Measurement of event shape distributions and moments in e+ e- --> hadrons at 91-GeV - 209-GeV and a determination of alpha(s).

The OPAL collaboration Abbiendi, G. ; Ainsley, C. ; Akesson, P.F. ; et al.
Eur.Phys.J.C 40 (2005) 287-316, 2005.
Inspire Record 669402 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.48652

We have studied hadronic events from e+e- annihilation data at centre-of-mass energies from 91 to 209 GeV. We present distributions of event shape observables and their moments at each energy and compare with QCD Monte Carlo models. From the event shape distributions we extract the strong coupling alpha_s and test its evolution with energy scale. The results are consistent with the running of alpha_s expected from QCD. Combining all data, the value of alpha_s(M_Z) is determined to be alpha_s(M_Z) = 0.1191 +- 0.0005 (stat.) +- 0.0010 (expt.) +- 0.0011 (hadr.) +- 0.0044 (theo.). The energy evolution of the moments is also used to determine a value of alpha_s with slightly larger errors: alpha_s(M_Z) = 0.1223 +- 0.0005 (stat.) +- 0.0014 (expt.) +- 0.0016 (hadr.) +0.0054 -0.0036 (theo.).

1 data table match query

Moments of the THRUST(NAME=MINOR) distribution.


QCD analyses and determinations of alpha(s) in e+ e- annihilation at energies between 35-GeV and 189-GeV.

The JADE & OPAL collaborations Pfeifenschneider, P. ; Biebel, O. ; Movilla Fernandez, P.A. ; et al.
Eur.Phys.J.C 17 (2000) 19-51, 2000.
Inspire Record 513337 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.12882

We employ data taken by the JADE and OPAL experiments for an integrated QCD study in hadronic e+e- annihilations at c.m.s. energies ranging from 35 GeV through 189 GeV. The study is based on jet-multiplicity related observables. The observables are obtained to high jet resolution scales with the JADE, Durham, Cambridge and cone jet finders, and compared with the predictions of various QCD and Monte Carlo models. The strong coupling strength, alpha_s, is determined at each energy by fits of O(alpha_s^2) calculations, as well as matched O(alpha_s^2) and NLLA predictions, to the data. Matching schemes are compared, and the dependence of the results on the choice of the renormalization scale is investigated. The combination of the results using matched predictions gives alpha_s(MZ)=0.1187+{0.0034}-{0.0019}. The strong coupling is also obtained, at lower precision, from O(alpha_s^2) fits of the c.m.s. energy evolution of some of the observables. A qualitative comparison is made between the data and a recent MLLA prediction for mean jet multiplicities.

1 data table match query

N-Jet rates from the OPAL collaboration at c.m. energy 183 GeV. Jets defined using the DURHAM alogrithm.


Measurement of the Longitudinal Proton Structure Function at HERA

The ZEUS collaboration Chekanov, S. ; Derrick, M. ; Magill, S. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 682 (2009) 8-22, 2009.
Inspire Record 817462 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.53740

The reduced cross sections for ep deep inelastic scattering have been measured with the ZEUS detector at HERA at three different centre-of-mass energies, 318, 251 and 225 GeV. From the cross sections, measured double differentially in Bjorken x and the virtuality, Q^2, the proton structure functions FL and F2 have been extracted in the region 5*10^-4 < x <0.007 and 20 < Q^2 < 130 GeV^2.

50 data tables match query

The reduced cross section at Q**2 = 24 GeV**2 for centre-of-mass energy 318.

The reduced cross section at Q**2 = 32 GeV**2 for centre-of-mass energy 318.

The reduced cross section at Q**2 = 45 GeV**2 for centre-of-mass energy 318.

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Measurement of the I=1/2 $K \pi$ $\mathcal{S}$-wave amplitude from Dalitz plot analyses of $\eta_c \to K \bar K \pi$ in two-photon interactions

The BaBar collaboration Lees, J.P. ; Poireau, V. ; Tisserand, V. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 93 (2016) 012005, 2016.
Inspire Record 1403544 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.76968

We study the processes $\gamma \gamma \to K^0_S K^{\pm}\pi^{\mp}$ and $\gamma \gamma \to K^+ K^- \pi^0$ using a data sample of 519~$fb^{-1}$ recorded with the BaBar detector operating at the SLAC PEP-II asymmetric-energy $e^+ e^-$ collider at center-of-mass energies at and near the $\Upsilon(nS)$ ($n = 2,3,4$) resonances. We observe $\eta_c$ decays to both final states and perform Dalitz plot analyses using a model-independent partial wave analysis technique. This allows a model-independent measurement of the mass-dependence of the $I=1/2$ $K \pi$ $\mathcal{S}$-wave amplitude and phase. A comparison between the present measurement and those from previous experiments indicates similar behaviour for the phase up to a mass of 1.5 $GeV/c^2$. In contrast, the amplitudes show very marked differences. The data require the presence of a new $a_0(1950)$ resonance with parameters $m=1931 \pm 14 \pm 22 \ MeV/c^2$ and $\Gamma=271 \pm 22 \pm 29 \ MeV$.

