I Khvastunov 7, D Poyraz 7, C Roskas 7, D Trocino 7, M Tytgat 7, W Verbeke 7, B Vermassen 7, M Vit 7, N Zaganidis 7, H Bakhshiansohi 8, O Bondu 8, S Brochet 8, G Bruno 8, C Caputo 8, P David 8, C Delaere 8, M Delcourt 8, B Francois 8, A Giammanco 8, G Krintiras 8, V Lemaitre 8, A Magitteri 8, A Mertens 8, M Musich 8, K Piotrzkowski 8, A Saggio 8, M Vidal Marono 8, S Wertz 8, J Zobec 8, F L Alves 9, G A Alves 9, M Correa Martins Junior 9, G Correia Silva 9, C Hensel 9, A Moraes 9, M E Pol 9, P Rebello Teles 9, E Belchior Batista Das Chagas 10, W Carvalho 10, J Chinellato 10, E Coelho 10, E M Da Costa 10, G G Da Silveira 10, D De Jesus Damiao 10, C De Oliveira Martins 10, S Fonseca De Souza 10, H Malbouisson 10, D Matos Figueiredo 10, M Melo De Almeida 10, C Mora Herrera 10, L Mundim 10, H Nogima 10, W L Prado Da Silva 10, L J Sanchez Rosas 10, A Santoro 10, A Sznajder 10, M Thiel 10, E J Tonelli Manganote 10, F Torres Da Silva De Araujo 10, A Vilela Pereira 10, S Ahuja 11, C A Bernardes 11, L Calligaris 11, T R Fernandez Perez Tomei 11, E M Gregores 11, P G Mercadante 11, S F Novaes 11, SandraS Padula 11, A Aleksandrov 12, R Hadjiiska 12, P Iaydjiev 12, A Marinov 12, M Misheva 12, M Rodozov 12, M Shopova 12, G Sultanov 12, A Dimitrov 13, L Litov 13, B Pavlov 13, P Petkov 13, W Fang 14, X Gao 14, L Yuan 14, M Ahmad 15, J G Bian 15, G M Chen 15, H S Chen 15, M Chen 15, Y Chen 15, C H Jiang 15, D Leggat 15, H Liao 15, Z Liu 15, F Romeo 15, S M Shaheen 15, A Spiezia 15, J Tao 15, C Wang 15, Z Wang 15, E Yazgan 15, H Zhang 15, S Zhang 15, J Zhao 15, Y Ban 16, G Chen 16, A Levin 16, J Li 16, L Li 16, Q Li 16, Y Mao 16, S J Qian 16, D Wang 16, Z Xu 16, Y Wang 17, C Avila 18, A Cabrera 18, C A Carrillo Montoya 18, L F Chaparro Sierra 18, C Florez 18, C F González Hernández 18, M A Segura Delgado 18, B Courbon 19, N Godinovic 19, D Lelas 19, I Puljak 19, T Sculac 19, Z Antunovic 20, M Kovac 20, V Brigljevic 21, D Ferencek 21, K Kadija 21, B Mesic 21, A Starodumov 21, T Susa 21, M W Ather 22, A Attikis 22, M Kolosova 22, G Mavromanolakis 22, J Mousa 22, C Nicolaou 22, F Ptochos 22, P A Razis 22, H Rykaczewski 22, M Finger 23, M Finger Jr 23, E Ayala 24, E Carrera Jarrin 25, A A Abdelalim 26, A Mahrous 26, A Mohamed 26, S Bhowmik 27, A Carvalho Antunes De Oliveira 27, R K Dewanjee 27, K Ehataht 27, M Kadastik 27, M Raidal 27, C Veelken 27, P Eerola 28, H Kirschenmann 28, J Pekkanen 28, M Voutilainen 28, J Havukainen 29, J K Heikkilä 29, T Järvinen 29, V Karimäki 29, R Kinnunen 29, T Lampén 29, K Lassila-Perini 29, S Laurila 29, S Lehti 29, T Lindén 29, P Luukka 29, T Mäenpää 29, H Siikonen 29, E Tuominen 29, J Tuominiemi 29, T Tuuva 30, M Besancon 31, F Couderc 31, M Dejardin 31, D Denegri 31, J L Faure 31, F Ferri 31, S Ganjour 31, A Givernaud 31, P Gras 31, G Hamel de Monchenault 31, P Jarry 31, C Leloup 31, E Locci 31, J Malcles 31, G Negro 31, J Rander 31, A Rosowsky 31, M Ö Sahin 31, M Titov 31, A Abdulsalam 32, C Amendola 32, I Antropov 32, F Beaudette 32, P Busson 32, C Charlot 32, R Granier de Cassagnac 32, I Kucher 32, A Lobanov 32, J Martin Blanco 32, M Nguyen 32, C Ochando 32, G Ortona 32, P Paganini 32, P Pigard 32, R Salerno 32, J B Sauvan 32, Y Sirois 32, A G Stahl Leiton 32, A Zabi 32, A Zghiche 32, J-L Agram 33, J Andrea 33, D Bloch 33, J-M Brom 33, E C Chabert 33, V Cherepanov 33, C Collard 33, E Conte 33, J-C Fontaine 33, D Gelé 33, U Goerlach 33, M Jansová 33, A-C Le Bihan 33, N Tonon 33, P Van Hove 33, S Gadrat 34, S Beauceron 35, C Bernet 35, G Boudoul 35, N Chanon 35, R Chierici 35, D Contardo 35, P Depasse 35, H El Mamouni 35, J Fay 35, L Finco 35, S Gascon 35, M Gouzevitch 35, G Grenier 35, B Ille 35, F Lagarde 35, I B Laktineh 35, H Lattaud 35, M Lethuillier 35, L Mirabito 35, A L Pequegnot 35, S Perries 35, A Popov 35, V Sordini 35, G Touquet 35, M Vander Donckt 35, S Viret 35, T Toriashvili 36, Z Tsamalaidze 37, C Autermann 38, L Feld 38, M K Kiesel 38, K Klein 38, M Lipinski 38, M Preuten 38, M P Rauch 38, C Schomakers 38, J Schulz 38, M Teroerde 38, B Wittmer 38, V Zhukov 38, A Albert 39, D Duchardt 39, M Endres 39, M Erdmann 39, S Ghosh 39, A Güth 39, T Hebbeker 39, C Heidemann 39, K Hoepfner 39, H Keller 39, L Mastrolorenzo 39, M Merschmeyer 39, A Meyer 39, P Millet 39, S Mukherjee 39, T Pook 39, M Radziej 39, H Reithler 39, M Rieger 39, A Schmidt 39, D Teyssier 39, G Flügge 40, O Hlushchenko 40, T Kress 40, A Künsken 40, T Müller 40, A Nehrkorn 40, A Nowack 40, C Pistone 40, O Pooth 40, D Roy 40, H Sert 40, A Stahl 40, M Aldaya Martin 41, T Arndt 41, C Asawatangtrakuldee 41, I Babounikau 41, K Beernaert 41, O Behnke 41, U Behrens 41, A Bermúdez Martínez 41, D Bertsche 41, A A Bin Anuar 41, K Borras 41, V Botta 41, A Campbell 41, P Connor 41, C Contreras-Campana 41, F Costanza 41, V Danilov 41, A De Wit 41, M M Defranchis 41, C Diez Pardos 41, D Domínguez Damiani 41, G Eckerlin 41, T Eichhorn 41, A Elwood 41, E Eren 41, E Gallo 41, A Geiser 41, J M Grados Luyando 41, A Grohsjean 41, P Gunnellini 41, M Guthoff 41, M Haranko 41, A Harb 41, J Hauk 41, H Jung 41, M Kasemann 41, J Keaveney 41, C Kleinwort 41, J Knolle 41, D Krücker 41, W Lange 41, A Lelek 41, T Lenz 41, K Lipka 41, W Lohmann 41, R Mankel 41, I-A Melzer-Pellmann 41, A B Meyer 41, M Meyer 41, M Missiroli 41, G Mittag 41, J Mnich 41, V Myronenko 41, S K Pflitsch 41, D Pitzl 41, A Raspereza 41, M Savitskyi 41, P Saxena 41, P Schütze 41, C Schwanenberger 41, R Shevchenko 41, A Singh 41, H Tholen 41, O Turkot 41, A Vagnerini 41, G P Van Onsem 41, R Walsh 41, Y Wen 41, K Wichmann 41, C Wissing 41, O Zenaiev 41, R Aggleton 42, S Bein 42, L Benato 42, A Benecke 42, V Blobel 42, M Centis Vignali 42, T Dreyer 42, E Garutti 42, D Gonzalez 42, J Haller 42, A Hinzmann 42, A Karavdina 42, G Kasieczka 42, R Klanner 42, R Kogler 42, N Kovalchuk 42, S Kurz 42, V Kutzner 42, J Lange 42, D Marconi 42, J Multhaup 42, M Niedziela 42, D Nowatschin 42, A Perieanu 42, A Reimers 42, O Rieger 42, C Scharf 42, P Schleper 42, S Schumann 42, J Schwandt 42, J Sonneveld 42, H Stadie 42, G Steinbrück 42, F M Stober 42, M Stöver 42, D Troendle 42, A Vanhoefer 42, B Vormwald 42, M Akbiyik 43, C Barth 43, M Baselga 43, S Baur 43, E Butz 43, R Caspart 43, T Chwalek 43, F Colombo 43, W De Boer 43, A Dierlamm 43, K El Morabit 43, N Faltermann 43, B Freund 43, M Giffels 43, M A Harrendorf 43, F Hartmann 43, S M Heindl 43, U Husemann 43, F Kassel 43, I Katkov 43, S Kudella 43, H Mildner 43, S Mitra 43, M U Mozer 43, Th Müller 43, M Plagge 43, G Quast 43, K Rabbertz 43, M Schröder 43, I Shvetsov 43, G Sieber 43, H J Simonis 43, R Ulrich 43, S Wayand 43, M Weber 43, T Weiler 43, S Williamson 43, C Wöhrmann 43, R Wolf 43, G Anagnostou 44, G Daskalakis 44, T Geralis 44, A Kyriakis 44, D Loukas 44, G Paspalaki 44, I Topsis-Giotis 44, G 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PMCID: PMC6432902  PMID: 30971865

