We report on measurements of the inclusive jet production cross section as a function of the jet transverse momentum in pp-bar collisions at sqrt{s} = 1.96 TeV}, using the k_T algorithm and a data sample corresponding to 1.0 fb^-1 collected with the Collider Detector at Fermilab in Run II. The measurements are carried out in five different jet rapidity regions with |yjet| < 2.1 and transverse momentum in the range 54 < \ptjet < 700 GeV/c. Next-to-leading order perturbative QCD predictions are in good agreement with the measured cross sections.
Measured inclusive jet differential cross section as a function of PT for the rapidity range -0.1 to 0.1 with the jet resolution parameter D = 0.7.
Measured inclusive jet differential cross section as a function of PT for the absoloute rapidity range 0.1 to 0.7 with the jet resolution parameter D = 0.7.
Measured inclusive jet differential cross section as a function of PT for the absolute rapidity range 0.7 to 1.1 with the jet resolution parameter D = 0.7.
We measure the Drell-Yan differential cross section d2σdMdy||y|<1 over the mass range 11<M<150 GeV/c2 using dielectron and dimuon data from p¯p collisions at a center-of-mass energy of s=1.8 TeV. Our results show the 1M3 dependence that is expected from the naive Drell-Yan model. In comparison to the predictions of recent QCD calculations we find our data favor those parton distribution functions with the largest quark contributions in the x interval 0.006 to 0.03.
Dielectron differential cross section.
Dimuon differential cross section.
Drell-Yan differential cross section for combined dielectron and dimuon data. Error includes both statistics and systematics.
We present a measurement of the cross section for production of isolated prompt photons in p¯p collisions at √s =1.8 TeV. The cross section, measured as a function of transverse momentum (PT), agrees qualitatively with QCD calculations but has a steeper slope at low PT.
Additional normalization systematic uncertainty of 27 pct for first eleven entries, and +32 pct(-46 pct) for last four entries.