Date

Measurement of the Total Compton Scattering Cross Section between 6.5 and 11 GeV

The GlueX collaboration Afzal, F. ; Akondi, C.S. ; Albrecht, M. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 870 (2025) 139914, 2025.
Inspire Record 2920657 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.165514

The total cross section for Compton scattering off atomic electrons, $γ+e\rightarrowγ'+e'$, was measured using photons with energies between 6.5 and 11.1 GeV incident on a $^9$Be target as part of the PrimEx-eta experiment in Hall D at Jefferson Lab. This is the first measurement of this fundamental QED process within this energy range. The total uncertainties of the cross section, combining the statistical and systematic components in quadrature, averaged to 3.4% across all energy bins. This not only demonstrates the capability of this experimental setup to perform precision cross-section measurements at forward angles but also allows us to compare with state-of-the-art QED calculations.

1 data table

$\gamma +e^- \rightarrow \gamma + e^-$ total cross section in bins of photon beam energy. The first uncertainties are statistical, and the second are systematic.


First measurement of $b$-jet mass with and without grooming

The LHCb collaboration Aaij, Roel ; Abdelmotteleb, Ahmed Sameh Wagih ; Abellan Beteta, Carlos ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 869 (2025) 139854, 2025.
Inspire Record 2922449 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.159893

The LHCb collaboration presents a novel suite of heavy-flavour jet substructure measurements at forward rapidity in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV. The jet mass is a perturbatively calculable probe of the virtuality of hard-scattered quarks and gluons, connecting small-distance quantum chromodynamics (QCD) with long-distance experimental measurement. It becomes dominated by nonperturbative corrections at small values, presenting an excellent test of QCD across a broad range of energies. Measuring heavy-flavour jet mass with a theoretically unambiguous flavour definition for the first time probes the gluon splitting mechanism for heavy-flavour production and pushes tests of perturbative QCD to unprecedented theoretical precision. Utilising the soft drop jet-grooming technique to access the perturbative jet core further enhances constraints on first-principles theory. Measurements of the jet mass for jets containing fully reconstructed $B^\pm$ hadrons are reported with and without grooming. These results offer unparalleled tests of quark flavour and mass dependence in QCD and provide a baseline for future studies of heavy-flavour jet quenching in heavy-ion collisions.

42 data tables

Groomed $B^\pm$-tagged jet invariant mass $m_{\textrm{jet,gr}}/p_{\textrm{T,jet}}$ for $R=0.5$ jets reconstructed in pp data, without any WTA flavour requirement. Normalization is set to unity. $10 < p_{\textrm{T,jet}} < 12$ GeV, soft drop $z_{\textrm{cut}}=0.1, \beta=0$.

Groomed $B^\pm$-tagged jet invariant mass $m_{\textrm{jet,gr}}/p_{\textrm{T,jet}}$ for $R=0.5$ jets reconstructed in pp data, without any WTA flavour requirement. Normalization is set to unity. $12 < p_{\textrm{T,jet}} < 15$ GeV, soft drop $z_{\textrm{cut}}=0.1, \beta=0$.

Groomed $B^\pm$-tagged jet invariant mass $m_{\textrm{jet,gr}}/p_{\textrm{T,jet}}$ for $R=0.5$ jets reconstructed in pp data, without any WTA flavour requirement. Normalization is set to unity. $15 < p_{\textrm{T,jet}} < 20$ GeV, soft drop $z_{\textrm{cut}}=0.1, \beta=0$.

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Three-pion Bose-Einstein correlations measured in proton-proton collisions

The LHCb collaboration Aaij, Roel ; Abdelmotteleb, Ahmed Sameh Wagih ; Abellan Beteta, Carlos ; et al.
JHEP 08 (2025) 174, 2025.
Inspire Record 2928684 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.160692

A study on the Bose-Einstein correlations for triplets of same-sign pions is presented. The analysis is performed using proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of $\sqrt{s}$ = 7 TeV, recorded by the LHCb experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fb$^{-1}$. For the first time, the results are interpreted in the core-halo model. The parameters of the model are determined in regions of charged-particle multiplicity. This measurement provides insight into the nature of hadronisation in terms of coherence, showing a coherent emission of pions.

3 data tables

Results of the fit to the three-particle double ratio ($r_{d_{3}}$) for same-sign pion triplets, VELO track multiplicity for pp collision: 5-10.

Results of the fit to the three-particle double ratio ($r_{d_{3}}$) for same-sign pion triplets, VELO track multiplicity for pp collision: 11-20.

Results of the fit to the three-particle double ratio ($r_{d_{3}}$) for same-sign pion triplets, VELO track multiplicity for pp collision: 21-60.


Measurement of the $W \to μν_μ$ cross-sections as a function of the muon transverse momentum in $pp$ collisions at 5.02 TeV

The LHCb collaboration Aaij, Roel ; Abdelmotteleb, Ahmed Sameh Wagih ; Abellan Beteta, Carlos ; et al.
LHCb-PAPER-2025-031, 2025.
Inspire Record 2972386 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.165429

The $pp \to W^{\pm} (\to μ^{\pm} ν_μ) X$ cross-sections are measured at a proton-proton centre-of-mass energy $\sqrt{s} = 5.02$ TeV using a dataset corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 100 pb$^{-1}$ recorded by the LHCb experiment. Considering muons in the pseudorapidity range $2.2 < η< 4.4$, the cross-sections are measured differentially in twelve intervals of muon transverse momentum between $28 < p_\mathrm{T} < 52$ GeV. Integrated over $p_\mathrm{T}$, the measured cross-sections are \begin{align*} σ_{W^+ \to μ^+ ν_μ} &= 300.9 \pm 2.4 \pm 3.8 \pm 6.0~\text{pb}, \\ σ_{W^- \to μ^- \barν_μ} &= 236.9 \pm 2.1 \pm 2.7 \pm 4.7~\text{pb}, \end{align*} where the first uncertainties are statistical, the second are systematic, and the third are associated with the luminosity calibration. These integrated results are consistent with theoretical predictions. This analysis introduces a new method to determine the $W$-boson mass using the measured differential cross-sections corrected for detector effects. The measurement is performed on this statistically limited dataset as a proof of principle and yields \begin{align*} m_W = 80369 \pm 130 \pm 33~\text{MeV}, \end{align*} where the first uncertainty is experimental and the second is theoretical.

5 data tables

The measured differential cross sections ($d\sigma/dp_T$) for $W^+$. The first systematic uncertainty is statistical and the second is systematic.

The measured differential cross sections ($d\sigma/dp_T$) for $W^-$. The first systematic uncertainty is statistical and the second is systematic.

The correlation matrix corresponding to the statistical uncertainties on the differential cross-section ($d\sigma/dp_T$) fit results for $W^+$. To combine with $W^-$, use the rows and columns ordered as $W^+$ and then $W^-$. Assume no correlation in the statistical uncertainties between $W^+$ and $W^-$ (zero entries in the off-diagonal blocks).

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