Abstract

Measurements are presented of associated production of a W boson and a charm quark (W+c) in proton–proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 13Te. The data correspond to an integrated luminosity of 35.7fb-1 collected by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC. The W bosons are identified by their decay into a muon and a neutrino. The charm quarks are tagged via the full reconstruction of D(2010)± mesons that decay via D(2010)±D0+π±K+π±+π±. A cross section is measured in the fiducial region defined by the muon transverse momentum pTμ>26Ge, muon pseudorapidity |ημ|<2.4, and charm quark transverse momentum pTc>5Ge. The inclusive cross section for this kinematic range is σ(W+c)=1026±31(stat)+76-72(syst) pb. The cross section is also measured differentially as a function of the pseudorapidity of the muon from the W boson decay. These measurements are compared with theoretical predictions and are used to probe the strange quark content of the proton.

Introduction

Precise knowledge of the structure of the proton, expressed in terms of parton distribution functions (PDFs), is important for interpreting results obtained in proton–proton (p p) collisions at the CERN LHC. The PDFs are determined by comparing theoretical predictions obtained at a particular order in perturbative quantum chromodynamics (pQCD) to experimental measurements. The precision of the PDFs, which affects the accuracy of the theoretical predictions for cross sections at the LHC, is determined by the uncertainties of the experimental measurements used, and by the limitations of the available theoretical calculations. The flavor composition of the light quark sea in the proton and, in particular, the understanding of the strange quark distribution is important for the measurement of the W boson mass at the LHC [1]. Therefore, it is of great interest to determine the strange quark distribution with improved precision.

Before the start of LHC data taking, information on the strange quark content of the nucleon was obtained primarily from charm production in (anti)neutrino-iron deep inelastic scattering (DIS) by the NuTeV [2], CCFR [3], and NOMAD [4] experiments. In addition, a direct measurement of inclusive charm production in nuclear emulsions was performed by the CHORUS experiment [5]. At the LHC, the production of W or Z bosons, inclusive or associated with charm quarks, provides an important input for tests of the earlier determinations of the strange quark distribution. The measurements of inclusive W or Z boson production at the LHC, which are indirectly sensitive to the strange quark distribution, were used in a QCD analysis by the ATLAS experiment, and an enhancement of the strange quark distribution with respect to other measurements was observed [6].

The associated production of W bosons and charm quarks in pp collisions at the LHC probes the strange quark content of the proton directly through the leading order (LO) processes g+s¯W++c¯ and g+sW-+c, as shown in Fig. 1. The contribution of the Cabibbo-suppressed processes g+d¯W++c¯ and g+dW-+c amounts to only a few percent of the total cross section. Therefore, measurements of associated W+c production in pp collisions provide valuable insights into the strange quark distribution of the proton. Furthermore, these measurements allow important cross-checks of the results obtained in the global PDF fits using the DIS data and measurements of inclusive W and Z boson production at the LHC.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Dominant contributions to W+c production at the LHC at leading order in pQCD

Production of W+c in hadron collisions was first investigated at the Tevatron [79]. The first measurement of the cross section of W+c production in pp collisions at the LHC was performed by the CMS Collaboration at a center-of-mass energy of s=7Te with an integrated luminosity of 5fb-1  [10]. This measurement was used for the first direct determination of the strange quark distribution in the proton at a hadron collider [11]. The extracted strangeness suppression with respect to u¯ and d¯ quark densities was found to be in agreement with measurements in neutrino scattering experiments. The cross section for W+c production was also measured by the ATLAS experiment at s=7Te [12] and used in a QCD analysis, which supported the enhanced strange quark content in the proton suggested by the earlier ATLAS analysis [6]. A subsequent joint QCD analysis [13] of all available data that were sensitive to the strange quark distribution demonstrated consistency between the W+c measurements by the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations. In Ref. [13], possible reasons for the observed strangeness enhancement were discussed. Recent results of an ATLAS QCD analysis [14], including measurements of inclusive W and Z boson production at s=7Te, indicated an even stronger strangeness enhancement in disagreement with all global PDFs. In Ref. [15], possible reasons for this observation were attributed to the limitations of the parameterization used in this ATLAS analysis [14]. The associated production of a W boson with a jet originating from a charm quark is also studied in the forward region by the LHCb experiment [16].

In this paper, the cross section for W+c production is measured in pp collisions at the LHC at s=13Te using data collected by the CMS experiment in 2016 corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 35.7fb-1. The W bosons are selected via their decay into a muon and a neutrino. The charm quarks are tagged by a full reconstruction of the charmed hadrons in the process cD(2010)±D0+πslow±K+π±+πslow±, which has a clear experimental signature. The pion originating from the D(2010)± decay receives very little energy because of the small mass difference between D(2010)± and D0(1865) and is therefore denoted a “slow” pion πslow±. Cross sections for W+D(2010)± production are measured within a selected fiducial phase space. The W+c cross sections are compared with theoretical predictions at next-to-leading order (NLO) QCD, which are obtained with mcfm 6.8 [1719], and are used to extract the strange quark content of the proton.

This paper is organized as follows. The CMS detector is briefly described in Sect. 2. The data and the simulated samples are described in Sect. 3. The event selection is presented in Sect. 4. The measurement of the cross sections and the evaluation of systematic uncertainties are discussed in Sect. 5. The details of the QCD analysis are described in Sect. 6. Section 7 summarizes the results.

The CMS detector

The central feature of the CMS apparatus is a superconducting solenoid of 6m internal diameter, providing a magnetic field of 3.8T. Within the solenoid volume are a silicon pixel and strip tracker, a lead tungstate crystal electromagnetic calorimeter (ECAL), and a brass and scintillator hadron calorimeter (HCAL), each composed of a barrel and two endcap sections. Forward calorimeters extend the pseudorapidity coverage provided by the barrel and endcap detectors. Muons are detected in gas-ionization chambers embedded in the steel flux-return yoke outside the solenoid.