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A Study of the reaction e+ e- ---> mu+ mu- around the Z0 pole

The DELPHI collaboration Abreu, P. ; Adam, W. ; Adami, F. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 260 (1991) 240-248, 1991.
Inspire Record 314619 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.29420

Measurements of the cross section and forward-backward asymmetry for the reaction e + e − → μ + μ − using the DELPHI detector at LEP are presented. The data come from a scan around the Z 0 peak at seven centre of mass energies, giving a sample of 3858 events in the polar angle region 22° < θ < 158°. From a fit to the cross section for 43° < θ < 137°, a polar angle region for which the absolute efficiency has been determined, the square root of the product of the Z 0 → e + e − and Z 0 → μ + μ − partial widths is determined to be (Γ e Γ μ ) 1 2 = 85.0 ± 0.9( stat. ) ± 0.8( syst. ) MeV . From this measurement of the partial width, the value of the effective weak mixing angle is determined to be sin 2 ( θ w ) = 0.2267 ± 0.0037 . The ratio of the hadronic to muon pair partial widths is found to be Γ h / Γ μ = 19.89 ± 0.40(stat.) ± 0.19(syst.). The forward-backward asymmetry at the resonance peak energy E CMS = 91.22 GeV is found to be A FB = 0.028 ± 0.020(stat.) ± 0.005(syst.). From a combined fit to the cross section and forward-backward asymmetry data, the products of the electron and muon vector and axial-vector coupling constants are determined to be V e V μ = 0.0024 ± 0.0015(stat.) ± 0.0004(syst.) and A e A μ = 0.253 ± 0.003(stat.) ± 0.003 (syst.). The results are in good agreement with the expectations of the minimal standard model.

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Search for a heavy charged boson in events with a charged lepton and missing transverse momentum from $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Brad ; Abbott, Dale Charles ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 100 (2019) 052013, 2019.
Inspire Record 1739784 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.90193

A search for a heavy charged-boson resonance decaying into a charged lepton (electron or muon) and a neutrino is reported. A data sample of 139 fb$^{-1}$ of proton-proton collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV collected with the ATLAS detector at the LHC during 2015-2018 is used in the search. The observed transverse mass distribution computed from the lepton and missing transverse momenta is consistent with the distribution expected from the Standard Model, and upper limits on the cross section for $pp \to W^\prime \to \ell\nu$ are extracted ($\ell = e$ or $\mu$). These vary between 1.3 pb and 0.05 fb depending on the resonance mass in the range between 0.15 and 7.0 TeV at 95% confidence level for the electron and muon channels combined. Gauge bosons with a mass below 6.0 TeV and 5.1 TeV are excluded in the electron and muon channels, respectively, in a model with a resonance that has couplings to fermions identical to those of the Standard Model $W$ boson. Cross-section limits are also provided for resonances with several fixed $\Gamma / m$ values in the range between 1% and 15%. Model-independent limits are derived in single-bin signal regions defined by a varying minimum transverse mass threshold. The resulting visible cross-section upper limits range between 4.6 (15) pb and 22 (22) ab as the threshold increases from 130 (110) GeV to 5.1 (5.1) TeV in the electron (muon) channel.

0 data tables match query

Measurement of flow harmonics correlations with mean transverse momentum in lead-lead and proton-lead collisions at $\sqrt{s_{NN}}=5.02$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Brad ; Abbott, Dale Charles ; et al.
Eur.Phys.J.C 79 (2019) 985, 2019.
Inspire Record 1743581 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.93057

To assess the properties of the quark-gluon plasma formed in heavy-ion collisions, the ATLAS experiment at the LHC measures a correlation between the mean transverse momentum and the magnitudes of the flow harmonics. The analysis uses data samples of lead-lead and proton-lead collisions obtained at the centre-of-mass energy per nucleon pair of 5.02 TeV, corresponding to total integrated luminosities of $22 ~\mu b^{-1}$ and $28~nb^{-1}$, respectively. The measurement is performed using a modified Pearson correlation coefficient with the charged-particle tracks on an event-by-event basis. The modified Pearson correlation coefficients for the $2^{nd}$-, 3$^{rd}$-, and 4$^{th}$-order harmonics are measured as a function of event centrality quantified as the number of charged particles or the number of nucleons participating in the collision. The measurements are performed for several intervals of the charged-particle transverse momentum. The correlation coefficients for all studied harmonics exhibit a strong centrality evolution in the lead-lead collisions, which only weakly depends on the charged-particle momentum range. In the proton-lead collisions, the modified Pearson correlation coefficient measured for the second harmonics shows only weak centrality dependence. The data is qualitatively described by the predictions based on the hydrodynamical model.

1 data table match query

The $cov(v_{3}^{2},[p_{T}])$ for Pb+Pb collisions for the $p_T$ 0.5-2 GeV interval as a function $N_{ch}$.


Measurements of multijet event isotropies using optimal transport with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
JHEP 10 (2023) 060, 2023.
Inspire Record 2663035 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.110164

A measurement of novel event shapes quantifying the isotropy of collider events is performed in 140 fb$^{-1}$ of proton-proton collisions with $\sqrt s=13$ TeV centre-of-mass energy recorded with the ATLAS detector at CERN's Large Hadron Collider. These event shapes are defined as the Wasserstein distance between collider events and isotropic reference geometries. This distance is evaluated by solving optimal transport problems, using the 'Energy-Mover's Distance'. Isotropic references with cylindrical and circular symmetries are studied, to probe the symmetries of interest at hadron colliders. The novel event-shape observables defined in this way are infrared- and collinear-safe, have improved dynamic range and have greater sensitivity to isotropic radiation patterns than other event shapes. The measured event-shape variables are corrected for detector effects, and presented in inclusive bins of jet multiplicity and the scalar sum of the two leading jets' transverse momenta. The measured distributions are provided as inputs to future Monte Carlo tuning campaigns and other studies probing fundamental properties of QCD and the production of hadronic final states up to the TeV-scale.