The silicon tracker measures charged particles within the pseudorapidity range |η|<2.5. It consists of 1440 silicon pixel and 15 148 silicon strip detector modules. For nonisolated particles of 1<pT<10Ge and |η|<1.4, the track resolutions are typically 1.5% in pT and 25–90 (45–150) μm in the transverse (longitudinal) impact parameter [20]. The reconstructed vertex with the largest value of summed physics-object pT2 is taken to be the primary pp interaction vertex. The physics objects are the jets, clustered using the jet finding algorithm [21, 22] with the tracks assigned to the vertex as inputs, and the associated missing transverse momentum, taken as the negative vector sum of the pT of those jets. Muons are measured in the pseudorapidity range |η|<2.4, with detection planes made using three technologies: drift tubes, cathode strip chambers, and resistive-plate chambers. The single muon trigger efficiency exceeds 90% over the full η range, and the efficiency to reconstruct and identify muons is greater than 96%. Matching muons to tracks measured in the silicon tracker results in a relative transverse momentum resolution, for muons with pT up to 100Ge, of 1% in the barrel and 3% in the endcaps. The pT resolution in the barrel is better than 7% for muons with pT up to 1Te  [23]. A more detailed description of the CMS detector, together with a definition of the coordinate system used and the relevant kinematic variables, can be found in Ref. [24].

Data and Monte Carlo samples and signal definition

Candidate events for the muon decay channel of the W boson are selected by a muon trigger [25] that requires a reconstructed muon with pTμ>24Ge. The presence of a high-pT neutrino is implied by the missing transverse momentum, pTmiss, which is defined as the negative vector sum of the transverse momenta of the reconstructed particles.

Muon candidates and pTmiss are reconstructed using the particle-flow (PF) algorithm [26], which reconstructs and identifies each individual particle with an optimized combination of information from the various elements of the CMS detector. The energy of photons is obtained directly from the ECAL measurement. The energy of electrons is determined from a combination of the electron momentum at the primary interaction vertex determined by the tracking detector, the energy of the corresponding ECAL cluster, and the energy sum of all bremsstrahlung photons spatially compatible with originating from the electron track. The muon momentum is obtained from the track curvature in both the tracker and the muon system, and identified by hits in multiple stations of the flux-return yoke. The energy of charged hadrons is determined from a combination of their momentum measured in the tracker and the matching ECAL and HCAL energy deposits, corrected for both zero-suppression effects and the response function of the calorimeters to hadronic showers. Finally, the energy of neutral hadrons is obtained from the corresponding corrected ECAL and HCAL energy.

The D(2010)± meson candidates are reconstructed from tracks formed by combining the measurements in the silicon pixel and strip detectors through the CMS combinatorial track finder [20].

The signal and background processes are simulated using Monte Carlo (MC) generators to estimate the acceptance and efficiency of the CMS detector. The corresponding MC events are passed through a detailed Geant4  [27] simulation of the CMS detector and reconstructed using the same software as the real data. The presence of multiple pp interactions in the same or adjacent bunch crossing (pileup) is incorporated by simulating additional interactions (both in-time and out-of-time with respect to the hard interaction) with a vertex multiplicity that matches the distribution observed in data. The simulated samples are normalized to the integrated luminosity of the data using the generated cross sections. To simulate the signal, inclusive W+jets events are generated with MadGraph 5_amc@nlo  (v2.2.2) [28] using the NLO matrix elements, interfaced with pythia8 (8.2.12) [29] for parton showering and hadronization. A matching scale of 10Ge is chosen, and the FxFx technique [30] is applied for matching and merging. The factorization and renormalization scales, μr2 and μf2, are set to μr2=μf2=mW2+pT,W2. The proton structure is described by the NNPDF3.0nlo [31] PDF set. To enrich the sample with simulated W+c events, an event filter that requires at least one muon with pTμ>20Ge and |ημ|<2.4, as well as at least one D(2010)± meson, is applied at the generator level.

Several background contributions are considered, which are described in the following. An inclusive W+jets event sample is generated using the same settings as the signal events, but without the event filter, to simulate background contributions from W events that do not contain D(2010)± mesons. Events originating from Drell–Yan (DY) with associated jets are simulated with MadGraph 5_amc@nlo  (v2.2.2) with μr2 and μf2 set to mZ2+pT,Z2. Events originating from top quark–antiquark pair (tt¯) production are simulated using powheg (v2.0) [32], whereas single top quark events are simulated using powheg (v2.0) [33, 34] or powheg (v1.0) [35], depending on the production channel. Inclusive production of WW, WZ, and ZZ bosons and contributions from the inclusive QCD events are generated using pythia8. The CUETP8M1 [36] underlying event tune is used in pythia8 for all, except for the tt¯ sample, where the CUETP8M2T4 [37] tune is applied.

The dominant background originates from processes like u+d¯W++gW++cc¯ or d+u¯W-+gW-+cc¯, with c quarks produced in gluon splitting. In the W+c signal events the charges of the W boson and the charm quark have opposite signs. In gluon splitting, an additional c quark is produced with the same charge as the W boson. At the generator level, an event is considered as a W+c event if it contains at least one charm quark in the final state. In the case of an odd number of c quarks, the c quark with the highest pT and a charge opposite to that of the W boson is considered as originating from a W+c process, whereas the other c quarks in the event are labeled as originating from gluon splitting. In the case of an even number of c quarks, all are considered to come from gluon splitting. Events containing both c and b quarks are considered to be W+c  events, since c quarks are of higher priority in this analysis, regardless of their momentum or production mechanism. Events containing no c quark and at least one b quark are classified as W+b. Otherwise, an event is assigned to the W+udsg category.

The contribution from gluon splitting can be significantly reduced using data. Events with the same charge sign for both the W boson and charm quark, which correlates to the charge sign of the D(2010)± meson, are background, which is due to gluon splitting. Since the gluon splitting background for opposite charge pairs is identical, it can be removed by subtracting the same-sign distribution from the signal. The measurement is performed in the central kinematic range and is not sensitive to the contributions of processes c+gW+s with a spectator charm quark.

For validation and tuning of MC event generators using a Rivet plugin [38], the W+D(2010)± measurement is performed. This requires a particle-level definition without constraints on the origin of D(2010)± mesons. Therefore, any contributions from B meson decays and other hadrons, though only a few pb, are included as signal for this part of the measurement.

Event selection

The associated production of W bosons and charm quarks is investigated using events, where Wμ+ν¯μ and the c quarks hadronize into a D(2010)± meson. The reconstruction of the muons from the W boson decays and of the D(2010)± candidates is described in detail in the following.

Selection of W boson candidates

Events containing a W boson decay are identified by the presence of a high-pT isolated muon and pTmiss. The muon candidates are reconstructed by combining the tracking information from the muon system and from the inner tracking system [23], using the CMS particle-flow algorithm. Muon candidates are required to have pTμ>26Ge, |ημ|<2.4, and must fulfill the CMS “tight identification” criteria [23]. To suppress contamination from muons contained in jets, an isolation requirement is imposed:

1pTμCHpT+max0.,NHpT+EMpT-0.5PUpT0.15,

where the pT sum of PF candidates for charged hadrons (CH), neutral hadrons (NH), photons (EM) and charged particles from pileup (PU) inside a cone of radius ΔR0.4 is used, and the factor 0.5 corresponds to the typical ratio of neutral to charged particles, as measured in jet production [26].

Events in which more than one muon candidate fulfills all the above criteria are rejected in order to suppress background from DY processes. Corrections are applied to the simulated samples to adjust the trigger, isolation, identification, and tracking efficiencies to the observed data. These correction factors are determined through dedicated tag-and-probe studies.

The presence of a neutrino in an event is assured by imposing a requirement on the transverse mass, which is defined as the combination of pTμ and pTmiss:

mT2pTμpTmiss(1-cos(ϕμ-ϕpTmiss)). 1

In this analysis, mT>50Ge is required, which results in a significant reduction of background.

Selection of D(2010)± candidates

The D(2010)± mesons are identified by their decays D(2010)±D0+πslow±K+π±+πslow± using the reconstructed tracks of the decay products. The branching fraction for this channel is 2.66±0.03% [39].