2 data tables match query

IRing128 for HT2>=1500 GeV, NJets>=3

IRing128 covariance for HT2>=1500 GeV, NJets>=3 (Table 22)


Measurement of the $t\bar{t}t\bar{t}$ production cross section in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}$=13 TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
JHEP 11 (2021) 118, 2021.
Inspire Record 1869695 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.105039

A measurement of four-top-quark production using proton-proton collision data at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 139 fb$^{-1}$ is presented. Events are selected if they contain a single lepton (electron or muon) or an opposite-sign lepton pair, in association with multiple jets. The events are categorised according to the number of jets and how likely these are to contain $b$-hadrons. A multivariate technique is then used to discriminate between signal and background events. The measured four-top-quark production cross section is found to be 26$^{+17}_{-15}$ fb, with a corresponding observed (expected) significance of 1.9 (1.0) standard deviations over the background-only hypothesis. The result is combined with the previous measurement performed by the ATLAS Collaboration in the multilepton final state. The combined four-top-quark production cross section is measured to be 24$^{+7}_{-6}$ fb, with a corresponding observed (expected) signal significance of 4.7 (2.6) standard deviations over the background-only predictions. It is consistent within 2.0 standard deviations with the Standard Model expectation of 12.0$\pm$2.4 fb.

1 data table match query

Comparison between data and prediction for the distribution of b-jets multiplicity in the 2LOS,$\geq$6j,$\geq$3b region after the fit.


Search for type-III seesaw heavy leptons in leptonic final states in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
Eur.Phys.J.C 82 (2022) 988, 2022.
Inspire Record 2027687 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.114228

A search for the pair production of heavy leptons as predicted by the type-III seesaw mechanism is presented. The search uses proton-proton collision data at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV, corresponding to 139 fb$^{-1}$ of integrated luminosity recorded by the ATLAS detector during Run 2 of the Large Hadron Collider. The analysis focuses on final states with three or four electrons or muons from the possible decays of new heavy leptons via intermediate electroweak bosons. No significant deviations above the Standard Model expectation are observed; upper and lower limits on the heavy lepton production cross-section and masses are derived respectively. These results are then combined for the first time with the ones already published by ATLAS using the channel with two leptons in the final state. The observed lower limit on the mass of the type-III seesaw heavy leptons combining two, three and four lepton channels together is 910 GeV at the 95% confidence level.

1 data table match query

Expected signal and background yields after each of the analysis selection cuts for the 800 GeV mass hypothesis in the Q0-RT CR. Preselection represents events with at least three leptons.


Version 2
Measurements of the inclusive and differential production cross sections of a top-quark-antiquark pair in association with a $Z$ boson at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
Eur.Phys.J.C 81 (2021) 737, 2021.
Inspire Record 1853014 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.100351

Measurements of both the inclusive and differential production cross sections of a top-quark-antiquark pair in association with a $Z$ boson ($t\bar{t}Z$) are presented. The measurements are performed by targeting final states with three or four isolated leptons (electrons or muons) and are based on $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV proton-proton collision data with an integrated luminosity of 139 fb$^{-1}$, recorded from 2015 to 2018 with the ATLAS detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The inclusive cross section is measured to be $\sigma_{t\bar{t}Z} = 0.99 \pm 0.05$ (stat.) $\pm 0.08$ (syst.) pb, in agreement with the most precise theoretical predictions. The differential measurements are presented as a function of a number of kinematic variables which probe the kinematics of the $t\bar{t}Z$ system. Both absolute and normalised differential cross-section measurements are performed at particle and parton levels for specific fiducial volumes and are compared with theoretical predictions at different levels of precision, based on a $\chi^{2}/$ndf and $p$-value computation. Overall, good agreement is observed between the unfolded data and the predictions.

2 data tables match query

The normalised parton-level differential cross-section measured in the fiducial phase-space as a function of the $|\Delta \phi (t\bar{t}, Z)|/\pi$ in the 4$\ell$ channel. The uncertainty is decomposed into four components which are the signal modelling uncertainty, the background modelling uncertainty, the experimental uncertainty, and the data statistical uncertainty.

The normalised parton-level differential cross-section measured in the fiducial phase-space as a function of the $|\Delta \phi (t\bar{t}, Z)|/\pi$ in the 4$\ell$ channel. The uncertainty is decomposed into four components which are the signal modelling uncertainty, the background modelling uncertainty, the experimental uncertainty, and the data statistical uncertainty.


Search for supersymmetry in events with four or more charged leptons in $139\,\textrm{fb}^{-1}$ of $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV $pp$ collisions with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
JHEP 07 (2021) 167, 2021.
Inspire Record 1852821 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.103062

A search for supersymmetry in events with four or more charged leptons (electrons, muons and $\tau$-leptons) is presented. The analysis uses a data sample corresponding to $139\,\mbox{fb\(^{-1}\)}$ of proton-proton collisions delivered by the Large Hadron Collider at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV and recorded by the ATLAS detector. Four-lepton signal regions with up to two hadronically decaying $\tau$-leptons are designed to target several supersymmetric models, while a general five-lepton signal region targets any new physics phenomena leading to a final state with five charged leptons. Data yields are consistent with Standard Model expectations and results are used to set upper limits on contributions from processes beyond the Standard Model. Exclusion limits are set at the 95% confidence level in simplified models of general gauge-mediated supersymmetry, excluding higgsino masses up to $540$ GeV. In $R$-parity-violating simplified models with decays of the lightest supersymmetric particle to charged leptons, lower limits of $1.6$ TeV, $1.2$ TeV, and $2.5$ TeV are placed on wino, slepton and gluino masses, respectively.

1 data table match query

Expected 95% CL exclusion limits on wino NLSP pair production with RPV LSP decays via $\lambda_{i33}$, where $i \in{1,2}$. The limits are set using the statistical combination of disjoint signal regions. Where two (or more) signal regions overlap, the signal region contributing its observed $\mathrm{CL}_{\mathrm{s}}$ value to the combination is the one with the better (best) expected $\mathrm{CL}_{\mathrm{s}}$ value.


Search for R-parity violating supersymmetry in a final state containing leptons and many jets with the ATLAS experiment using $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV proton-proton collision data

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
Eur.Phys.J.C 81 (2021) 1023, 2021.
Inspire Record 1869040 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.104860

A search for R-parity violating supersymmetry in final states characterised by high jet multiplicity, at least one isolated light lepton and either zero or at least three $b$-tagged jets is presented. The search uses 139 fb$^{-1}$ of $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV proton-proton collision data collected by the ATLAS experiment during Run 2 of the Large Hadron Collider. The results are interpreted in the context of R-parity-violating supersymmetry models that feature gluino production, top-squark production, or electroweakino production. The dominant sources of background are estimated using a data-driven model, based on observables at medium jet multiplicity, to predict the $b$-tagged jet multiplicity distribution at the higher jet multiplicities used in the search. Machine learning techniques are used to reach sensitivity to electroweakino production, extending the data-driven background estimation to the shape of the machine learning discriminant. No significant excess over the Standard Model expectation is observed and exclusion limits at the 95% confidence-level are extracted, reaching as high as 2.4 TeV in gluino mass, 1.35 TeV in top-squark mass, and 320 (365) GeV in higgsino (wino) mass.

1 data table match query

The observed data event yields and the corresponding estimates for the backgrounds in the different $b$-jet multiplicity bins for the 60 GeV jet $p_{\mathrm{T}}$ threshold region in the $1\ell$ category for at least 11 jets. The background is estimated by including all bins in the fit. All uncertainties, which may be correlated across the bins, are included in the total background uncertainty.


A detailed map of Higgs boson interactions by the ATLAS experiment ten years after the discovery

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
Nature 607 (2022) 52-59, 2022.
Inspire Record 2104706 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.130266

The Standard Model of particle physics describes the known fundamental particles and forces that make up our universe, with the exception of gravity. One of the central features of the Standard Model is a field that permeates all of space and interacts with fundamental particles. The quantum excitation of this field, known as Higgs field, manifests itself as the Higgs boson, the only fundamental particle with no spin. In 2012, a particle with properties consistent with the Higgs boson of the Standard Model was observed by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. Since then, more than 30 times as many Higgs bosons have been recorded by the ATLAS experiment, allowing much more precise measurements and new tests of the theory. Here, on the basis of this larger dataset, we combine an unprecedented number of production and decay processes of the Higgs boson to scrutinize its interactions with elementary particles. Interactions with gluons, photons, and $W$ and $Z$ bosons -- the carriers of the strong, electromagnetic, and weak forces -- are studied in detail. Interactions with three third-generation matter particles (bottom ($b$) and top ($t$) quarks, and tau leptons ($\tau$)) are well measured and indications of interactions with a second-generation particle (muons, $\mu$) are emerging. These tests reveal that the Higgs boson discovered ten years ago is remarkably consistent with the predictions of the theory and provide stringent constraints on many models of new phenomena beyond the Standard Model.

1 data table match query

Best-fit values and uncertainties for the cross sections in each measurement region, normalized to the SM predictions for the various parameters. The measurements assume SM branching fractions for all measured decays. The black error bars, blue boxes and yellow boxes show the total, systematic, and statistical uncertainties in the measurements, respectively. The gray bands show the theory uncertainties on the predictions. The level of compatibility between the combined measurement and the SM prediction corresponds to a $p$-value of 94%.


Search for associated production of a $Z$ boson with an invisibly decaying Higgs boson or dark matter candidates at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 829 (2022) 137066, 2022.
Inspire Record 1969392 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.114363

A search for invisible decays of the Higgs boson as well as searches for dark matter candidates, produced together with a leptonically decaying $Z$ boson, are presented. The analysis is performed using proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV, delivered by the LHC, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 139 fb$^{-1}$ and recorded by the ATLAS experiment. Assuming Standard Model cross-sections for $ZH$ production, the observed (expected) upper limit on the branching ratio of the Higgs boson to invisible particles is found to be 19% (19%) at the 95% confidence level. Exclusion limits are also set for simplified dark matter models and two-Higgs-doublet models with an additional pseudoscalar mediator.

1 data table match query

Observed lower limit on WIMP-nucleon cross section at 90% CL as a function of m(WIMP), assuming Higgs-portal scenario with Majorana WIMP.