The D0 candidates are constructed by combining two oppositely charged tracks with transverse momenta pTtrack>1Ge, assuming the K and π± masses. The D0 candidates are further combined with a track of opposite charge to the kaon candidate, assuming the π± mass, following the well-established procedure of Refs. [40, 41]. The invariant mass of the Kπ± combination is required to be |m(Kπ±)-m(D0)|<35Me, where m(D0)=1864.8±0.1Me [39]. The candidate K and π± tracks must originate at a fitted secondary vertex [42] that is displaced by not more than 0.1cm in both the xy-plane and z-coordinate from the third track, which is presumed to be the πslow± candidate. The latter is required to have pTtrack>0.35Ge and to be in a cone of ΔR0.15 around the direction of the D0 candidate momentum. The combinatorial background is reduced by requiring the D(2010)± transverse momentum pTD>5Ge and by applying an isolation criterion pTD/pT>0.2. Here pT is the sum of transverse momenta of tracks in a cone of ΔR 0.4 around the direction of the D(2010)± momentum. The contribution of D(2010)± mesons produced in pileup events is suppressed by rejecting candidates with a z-distance>0.2cm between the muon and the πslow±. After applying all selection criteria, the contribution of D0 decays other than Kπ± is negligible compared to the uncertainties.

The D(2010)± meson candidates are identified using the mass difference method [41] via a peak in the Δm(D,D0) distribution. Wrong-charge combinations with K±π± pairs in the accepted D0 mass range mimic the background originating from light-flavor hadrons. By subtracting the wrong-charge combinations, the combinatorial background in the Δm(D,D0) distribution is mostly removed. The presence of nonresonant charm production in the right-charge Kπ±π± combinations introduces a small normalization difference of Δm(D,D0) distributions for right- and wrong-charge combinations, which is corrected utilizing fits to the ratio of both distributions.

Selection of W+c candidates

An event is selected as a W+c signal if it contains a W boson and a D(2010)± candidate fulfilling all selection criteria. The candidate events are split into two categories: with W±+D(2010)± combinations falling into the same sign (SS) category, and W+D(2010)± combinations falling into the opposite sign (OS) category. The signal events consist of only OS combinations, whereas the W+cc¯ and W+bb¯ background processes produce the same number of OS and SS candidates. Therefore, subtracting the SS events from the OS events removes the background contributions from gluon splitting. The contributions from other background sources, such as tt¯ and single top quark production, are negligible.

The number of W+c events corresponds to the number of D(2010)± mesons after the subtraction of light-flavor and gluon splitting backgrounds. The invariant mass of Kπ± candidates, which are selected in a Δm(D,D0) window of ±1Me, is shown in Fig. 2, along with the observed reconstructed mass difference Δm(D,D0). A clear D0 peak at the expected mass and a clear Δm(D,D0) peak around the expected value of 145.4257±0.0017Me [39] are observed. The remaining background is negligible, and the number of D(2010)± mesons is determined by counting the number of candidates in a window of 144<Δm(D,D0)<147Me. Alternately, two different functions are fit to the distributions, and their integral over the same mass window is used to estimate the systematic uncertainties associated with the method chosen.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Distributions of the reconstructed invariant mass of Kπ± candidates (upper) in the range |Δm(D,D0)-0.1454|<0.001Ge, and the reconstructed mass difference Δm(D,D0) (lower). The SS combinations are subtracted. The data (filled circles) are compared to MC simulation with contributions from different processes shown as histograms of different shades

Measurement of the fiducial W+c cross section

The fiducial cross section is measured in a kinematic region defined by requirements on the transverse momentum and the pseudorapidity of the muon and the transverse momentum of the charm quark. The simulated signal is used to extrapolate from the fiducial region of the D(2010)± meson to the fiducial region of the charm quark. Since the D(2010)± kinematics is integrated over at the generator level, the only kinematic constraint on the corresponding charm quark arises from the requirement on the transverse momentum of D(2010)± meson. The correlation of the kinematics of charm quarks and D(2010)± mesons is investigated using simulation, and the requirement of pTD>5Ge translates into pTc>5Ge. The distributions of |ημ| and pTc in the simulation are shown to reproduce very well the fixed order prediction at NLO obtained, using mcfm 6.8 [1719] calculation. The kinematic range of the measured fiducial cross section corresponds to pTμ>26Ge, |ημ|<2.4, and pTc>5Ge.

The fiducial W+c cross section is determined as:

σ(W+c)=NselSLintBC, 2

where Nsel is the number of selected OS-SS events in the Δm(D,D0) distribution and S is the signal fraction. The latter is defined as the ratio of the number of reconstructed W+D(2010)± candidates originating from W+c to the number of all reconstructed D(2010)±. It is determined from the MC simulation, includes the background contributions, and varies between 0.95 and 0.99. The integrated luminosity is denoted by Lint. The combined branching fraction B for the channels under study is a product of B(cD(2010)±)=0.2429 ± 0.0049 [43] and B(D(2010)±K+π±+πslow±) = 0.0266 ± 0.0003 [39]. The correction factor C accounts for the acceptance and efficiency of the detector. The latter is determined using the MC simulation and is defined as the ratio of the number of reconstructed W+D(2010)± candidates to the number of generated W+D(2010)± originating from W+c events that fulfill the fiducial requirements. In the measurement of the W++c¯ (W++D(2010)-) and W-+c (W-+D(2010)+) cross sections, the factor C is determined separately for different charge combinations.

The measurement of the W+c cross section relies to a large extent on the MC simulation and requires extrapolation to unmeasured phase space. To reduce the extrapolation and the corresponding uncertainty, the cross section for W+D(2010)± production is also determined in the fiducial phase space of the detector-level measurement, pTμ>26Ge, |ημ|<2.4, |ηD|<2.4 and pTD>5Ge, in a similar way by modifying Eq. (2) as follows: only the branching fraction B=B(D(2010)±K+π±+πslow±) is considered and the factor C is defined as the ratio between the numbers of reconstructed and of generated W+D(2010)± candidates in the fiducial phase space after OS-SS subtraction.

The cross sections are determined inclusively and also in five bins of the absolute pseudorapidity |ημ| of the muon originating from the W boson decay. The number of signal (OS-SS) events in each range of |ημ| is shown in Fig. 3. Good agreement between the data and MC simulation within the statistical uncertainties is observed.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Number of events after OS-SS subtraction for data (filled circles) and MC simulation (filled histograms) as a function of |ημ|

Systematic uncertainties

The efficiencies and the assumptions relevant for the measurement are varied within their uncertainties to estimate the systematic uncertainty in the cross section measurement. The resulting shift of the cross section with respect to the central result is taken as the corresponding uncertainty contribution. The various sources of the systematic uncertainties in the W+c production cross section are listed in Table 1 for both the inclusive and the differential measurements.

  • Uncertainties associated with the integrated luminosity measurement are estimated as 2.5% [44].

  • The uncertainty in the tracking efficiency is 2.3% for the 2016 data. It is determined using the same method described in Ref. [45], which exploits the ratio of branching fractions between the four-body and two-body decays of the neutral charm meson to all-charged final states.

  • The uncertainty in the branching fraction of the cD(2010)± is 2.4% [43].

  • The muon systematic uncertainties are 1% each for the muon identification and isolation, and 0.5% for the trigger and tracking corrections. These are added in quadrature and the resulting uncertainty for muons is 1.2%, which is referred to as the ‘muon uncertainty’.

  • The uncertainty in the determination of Nsel is estimated from the difference in using a Gaussian or Crystal Ball fit [46]. The largest value of this uncertainty determined differentially, 1.5%, is considered for all.

  • Uncertainties in the modeling of kinematic observables of the generated D(2010)± meson are estimated by reweighting the simulated pTD and |ηD| distributions to the shape observed in data. The respective uncertainty in the inclusive cross section measurement is 0.5%. Due to statistical limitations, this uncertainty is determined inclusively in |ημ|.

  • The uncertainty in the difference of the normalization of the Δm(D,D0) distributions for Kπ±π± and K±π±π combinations (’background normalization’) is 0.5%.

  • Uncertainties in the measured pTmiss are estimated in Ref. [47] and result in an overall uncertainty of 0.9% for this analysis.

  • Uncertainties due to the modeling of pileup are estimated by varying the total inelastic cross section used in the simulation of pileup events by 5%. The corresponding uncertainty in the W+c cross section is 2%.

  • The uncertainty related to the requirement of a valid secondary vertex, fitted from the tracks associated with a D0 candidate, is determined by calculating the D(2010)± reconstruction efficiency in data and MC simulation for events with and without applying this selection criterion. The number of reconstructed D(2010)± candidates after the SS event subtraction is compared for events with or without a valid secondary vertex along with the proximity requirement (Δxy<0.1cm, Δz<0.1cm). The difference in efficiency between data and MC simulation is calculated and an uncertainty in the inclusive cross section of -1.1% is obtained. Since this variation is not symmetric, the uncertainty is one-sided.

  • The PDF uncertainties are determined according to the prescription of the PDF group [31]. These are added in quadrature to the uncertainty related to the variation of αS(mZ) in the PDF, resulting in an uncertainty of 1.2% in the inclusive cross section.

  • The uncertainty associated with the fragmentation of the c quark into a D(2010)± meson is determined through variations of the function describing the fragmentation parameter z=pTD/pTc. The investigation of this uncertainty is inspired by a dedicated measurement of the cD(2010)± fragmentation function in electron-proton collisions [48], in which the fragmentation parameters in various phenomenological models were determined with an uncertainty of 10%. In the pythia MC event generator, the fragmentation is described by the phenomenological Bowler–Lund function [49, 50], in the form
    f(z)=1zrcbmq2(1-z)aexp(-bm2/z)c,
    with m=mD2+pTD2, controlled by the two parameters a and b. In the case of charm quarks, rc = 1 and mq=1.5Ge are the pythia standard settings in the CUETP8M1 tune, whereas the value of m is related to the average transverse momentum of generated D(2010)± in the MC sample. The parameters a, b and c are determined in a fit to the simulated distribution of f(z), where c is needed for the normalization. Since the presence of a jet is not required in the analysis, the charm quark transverse momentum is approximated by summing up the transverse momenta of tracks in a cone of ΔR 0.4 around the axis of the D(2010)± candidate. The free parameters are determined as a=1.827±0.016 and b=0.00837±0.00005Ge-2. To estimate the uncertainty, the parameters a and b are varied within ±10% around their central values, following the precision achieved for the fragmentation parameters in [48]. An additional constraint on the upper boundary on the a parameter in pythia is consistent with this 10% variation. The resulting uncertainty in the cross section is 3.9%.

Table 1.

Systematic uncertainties [%] in the inclusive and differential W+c cross section measurement in the fiducial region of the analysis. The total uncertainty corresponds to the sum of the individual contributions in quadrature. The contributions listed in the top part of the table cancel in the ratio σ(W++c¯)/σ(W-+c)

Pseudorapidity [|ημ|] [0, 2.4] [0, 0.4] [0.4, 0.8] [0.8, 1.3] [1.3, 1.8] [1.8, 2.4]
Luminosity ± 2.5 ± 2.5 ± 2.5 ± 2.5 ± 2.5 ± 2.5
Tracking ± 2.3 ± 2.3 ± 2.3 ± 2.3 ± 2.3 ± 2.3
Branching ± 2.4 ± 2.4 ± 2.4 ± 2.4 ± 2.4 ± 2.4
Muons ± 1.2 ± 1.2 ± 1.2 ± 1.2 ± 1.2 ± 1.2
Nsel determination ± 1.5 ± 1.5 ± 1.5 ± 1.5 ± 1.5 ± 1.5
D(2010)± ± 0.5 ± 0.5 ± 0.5 ± 0.5 ± 0.5 ± 0.5
kinematics
Background
normalization ±  0.5 + 0.9/− 0.8 + 1.9/− 0.8 + 1.4/− 0.5 + 0.8/− 1.0 0.0/− 0.6
pTmiss + 0.7/− 0.9 + 0.4/− 1.2 + 1.3/− 0.3 + 1.1/− 1.0 0.0/− 2.6 0.0/+ 1.5
Pileup + 2.0/− 1.9 + 0.4/− 0.5 + 2.9/− 3.0 + 2.0/− 1.9 + 4.6/− 5.1 + 2.7/− 2.6
Secondary vertex − 1.1 + 1.3 − 1.2 − 1.5 − 2.7 − 2.5
PDF ± 1.2 ± 1.3 ± 0.9 ± 1.4 ± 1.5 ± 1.7
Fragmentation + 3.9/− 3.2 + 3.4/− 1.8 + 7.4/− 5.2 + 3.3/− 3.0 + 2.2/− 1.2 + 7.4/− 5.7
MC statistics + 3.6/− 3.3 + 8.8/− 7.5 + 9.0/− 11.9 + 7.9/− 6.8 + 9.8/− 14.1 + 10.1/− 8.5
Total + 7.5/− 7.0 + 10.7/− 9.3 + 13.2/− 14.2 + 10.1/− 9.3 + 12.7/− 16.2 + 13.8/− 12.1

Cross section results

The numbers of signal events and the inclusive fiducial cross sections with their uncertainties are listed in Table 2 together with the ratio of σ(W++c¯)/σ(W-+c). For the differential measurement of the W+c cross section, the numbers of signal events are summarized in Table 3 together with the corrections C derived using MC simulations in each |ημ| bin. The results are presented for dσ(W+c)/d|ημ|, as well as for dσ(W++c¯)/d|ημ| and for dσ(W-+c)/d|ημ|.

Table 2.

Inclusive cross sections of W+c and W+D(2010)± production in the fiducial range of the analysis. The correction factor C accounts for the acceptance and efficiency of the detector

W+c W++c¯ W-+c
Nsel 19210 ± 587(stat) 9674 ± 401(stat) 9546 ± 367(stat)
C 0.0811 ± 0.003(stat) 0.0832 ± 0.004(stat) 0.0794 ± 0.004(stat)
σ [pb] 1026 ± 31(stat) +76-72 (syst) 504 ± 21(stat) ±42(syst) 521 ± 20(stat) +42-40 (syst)
σ(W++c¯)σ(W-+c) 0.968 ± 0.055(stat) +0.015-0.028
W+D(2010)± W++D(2010)- W-+D(2010)+
Nsel 19210 ± 587(stat) 9674 ± 401(stat) 9546 ± 367(stat)
C 0.107 ± 0.004(stat) 0.113 ± 0.006(stat) 0.101 ± 0.004(stat)
σ [pb] 190 ± 6(stat) +12-13 (syst) 90 ± 4(stat) +7-8 (syst) 99 ± 3(stat) ±7(syst)
σ(W++D(2010)-)σ(W-+D(2010)+) 0.909 ± 0.051(stat) +0.014-0.028

Table 3.

Number of signal events, correction factors C, accounting for the acceptance and efficiency of the detector and the differential cross sections in each |ημ| range for W+c (upper), W++c¯ (middle) and W-+c (lower)

[|ηminμ|,|ηmaxμ|] Nsel C dσ(W+c)d|ημ| [pb]
W+c
   [0, 0.4] 3795 ± 248(stat) 0.072 ± 0.006(stat) 569 ± 37(stat) +61-53
   [0.4, 0.8] 4201 ± 256(stat) 0.096 ± 0.006(stat) 467 ± 28(stat) +61-66
   [0.8, 1.3] 4334 ± 274(stat) 0.078 ± 0.006(stat) 479 ± 30(stat) +49-45
   [1.3, 1.8] 3823 ± 267(stat) 0.083 ± 0.007(stat) 395 ± 28(stat) +49-63
   [1.8, 2.4] 3042 ± 266(stat) 0.078 ± 0.007(stat) 283 ± 25(stat) +39-34
[|ηminμ|,|ηmaxμ|] Nsel C dσ(W++c¯)d|ημ| [pb]
W++c¯
   [0, 0.4] 2109 ± 167(stat) 0.073 ± 0.008(stat) 313 ± 25(stat) +48-44
   [0.4, 0.8] 2119 ± 172(stat) 0.094 ± 0.010(stat) 236 ± 19(stat) +37-41
   [0.8, 1.3] 2103 ± 186(stat) 0.077 ± 0.008(stat) 235 ± 21(stat) +33-27
   [1.3, 1.8] 1840 ± 184(stat) 0.093 ± 0.010(stat) 162 ± 16(stat) +34-31
   [1.8, 2.4] 1499 ± 186(stat) 0.080 ± 0.011(stat) 135 ± 17(stat) +24-26
[|ηminμ|,|ηmaxμ|] Nsel C dσ(W-+c)d|ημ| [pb]
W-+c
   [0, 0.4] 1688 ± 158(stat) 0.072 ± 0.008(stat) 255 ± 23(stat) +35-42
   [0.4, 0.8] 2084 ± 162(stat) 0.097 ± 0.008(stat) 231 ± 18(stat) +28-42
   [0.8, 1.3] 2234 ± 172(stat) 0.079 ± 0.007(stat) 244 ± 19(stat) +29-38
   [1.3, 1.8] 1986 ± 166(stat) 0.073 ± 0.008(stat) 237 ± 20(stat) +33-37
   [1.8, 2.4] 1544 ± 161(stat) 0.075 ± 0.008(stat) 149 ± 16(stat) +25-21