Search in diphoton and dielectron final states for displaced production of Higgs or $Z$ bosons with the ATLAS detector in $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV $pp$ collisions

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 108 (2023) 012012, 2023.
Inspire Record 2654099 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.135829

A search is presented for displaced production of Higgs bosons or $Z$ bosons, originating from the decay of a neutral long-lived particle (LLP) and reconstructed in the decay modes $H\rightarrow \gamma\gamma$ and $Z\rightarrow ee$. The analysis uses the full Run 2 data set of proton$-$proton collisions delivered by the LHC at an energy of $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV between 2015 and 2018 and recorded by the ATLAS detector, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 139 fb$^{-1}$. Exploiting the capabilities of the ATLAS liquid argon calorimeter to precisely measure the arrival times and trajectories of electromagnetic objects, the analysis searches for the signature of pairs of photons or electrons which arise from a common displaced vertex and which arrive after some delay at the calorimeter. The results are interpreted in a gauge-mediated supersymmetry breaking model with pair-produced higgsinos that decay to LLPs, and each LLP subsequently decays into either a Higgs boson or a $Z$ boson. The final state includes at least two particles that escape direct detection, giving rise to missing transverse momentum. No significant excess is observed above the background expectation. The results are used to set upper limits on the cross section for higgsino pair production, up to a $\tilde\chi^0_1$ mass of 369 (704) GeV for decays with 100% branching ratio of $\tilde\chi^0_1$ to Higgs ($Z$) bosons for a $\tilde\chi^0_1$ lifetime of 2 ns. A model-independent limit is also set on the production of pairs of photons or electrons with a significant delay in arrival at the calorimeter.

1 data table match query

The 95% CL limits on $\sigma(pp \rightarrow \tilde\chi^0_1 \tilde\chi^0_1$) in fb as a function of $\tilde\chi^0_1$ branching ratio to the SM Higgs boson, where the assumed cross-section is for higgsino production, and $\mathcal{B}$($\tilde\chi^0_1$ $\rightarrow Z +\tilde{G}$) = 1 - $\mathcal{B}$($\tilde\chi^0_1$ $\rightarrow H + \tilde{G}$). Several signal hypotheses are overlaid that are labelled by the $\tilde\chi^0_1$ mass, all with a fixed $\tilde\chi^0_1$ lifetime of 2 ns.


Search for leptoquarks decaying into the b$\tau$ final state in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abeling, Kira ; et al.
JHEP 10 (2023) 001, 2023.
Inspire Record 2662587 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.140957

A search for leptoquarks decaying into the $b\tau$ final state is performed using Run 2 proton-proton collision data from the Large Hadron Collider, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 139 fb$^{-1}$ at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector. The benchmark models considered in this search are vector leptoquarks with electric charge of 2/3e and scalar leptoquarks with an electric charge of 4/3e. No significant excess above the Standard Model prediction is observed, and 95% confidence level upper limits are set on the cross-section times branching fraction of leptoquarks decaying into $b\tau$. For the vector leptoquark production two models are considered: the Yang-Mills and Minimal coupling models. In the Yang-Mills (Minimal coupling) scenario, vector leptoquarks with a mass below 1.58 (1.35) TeV are excluded for a gauge coupling of 1.0 and below 2.05 (1.99) TeV for a gauge coupling of 2.5. In the case of scalar leptoquarks, masses below 1.28 TeV (1.53 TeV) are excluded for a Yukawa coupling of 1.0 (2.5). Finally, an interpretation of the results with minimal model dependence is performed for each of the signal region categories, and limits on the visible cross-section for beyond the Standard Model processes are provided.

1 data table match query

Observed (solid line) and expected (dashed line) 95% CL upper limits for $\lambda$ = 2.5 on the cross-section of singly produced $\widetilde{S_{1}}$ signal hypotheses from the combination of the high b-jet $p_{T}$ category for the $\tau_\text{lep}\tau_\text{had}$ and $\tau_\text{had}\tau_\text{had}$ channels.


Version 2
Search for Higgs boson pair production in association with a vector boson in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=$ 13 TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
Eur.Phys.J.C 83 (2023) 519, 2023.
Inspire Record 2164067 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.131626

This paper reports a search for Higgs boson pair ($hh$) production in association with a vector boson ($W$ or $Z$) using 139 $fb^{-1}$ of proton-proton collision data at $\sqrt{s}=$ 13 TeV recorded with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. The search is performed in final states in which the vector boson decays leptonically ($W\to\ell\nu, Z\to\ell\ell,\nu\nu$ with $\ell=e, \mu$) and the Higgs bosons each decay into a pair of $b$-quarks. It targets $Vhh$ signals from both non-resonant $hh$ production, present in the Standard Model (SM), and resonant $hh$ production, as predicted in some SM extensions. A 95% confidence-level upper limit of 183 (87) times the SM cross-section is observed (expected) for non-resonant $Vhh$ production when assuming the kinematics are as expected in the SM. Constraints are also placed on Higgs boson coupling modifiers. For the resonant search, upper limits on the production cross-sections are derived for two specific models: one is the production of a vector boson along with a neutral heavy scalar resonance $H$, in the mass range 260-1000 GeV, that decays into $hh$, and the other is the production of a heavier neutral pseudoscalar resonance $A$ that decays into a $Z$ boson and $H$ boson, where the $A$ boson mass is 360-800 GeV and the $H$ boson mass is 260-400 GeV. Constraints are also derived in the parameter space of two-Higgs-doublet models.

2 data tables match query

Data and post-fit signal and background from S+B fit for 315 GeV resonant $H\to 4b$ production in association with a W boson.

Data and post-fit signal and background from S+B fit for 315 GeV resonant $H\to 4b$ production in association with a W boson.