The measured inclusive and differential fiducial cross sections of W+c are compared to predictions at NLO (O(αs2)) that are obtained using mcfm 6.8. Similarly to the earlier analysis [11], the mass of the charm quark is chosen to be mc=1.5Ge, and the factorization and the renormalization scales are set to the value of the W boson mass. The calculation is performed for pTμ>26Ge, |ημ|<2.4, and pTc>5Ge. In Fig. 4, the measurements of the inclusive W+c cross section and the charge ratio are compared to the NLO predictions calculated using the ABMP16nlo [51], ATLASepWZ16nnlo [14], CT14nlo [52], MMHT14nlo [53], NNPDF3.0nlo [31], and NNPDF3.1nlo [54] PDF sets. The values of the strong coupling constant αS(mZ) are set to those used in the evaluation of a particular PDF. The details of the experimental data, used for constraining the strange quark content of the proton in the global PDFs, are given in Refs. [14, 31, 52, 53, 55]. In these references, the treatment of the sea quark distributions in different PDF sets is discussed, and the comparison of the PDFs is presented. The ABMP16nlo PDF includes the most recent data on charm quark production in charged-current neutrino-nucleon DIS collected by the NOMAD and CHORUS experiments in order to improve the constraints on the strange quark distribution and to perform a detailed study of the isospin asymmetry of the light quarks in the proton sea [56]. Despite differences in the data used in the individual global PDF fits, the strangeness suppression distributions in ABMP16nlo, NNPDF3.1nlo, CT14nlo and MMHT14nlo are in a good agreement among each other and disagree with the ATLASepWZ16nnlo result [14].

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

Inclusive fiducial cross section σ(W+c) and the cross section ratio σ(W++c¯)/σ(W-+c) at 13Te. The data are represented by a line with the statistical (total) uncertainty shown by a light (dark) shaded band. The measurements are compared to the NLO QCD prediction using several PDF sets, represented by symbols of different types. All used PDF sets are evaluated at NLO, except for ATLASepWZ16, which is obtained at NNLO. The error bars depict the total theoretical uncertainty, including the PDF and the scale variation uncertainty

The predicted inclusive cross sections are summarized in Table 4. The PDF uncertainties are calculated using prescriptions from each PDF group. For the ATLASepWZ16nnlo PDFs no respective NLO set is available and only Hessian uncertainties are considered in this paper. For other PDFs, the variation of αs(mZ) is taken into account as well. The uncertainties due to missing higher-order corrections are estimated by varying μr and μf simultaneously by a factor of 2 up and down, and the resulting variation of the cross section is referred to as the scale uncertainty, Δμ. Good agreement between NLO predictions and the measurements is observed, except for the prediction using ATLASepWZ16nnlo. For the cross section ratio σ(W++c¯)/σ(W-+c), all theoretical predictions are in good agreement with the measured value. In Table 5, the theoretical predictions for dσ(W+c)/d|ημ| using different PDF sets are summarized. In Fig. 5, the measurements of differential W+c and W+D(2010)± cross sections are compared with the mcfm NLO calculations and with the signal MC prediction, respectively. Good agreement between the measured W+c cross section and NLO calculations is observed except for the prediction using the ATLASepWZ16nnlo PDF set. The signal MC prediction using NNPDF3.0nlo is presented with the PDF and αs uncertainties and accounts for simultaneous variations of μr and μf in the matrix element by a factor of 2. The W+D(2010)± cross section is described well by the simulation.

Table 4.

The NLO predictions for σ(W+c), obtained with mcfm [1719]. The uncertainties account for PDF and scale variations

σ(W+c) [pb] ΔPDF [%] Δμ [%] σ(W++c¯)/σ(W-+c)
ABMP16nlo 1077.9 ± 2.1 +3.4-2.4 0.975 +0.002-0.002
ATLASepWZ16nnlo 1235.1 +1.4-1.6 +3.7-2.8 0.976 +0.001-0.001
CT14nlo 992.6 +7.2-8.4 +3.1-2.1 0.970 +0.005-0.007
MMHT14nlo 1057.1 +6.5-8.0 +3.2-2.2 0.960 +0.023-0.033
NNPDF3.0nlo 959.5 ± 5.4 +2.8-1.9 0.962 +0.034-0.034
NNPDF3.1nlo 1030.2 ± 5.3 +3.2-2.2 0.965 +0.043-0.043

Table 5.

Theoretical predictions for dσ(W+c)/d|ημ| calculated with mcfm at NLO for different PDF sets. The relative uncertainties due to PDF and scale variations are shown

[|ηminμ|,|ηmaxμ|] ABMP16nlo ATLASepWZ16nnlo
dσ(W+c)d|ημ|[pb] ΔPDF[%] Δμ [%] dσ(W+c)d|ημ|[pb] ΔPDF[%] Δμ[%]
[0, 0.4] 537.8 ± 2.2 +3.7-1.9 607.8 +1.1-1.3 +4.2-2.4
[0.4, 0.8] 522.8 ± 2.1 +3.1-2.3 592.9 +1.1-1.3 +3.5-2.7
[0.8, 1.3] 483.9 ± 2.1 +3.2-2.1 552.7 +1.2-1.4 +3.6-2.5
[1.3, 1.8] 422.4 ± 2.0 +3.4-2.9 487.8 +1.4-1.6 +3.8-3.3
[1.8, 2.4] 334.1 ± 2.0 +3.4-3.0 391.1 +2.2-2.3 +3.6-3.3
[|ηminμ|,|ηmaxμ|] CT14nlo MMHT14nlo
dσ(W+c)d|ημ|[pb] ΔPDF[%] Δμ[%]    dσ(W+c)d|ημ|[pb] ΔPDF[%] Δμ[%]
[0, 0.4] 499.3 +7.0-8.0 +3.4-1.7 526.0 +7.0-7.7 +3.6-1.8
[0.4, 0.8] 484.4 +7.0-8.0 +2.9-2.1 511.2 +6.8-7.7 +3.0-2.1
[0.8, 1.3] 446.3 +6.9-8.2 +2.9-1.8 473.4 +6.4-7.7 +3.0-1.9
[1.3, 1.8] 387.0 +7.1-8.5 +3.1-2.6 414.4 +6.0-8.0 +3.2-2.7
[1.8, 2.4] 304.1 +7.8-9.3 +3.0-2.6 330.5 +6.5-9.1 +3.2-2.7
[|ηminμ|,|ηmaxμ|] NNPDF3.0nlo NNPDF3.1nlo
dσ(W+c)d|ημ|[pb] ΔPDF[%] Δμ[%] dσ(W+c)d|ημ|[pb] ΔPDF[%] Δμ[%]
[0, 0.4] 489.8 ± 7.0 +3.2-1.5 524.8 ± 5.8 +3.6-1.8
[0.4, 0.8] 473.2 ± 6.5 +2.7-1.8 508.1 ± 5.6 +3.0-2.2
[0.8, 1.3] 432.4 ± 5.5 +2.6-1.5 465.6 ± 5.4 +3.0-1.9
[1.3, 1.8] 370.4 ± 4.2 +2.7-2.3 399.0 ± 5.0 +3.1-2.7
[1.8, 2.4] 288.1 ± 3.5 +2.7-2.3 307.9 ± 4.8 +3.1-2.6

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

Left: Differential cross sections of σ(W+c) production at 13Te measured as a function |ημ|. The data are presented by filled circles with the statistical (total) uncertainties shown by vertical error bars (light shaded bands). The measurements are compared to the QCD predictions calculated with mcfm at NLO using different PDF sets, presented by symbols of different style. All used PDF sets are evaluated at NLO, except for ATLASepWZ16, which is obtained at NNLO. The error bars represent theoretical uncertainties, which include PDF and scale variation uncertainty. Right: σ(W+D(2010)±) production differential cross sections presented as a function of |ημ|. The data (filled circles) are shown with their total (outer error bars) and statistical (inner error bars) uncertainties and are compared to the predictions of the signal MC generated with MadGraph 5_amc@nlo and using NNPDF3.0nlo to describe the proton structure. PDF uncertainties and scale variations are accounted for and added in quadrature (shaded band)

Impact on the strange quark distribution in the proton

The associated W+c production at 13Te probes the strange quark distribution directly in the kinematic range of x0.007 at the scale of mW2. The first measurement of a fiducial W+c cross section in pp collisions was performed by the CMS experiment at a center-of-mass energy s=7Te with a total integrated luminosity of 5fb-1  [11]. The results were used in a QCD analysis [10] together with measurements of neutral- and charged-current cross sections of DIS at HERA [57] and of the lepton charge asymmetry in W production at s=7Te at the LHC [11].

The present measurement of the W+c production cross section at 13Te, determined as a function of the absolute pseudorapidity |ημ| of the muon from the W boson decay and pTμ>26Ge, is used in an NLO QCD analysis. This analysis also includes an updated combination of the inclusive DIS cross sections [58] and the available CMS measurements of the lepton charge asymmetry in W boson production at s=7Te [11] and at s=8Te [59]. These latter measurements probe the valence quark distributions in the kinematic range 10-3x10-1 and have indirect sensitivity to the strange quark distribution. The earlier CMS measurement [10] of W+c production at s=7Te is also used to exploit the strange quark sensitive measurements at CMS in a joint QCD analysis. The correlations of the experimental uncertainties within each individual data set are taken into account, whereas the CMS data sets are treated as uncorrelated to each other. In particular, the measurements of W+c production at 7 and 13Te are treated as uncorrelated because of the different methods of charm tagging and the differences in reconstruction and event selection in the two data sets.

The theoretical predictions for the muon charge asymmetry and for W+c production are calculated at NLO using the mcfm program [17, 18], which is interfaced to applgrid 1.4.56 [60].

Version 2.0.0 of the open-source QCD fit framework for PDF determination xFitter [61, 62] is used with the parton distributions evolved using the Dokshitzer–Gribov–Lipatov–Altarelli–Parisi equations [6368] at NLO, as implemented in the qcdnum 17-00/06 program [69].

The Thorne–Roberts [70, 71] general mass variable flavor number scheme at NLO is used for the treatment of heavy quark contributions with heavy quark masses mb=4.5Ge and mc=1.5Ge, which correspond to the values used in the signal MC simulation in the cross section measurements. The renormalization and factorization scales are set to Q, which denotes the four-momentum transfer for the case of the DIS data and the mass of the W boson for the case of the muon charge asymmetry and the W+c measurement. The strong coupling constant is set to αs(mZ)=0.118. The Q2 range of HERA data is restricted to Q2Qmin2=3.5Ge2 to ensure the applicability of pQCD over the kinematic range of the fit. The procedure for the determination of the PDFs follows the approach used in the earlier CMS analyses [11, 59]. In the following, a similar PDF parameterization is used as in the most recent CMS QCD analysis [59] of inclusive W boson production.

The parameterized PDFs are the gluon distribution, xg, the valence quark distributions, xuv, xdv, the u-type, xu¯, and xd¯-type anti-quark distributions, with xs (xs¯) denoting the strange (anti-)quark distribution. The initial scale of the QCD evolution is chosen as Q02=1.9Ge2. At this scale, the parton distributions are parameterized as:

xuv(x)=AuvxBuv(1-x)Cuv(1+Euvx2), 3
xdv(x)=AdvxBdv(1-x)Cdv, 4
xu¯(x)=Au¯xBu¯(1-x)Cu¯(1+Eu¯x2), 5
xd¯(x)=Ad¯xBd¯(1-x)Cd¯, 6
xs¯(x)=As¯xBs¯(1-x)Cs¯, 7
xg(x)=AgxBg(1-x)Cg. 8

The normalization parameters Auv, Adv, Ag are determined by the QCD sum rules, the B parameter is responsible for small-x behavior of the PDFs, and the parameter C describes the shape of the distribution as x1. The strangeness fraction fs=s¯/(d¯+s¯) is a free parameter in the fit.

The strange quark distribution is determined by fitting the free parameters in Eqs. (3)–(8). The constraint Au¯=Ad¯ ensures the same normalization for u¯ and d¯ densities at x0. It is assumed that xs=xs¯.

In the earlier CMS analysis [11], the assumption Bu¯=Bd¯ was applied. An alternative assumption Bu¯Bd¯ led to a significant change in the result, which was included in the parameterization uncertainty. In the present analysis, the B parameters of the light sea quarks are independent from each other, Bu¯Bd¯Bs¯, following the suggestion of Ref. [15].

For all measured data, the predicted and measured cross sections together with their corresponding uncertainties are used to build a global χ2, minimized to determine the initial PDF parameters [61, 62]. The quality of the overall fit can be judged based on the global χ2 divided by the number of degrees of freedom, ndof. For each data set included in the fit, a partial χ2 divided by the number of measurements (data points), ndp, is provided. The correlated part of χ2 quantifies the influence of the correlated systematic uncertainties in the fit. The global and partial χ2 values for each data set are listed in Table 6, illustrating a general agreement among all the data sets.

Table 6.

The partial χ2 per number of data points, ndp, and the global χ2 per number of degree of freedom, ndof, resulting from the PDF fit

Data set χ2/ndp
HERA I+II charged current e+p 43/39
HERA I+II charged current e-p 57/42
HERA I+II neutral current e-p 218/159
HERA I+II neutral current e+p, Ep = 820Ge 69/70
HERA I+II neutral current e+p, Ep = 920Ge 448/377
HERA I+II neutral current e+p, Ep = 460Ge 216/204
HERA I+II neutral current e+p, Ep = 575Ge 220/254
CMS W muon charge asymmetry 7Te 13/11
CMS W muon charge asymmetry 8Te 4.2/11
CMS W+c 7Te 2.2/5
CMS W+c 13Te 2.1/5
Correlated χ2 87
Total χ2/dof 1385/1160

The PDF uncertainties are investigated according to the general approach of HERAPDF 1.0 [57]. The experimental PDF uncertainties arising from the uncertainties in the measurements are estimated by using the Hessian method [72], adopting the tolerance criterion of Δχ2=1. The experimental uncertainties correspond to 68% confidence level. Alternatively, the experimental uncertainties in the measurements are propagated to the extracted QCD fit parameters using the MC method [73, 74]. In this method, 426 replicas of pseudodata are generated, with measured values for the cross sections allowed to vary within the statistical and systematic uncertainties. For each of them, the PDF fit is performed and the uncertainty is estimated as the root-mean-square around the central value. Because of possible nonGaussian tails in the PDF uncertainties, the MC method is usually considered to be more robust and to give more realistic uncertainties, in particular for PDFs not strongly constrained by the measurements, e.g., in the case of too little or not very precise data. In Fig. 6, the distributions of the strange quark content s(x,Q2), and of the strangeness suppression factor rs(x,μf2)=(s+s¯)/(u¯+d¯) are presented.

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

The s quark distribution (upper) and the strangeness suppression factor (lower) as functions of x at the factorization scale of 1.9Ge 2 (left) and mW2 (right). The results of the current analysis are presented with the fit uncertainties estimated by the Hessian method (hatched band) and using MC replicas (shaded band)

In Fig. 7 the strangeness suppression factor is shown in comparison with the ATLASepWZ16nnlo and the ABMP16nlo, similar to Fig. 1 in Ref. [15]. Whereas the CMS result for rs(x) is close to the ABMP16nlo PDF, it shows a significant difference with regard to the ATLASepWZ16nnlo PDF for x>10-3. The significant excess of the strange quark content in the proton reported by ATLAS [14] is not observed in the present analysis.

Fig. 7.