Measurement of the production of a $W$ boson in association with a charmed hadron in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 13\,\mathrm{TeV}$ with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abeling, Kira ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 108 (2023) 032012, 2023.
Inspire Record 2628732 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.136060

The production of a $W$ boson in association with a single charm quark is studied using 140 $\mathrm{fb}^{-1}$ of $\sqrt{s} = 13\,\mathrm{TeV}$ proton-proton collision data collected with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. The charm quark is tagged by a charmed hadron, reconstructed with a secondary-vertex fit. The $W$ boson is reconstructed from an electron/muon decay and the missing transverse momentum. The mesons reconstructed are $D^{\pm} \to K^\mp \pi^\pm \pi^\pm$ and $D^{*\pm} \to D^{0} \pi^\pm \to (K^\mp \pi^\pm) \pi^\pm$, where $p_{\text{T}}(e, \mu) > 30\,\mathrm{GeV}$, $|\eta(e, \mu)| < 2.5$, $p_{\text{T}}(D) > 8\,\mathrm{GeV}$, and $|\eta(D)| < 2.2$. The integrated and normalized differential cross-sections as a function of the pseudorapidity of the lepton from the $W$ boson decay, and of the transverse momentum of the meson, are extracted from the data using a profile likelihood fit. The measured fiducial cross-sections are $\sigma^{\mathrm{OS-SS}}_{\mathrm{fid}}(W^{-}{+}D^{+}) = 50.2\pm0.2\,\mathrm{(stat.)}\,^{+2.4}_{-2.3}\,\mathrm{(syst.)}\,\mathrm{pb}$, $\sigma^{\mathrm{OS-SS}}_{\mathrm{fid}}(W^{+}{+}D^{-}) = 48.5\pm0.2\,\mathrm{(stat.)}\,^{+2.3}_{-2.2}\,\mathrm{(syst.)}\,\mathrm{pb}$, $\sigma^{\mathrm{OS-SS}}_{\mathrm{fid}}(W^{-}{+}D^{*+}) = 51.1\pm0.4\,\mathrm{(stat.)}\,^{+1.9}_{-1.8}\,\mathrm{(syst.)}\,\mathrm{pb}$, and $\sigma^{\mathrm{OS-SS}}_{\mathrm{fid}}(W^{+}{+}D^{*-}) = 50.0\pm0.4\,\mathrm{(stat.)}\,^{+1.9}_{-1.8}\,\mathrm{(syst.)}\,\mathrm{pb}$. Results are compared with the predictions of next-to-leading-order quantum chromodynamics calculations performed using state-of-the-art parton distribution functions. The ratio of charm to anti-charm production cross-sections is studied to probe the $s$-$\bar{s}$ quark asymmetry and is found to be $R_c^\pm = 0.971\pm0.006\,\mathrm{(stat.)}\pm0.011\,\mathrm{(syst.)}$.

1 data table match query

Measured $|\eta(\ell)|$ differential fiducial cross-section times the single-lepton-flavor W boson branching ratio in the $W^{+}+D^{*-}$ channel with the full breakdown of uncertainties.


Version 4
Search for Higgs boson pair production in the two bottom quarks plus two photons final state in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 106 (2022) 052001, 2022.
Inspire Record 1995886 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.105864

Searches are performed for nonresonant and resonant di-Higgs boson production in the $b\bar{b}\gamma\gamma$ final state. The data set used corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 139 fb$^{-1}$ of proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. No excess above the expected background is found and upper limits on the di-Higgs boson production cross sections are set. A 95% confidence-level upper limit of 4.2 times the cross section predicted by the Standard Model is set on $pp \rightarrow HH$ nonresonant production, where the expected limit is 5.7 times the Standard Model predicted value. The expected constraints are obtained for a background hypothesis excluding $pp \rightarrow HH$ production. The observed (expected) constraints on the Higgs boson trilinear coupling modifier $\kappa_{\lambda}$ are determined to be $[-1.5, 6.7]$ $([-2.4, 7.7])$ at 95% confidence level, where the expected constraints on $\kappa_{\lambda}$ are obtained excluding $pp \rightarrow HH$ production from the background hypothesis. For resonant production of a new hypothetical scalar particle $X$ ($X \rightarrow HH \rightarrow b\bar{b}\gamma\gamma$), limits on the cross section for $pp \to X \to HH$ are presented in the narrow-width approximation as a function of $m_{X}$ in the range $251 \leq m_{X} \leq 1000$ GeV. The observed (expected) limits on the cross section for $pp \to X \to HH$ range from 640 fb to 44 fb (391 fb to 46 fb) over the considered mass range.

4 data tables match query

Comparison of $m_{b\bar{b}}$ distributions when applying the specific b-jet energy calibration and the nominal jet energy calibration. The distributions are fitted using a Bukin function, and the values of the peak position, resolution and the relative improvement are reported in the legend.

Comparison of $m_{b\bar{b}}$ distributions when applying the specific b-jet energy calibration and the nominal jet energy calibration. The distributions are fitted using a Bukin function, and the values of the peak position, resolution and the relative improvement are reported in the legend.

Comparison of $m_{b\bar{b}}$ distributions when applying the specific b-jet energy calibration and the nominal jet energy calibration. The distributions are fitted using a Bukin function, and the values of the peak position, resolution and the relative improvement are reported in the legend.

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Version 2
Measurements of differential cross-sections in top-quark pair events with a high transverse momentum top quark and limits on beyond the Standard Model contributions to top-quark pair production with the ATLAS detector at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
JHEP 06 (2022) 063, 2022.
Inspire Record 2037744 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.134011

Cross-section measurements of top-quark pair production where the hadronically decaying top quark has transverse momentum greater than $355$ GeV and the other top quark decays into $\ell \nu b$ are presented using 139 fb$^{-1}$ of data collected by the ATLAS experiment during proton-proton collisions at the LHC. The fiducial cross-section at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV is measured to be $\sigma = 1.267 \pm 0.005 \pm 0.053$ pb, where the uncertainties reflect the limited number of data events and the systematic uncertainties, giving a total uncertainty of $4.2\%$. The cross-section is measured differentially as a function of variables characterising the $t\bar{t}$ system and additional radiation in the events. The results are compared with various Monte Carlo generators, including comparisons where the generators are reweighted to match a parton-level calculation at next-to-next-to-leading order. The reweighting improves the agreement between data and theory. The measured distribution of the top-quark transverse momentum is used to set limits on the Wilson coefficients of the dimension-six operators $O_{tG}$ and $O_{tq}^{(8)}$ in the effective field theory framework.