Fig. 7

The strangeness suppression factor as a function of x at the factorization scale of 1.9Ge 2 (left) and mW2 (right). The results of the current analysis (hatched band) are compared to ABMP16nlo (dark shaded band) and ATLASepWZ16nnlo (light shaded band) PDFs

To investigate the impact of model assumptions on the resulting PDFs, alternative fits are performed, in which the heavy quark masses are varied as 4.3mb5.0Ge, 1.37mc1.55Ge, and the value of Qmin2 imposed on the HERA data is varied in the interval 2.5Qmin25.0Ge2. Also, the variations in PDF parameterization, following Ref. [59] are investigated. These variations do not alter the results for the strange quark distribution or the suppression factor significantly, compared to the PDF fit uncertainty. Since each global PDF group is using their own assumptions for the values of heavy quark masses and cutoffs on the DIS data, these model variations are not quantified further.

To compare the results of the present PDF fit with the earlier determination of the strange quark content in the proton at CMS [11], the “free-s” parameterization of Ref. [11] is used. There, a flexible form [70, 71] for the gluon distribution was adopted, allowing the gluon to be negative. Furthermore, the condition Bu¯=Bd¯=Bs¯ was applied in the central parameterization, while Bd¯Bs¯ was used to estimate the parameterization uncertainty. A complete release of the condition Bu¯=Bd¯=Bs¯ was not possible because of limited data input, in contrast to the current analysis. The same PDF parameterization was used in the ATLASepWZ16nnlo analysis [14]. The results are presented in Fig. 8. The central value obtained of the s quark distribution is well within the experimental uncertainty of the results at s=7Te, while the PDF uncertainty is reduced.

Fig. 8.

Fig. 8

The distributions of s quarks (upper panel) in the proton and their relative uncertainty (lower panel) as a functions of x at the factorization scale of 1.9Ge 2 (left) and mW2 (right). The result of the current analysis (filled band) is compared to the result of Ref. [11] (dashed band). The PDF uncertainties resulting from the fit are shown

Summary

Associated production of W bosons with charm quarks in proton–proton collisions at s=13Te is measured using the data collected by the CMS experiment in 2016 and corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 35.7fb-1. The W boson is detected via the presence of a high-pT muon and missing transverse momentum, suggesting the presence of a neutrino. The charm quark is identified via the full reconstruction of the D(2010)± meson decaying to D0+πslow±K+π±+πslow±. Since in W+c production the W boson and the c quark have opposite charge, contributions from background processes, mainly c quark production from gluon splitting, are largely removed by subtracting the events in which the charges of the W boson and of the D(2010)± meson have the same sign. The fiducial cross sections are measured in the kinematic range of the muon transverse momentum pTμ>26Ge, pseudorapidity |ημ|<2.4, and transverse momentum of the charm quark pTc>5Ge. The fiducial cross section of W+D(2010)± production is measured in the kinematic range pTμ>26Ge, |ημ|<2.4, transverse momentum of the D(2010)± meson pTD>5Ge and |ηD|<2.4, and compared to the Monte Carlo prediction. The measurements are performed inclusively and in five bins of |ημ|.

The obtained values for the inclusive fiducial W+c cross section and for the cross section ratio are:

σ(W+c)=1026±31(stat)+76-72(syst) pb, 9
σ(W++c¯)σ(W-+c)=0.968±0.055(stat)+0.015-0.028(syst). 10

The measurements are in good agreement with the theoretical predictions at next-to-leading order (NLO) for different sets of parton distribution functions (PDF), except for the one using the ATLASepWZ16nnlo PDF. To illustrate the impact of these measurements in the determination of the strange quark distribution in the proton, the data is used in a QCD analysis at NLO together with inclusive DIS measurements and earlier results from CMS on W+c production and the lepton charge asymmetry in W boson production. The strange quark distribution and the strangeness suppression factor rs(x,μf2)=(s+s¯)/(u¯+d¯) are determined and agree with earlier results obtained in neutrino scattering experiments. The results do not support the hypothesis of an enhanced strange quark contribution in the proton quark sea reported by ATLAS [14].

Acknowledgements

We congratulate our colleagues in the CERN accelerator departments for the excellent performance of the LHC and thank the technical and administrative staffs at CERN and at other CMS institutes for their contributions to the success of the CMS effort. In addition, we gratefully acknowledge the computing centers and personnel of the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid for delivering so effectively the computing infrastructure essential to our analyses. Finally, we acknowledge the enduring support for the construction and operation of the LHC and the CMS detector provided by the following funding agencies: BMBWF and FWF (Austria); FNRS and FWO (Belgium); CNPq, CAPES, FAPERJ, FAPERGS, and FAPESP (Brazil); MES (Bulgaria); CERN; CAS, MoST, and NSFC (China); COLCIENCIAS (Colombia); MSES and CSF (Croatia); RPF (Cyprus); SENESCYT (Ecuador); MoER, ERC IUT, and ERDF (Estonia); Academy of Finland, MEC, and HIP (Finland); CEA and CNRS/IN2P3 (France); BMBF, DFG, and HGF (Germany); GSRT (Greece); NKFIA (Hungary); DAE and DST (India); IPM (Iran); SFI (Ireland); INFN (Italy); MSIP and NRF (Republic of Korea); MES (Latvia); LAS (Lithuania); MOE and UM (Malaysia); BUAP, CINVESTAV, CONACYT, LNS, SEP, and UASLP-FAI (Mexico); MOS (Montenegro); MBIE (New Zealand); PAEC (Pakistan); MSHE and NSC (Poland); FCT (Portugal); JINR (Dubna); MON, RosAtom, RAS, RFBR, and NRC KI (Russia); MESTD (Serbia); SEIDI, CPAN, PCTI, and FEDER (Spain); MOSTR (Sri Lanka); Swiss Funding Agencies (Switzerland); MST (Taipei); ThEPCenter, IPST, STAR, and NSTDA (Thailand); TUBITAK and TAEK (Turkey); NASU and SFFR (Ukraine); STFC (United Kingdom); DOE and NSF (USA).

Individuals have received support from the Marie-Curie program and the European Research Council and Horizon 2020 Grant, contract No. 675440 (European Union); the Leventis Foundation; the A. P. Sloan Foundation; the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation; the Belgian Federal Science Policy Office; the Fonds pour la Formation à la Recherche dans l’Industrie et dans l’Agriculture (FRIA-Belgium); the Agentschap voor Innovatie door Wetenschap en Technologie (IWT-Belgium); the F.R.S.-FNRS and FWO (Belgium) under the “Excellence of Science - EOS” - be.h project n. 30820817; the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (MEYS) of the Czech Republic; the Lendület (“Momentum”) Programme and the János Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the New National Excellence Program ÚNKP, the NKFIA research grants 123842, 123959, 124845, 124850 and 125105 (Hungary); the Council of Science and Industrial Research, India; the HOMING PLUS program of the Foundation for Polish Science, cofinanced from European Union, Regional Development Fund, the Mobility Plus program of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, the National Science Center (Poland), contracts Harmonia 2014/14/M/ST2/00428, Opus 2014/13/B/ST2/02543, 2014/15/B/ST2/03998, and 2015/19/B/ST2/02861, Sonata-bis 2012/07/E/ST2/01406; the National Priorities Research Program by Qatar National Research Fund; the Programa Estatal de Fomento de la Investigación Científica y Técnica de Excelencia María de Maeztu, grant MDM-2015-0509 and the Programa Severo Ochoa del Principado de Asturias; the Thalis and Aristeia programs cofinanced by EU-ESF and the Greek NSRF; the Rachadapisek Sompot Fund for Postdoctoral Fellowship, Chulalongkorn University and the Chulalongkorn Academic into Its 2nd Century Project Advancement Project (Thailand); the Welch Foundation, contract C-1845; and the Weston Havens Foundation (USA).

Data Availability Statement

This manuscript has no associated data or the data will not be deposited. [Authors’ comment: Release and preservation of data used by the CMS Collaboration as the basis for publications is guided by the CMS policy as written in its document “CMS data preservation, re-use and open access policy” (https://cms-docdb.cern.ch/cgi-bin/PublicDocDB/RetrieveFile?docid=6032&filename=CMSDataPolicyV1.2.pdf&version=2 ).]

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Data Availability Statement

This manuscript has no associated data or the data will not be deposited. [Authors’ comment: Release and preservation of data used by the CMS Collaboration as the basis for publications is guided by the CMS policy as written in its document “CMS data preservation, re-use and open access policy” (https://cms-docdb.cern.ch/cgi-bin/PublicDocDB/RetrieveFile?docid=6032&filename=CMSDataPolicyV1.2.pdf&version=2 ).]


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