2 data tables match query

- - - - - - - - Overview of HEPData Record - - - - - - - - <br/><br/> <b>Fiducial phase space definitions:</b><br/> <ul> <li> NLEP = 1, either E or MU, PT &gt; 27 GeV, ABS ETA &lt; 2.5 <li> NJETS &gt;= 2, R = 0.4, PT &gt; 26 GeV, ABS ETA &lt; 2.5 <li> NBJETS &gt;= 2 <li> NJETS &gt;= 1, R=1, PT &gt; 355 GeV, ABS ETA &lt; 2.0, top-tagged </ul><br/> <u>1D:</u><br/> Spectra:<br/> <ul><br/> <li>SIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 1">Table 1</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 2">Table 2</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 4">Table 4</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 5">Table 5</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 7">Table 7</a> ) <li>DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 8">Table 8</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 10">Table 10</a> ) <li>DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 11">Table 11</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 13">Table 13</a> ) <li>DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 14">Table 14</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 16">Table 16</a> ) <li>DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 17">Table 17</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 19">Table 19</a> ) <li>DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 20">Table 20</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 22">Table 22</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 23">Table 23</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 25">Table 25</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 26">Table 26</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 28">Table 28</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 29">Table 29</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 31">Table 31</a> ) <li>DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 32">Table 32</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 34">Table 34</a> ) <li>DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 35">Table 35</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 37">Table 37</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 38">Table 38</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DPT_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 40">Table 40</a> ) <li>DSIG/DM_J1_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 41">Table 41</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DM_J1_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 43">Table 43</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 44">Table 44</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 46">Table 46</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 47">Table 47</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 49">Table 49</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 50">Table 50</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 52">Table 52</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 53">Table 53</a> ) <li>1/SIG*DSIG/DPT_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 55">Table 55</a> ) </ul><br/> Statistical covariance matrices: <ul> <li>DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 3">Table 3</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 6">Table 6</a> ) <li>DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 9">Table 9</a> ) <li>DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 12">Table 12</a> ) <li>DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 15">Table 15</a> ) <li>DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 18">Table 18</a> ) <li>DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 21">Table 21</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 24">Table 24</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 27">Table 27</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 30">Table 30</a> ) <li>DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 33">Table 33</a> ) <li>DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 36">Table 36</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 39">Table 39</a> ) <li>DSIG/DM_J1_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 42">Table 42</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 45">Table 45</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 48">Table 48</a> ) <li>DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 51">Table 51</a> ) <li>DSIG/DPT_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 54">Table 54</a> ) </ul><br/> Inter-spectra statistical covariance matrices: <ul> <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_THAD and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 104">Table 104</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TLEP and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 105">Table 105</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TLEP and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 106">Table 106</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_TTBAR and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 107">Table 107</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 108">Table 108</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 109">Table 109</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 110">Table 110</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 111">Table 111</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 112">Table 112</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 113">Table 113</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 114">Table 114</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 115">Table 115</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 116">Table 116</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 117">Table 117</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 118">Table 118</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DY_TTBAR and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 119">Table 119</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DY_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 120">Table 120</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DY_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 121">Table 121</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DY_TTBAR and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 122">Table 122</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DY_TTBAR and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 123">Table 123</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DY_TTBAR and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 124">Table 124</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT_TTBAR and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 125">Table 125</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 126">Table 126</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 127">Table 127</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT_TTBAR and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 128">Table 128</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT_TTBAR and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 129">Table 129</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT_TTBAR and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 130">Table 130</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT_TTBAR and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 131">Table 131</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 132">Table 132</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 133">Table 133</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 134">Table 134</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 135">Table 135</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 136">Table 136</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 137">Table 137</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 138">Table 138</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 139">Table 139</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 140">Table 140</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 141">Table 141</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 142">Table 142</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 143">Table 143</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 144">Table 144</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 145">Table 145</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 146">Table 146</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 147">Table 147</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_TTBAR and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 148">Table 148</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 149">Table 149</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 150">Table 150</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 151">Table 151</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 152">Table 152</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 153">Table 153</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 154">Table 154</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 155">Table 155</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 156">Table 156</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 157">Table 157</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 158">Table 158</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 159">Table 159</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 160">Table 160</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 161">Table 161</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 162">Table 162</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 163">Table 163</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 164">Table 164</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 165">Table 165</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 166">Table 166</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 167">Table 167</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 168">Table 168</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DHT and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 169">Table 169</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 170">Table 170</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 171">Table 171</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 172">Table 172</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 173">Table 173</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 174">Table 174</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 175">Table 175</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 176">Table 176</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 177">Table 177</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 178">Table 178</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 179">Table 179</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 180">Table 180</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DNJETS and DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 181">Table 181</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 182">Table 182</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 183">Table 183</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 184">Table 184</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 185">Table 185</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 186">Table 186</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 187">Table 187</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 188">Table 188</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 189">Table 189</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 190">Table 190</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 191">Table 191</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 192">Table 192</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 193">Table 193</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J1 and DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 194">Table 194</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 195">Table 195</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 196">Table 196</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 197">Table 197</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 198">Table 198</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 199">Table 199</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 200">Table 200</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 201">Table 201</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 202">Table 202</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 203">Table 203</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 204">Table 204</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 205">Table 205</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 206">Table 206</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 207">Table 207</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DM_J1_THAD and DSIG/DPT_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 208">Table 208</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 209">Table 209</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 210">Table 210</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 211">Table 211</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 212">Table 212</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 213">Table 213</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 214">Table 214</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 215">Table 215</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 216">Table 216</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 217">Table 217</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 218">Table 218</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 219">Table 219</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 220">Table 220</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 221">Table 221</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DPT_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 222">Table 222</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 and DSIG/DM_J1_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 223">Table 223</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 224">Table 224</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 225">Table 225</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 226">Table 226</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 227">Table 227</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 228">Table 228</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 229">Table 229</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 230">Table 230</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 231">Table 231</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 232">Table 232</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 233">Table 233</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 234">Table 234</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 235">Table 235</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 236">Table 236</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DPT_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 237">Table 237</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DM_J1_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 238">Table 238</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 239">Table 239</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 240">Table 240</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 241">Table 241</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 242">Table 242</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 243">Table 243</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 244">Table 244</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 245">Table 245</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 246">Table 246</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 247">Table 247</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 248">Table 248</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 249">Table 249</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 250">Table 250</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 251">Table 251</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 252">Table 252</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DPT_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 253">Table 253</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DM_J1_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 254">Table 254</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 255">Table 255</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 256">Table 256</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DSIG (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 257">Table 257</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DPT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 258">Table 258</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DPT_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 259">Table 259</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DM_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 260">Table 260</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DABS_Y_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 261">Table 261</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DABS_Y_TLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 262">Table 262</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DY_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 263">Table 263</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DHT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 264">Table 264</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_BLEP (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 265">Table 265</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DPT_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 266">Table 266</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_TTBAR (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 267">Table 267</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DHT (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 268">Table 268</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DNJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 269">Table 269</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DPT_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 270">Table 270</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DM_J1_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 271">Table 271</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 272">Table 272</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 273">Table 273</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance between DSIG/DPT_J2 and DSIG/DDPHIOPI_J1_J2 (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 274">Table 274</a> ) </ul><br/> <u>2D:</u><br/> Spectra: <ul> <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS (NJETS = 1) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 56">Table 56</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS (NJETS = 2) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 57">Table 57</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS (NJETS $\geq$ 3) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 58">Table 58</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS (NJETS = 1) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 59">Table 59</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS (NJETS = 2) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 60">Table 60</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS (NJETS $\geq$ 3) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 61">Table 61</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD ( 355.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 398.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 68">Table 68</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD ( 398.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 496.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 69">Table 69</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD ( 496.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 2000.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 70">Table 70</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD ( 355.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 398.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 71">Table 71</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD ( 398.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 496.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 72">Table 72</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD ( 496.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 2000.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 73">Table 73</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD ( 355.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 398.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 80">Table 80</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD ( 398.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 496.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 81">Table 81</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD ( 496.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 2000.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 82">Table 82</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD ( 355.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 398.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 83">Table 83</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD ( 398.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 496.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 84">Table 84</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD ( 496.0 GeV < PT_THAD < 2000.0 GeV) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 85">Table 85</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS (NJETS = 1) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 92">Table 92</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS (NJETS = 2) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 93">Table 93</a> ) <li>1/SIG*D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS (NJETS $\geq$ 3) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 94">Table 94</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS (NJETS = 1) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 95">Table 95</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS (NJETS = 2) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 96">Table 96</a> ) <li>D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS (NJETS $\geq$ 3) (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 97">Table 97</a> ) </ul><br/> Statistical covariance matrices: <ul> <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS between the 1st and 1st bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 62">Table 62</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS between the 2nd and 1st bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 63">Table 63</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS between the 2nd and 2nd bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 64">Table 64</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS between the 3rd and 1st bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 65">Table 65</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS between the 3rd and 2nd bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 66">Table 66</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DNJETS between the 3rd and 3rd bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 67">Table 67</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD between the 1st and 1st bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 74">Table 74</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD between the 2nd and 1st bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 75">Table 75</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD between the 2nd and 2nd bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 76">Table 76</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD between the 3rd and 1st bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 77">Table 77</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD between the 3rd and 2nd bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 78">Table 78</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DPT_J1/DPT_THAD between the 3rd and 3rd bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 79">Table 79</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD between the 1st and 1st bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 86">Table 86</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD between the 2nd and 1st bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 87">Table 87</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD between the 2nd and 2nd bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 88">Table 88</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD between the 3rd and 1st bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 89">Table 89</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD between the 3rd and 2nd bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 90">Table 90</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DPT_THAD between the 3rd and 3rd bins of PT_THAD (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 91">Table 91</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS between the 1st and 1st bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 98">Table 98</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS between the 2nd and 1st bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 99">Table 99</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS between the 2nd and 2nd bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 100">Table 100</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS between the 3rd and 1st bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 101">Table 101</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS between the 3rd and 2nd bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 102">Table 102</a> ) <li>Statistical covariance matrix for D2SIG/DDPHIOPI_THAD_J1/DNJETS between the 3rd and 3rd bins of NJETS (<a href="1651136742?version=1&table=Table 103">Table 103</a> ) </ul><br/>

Relative differential cross-section as a function of $H_T^{t\bar{t}}$ at particle level in the boosted topology. The measured differential cross-section is compared with the prediction obtained with the Powheg+Pythia8 Monte Carlo generator.


Version 2
Measurement of Higgs boson decay into $b$-quarks in associated production with a top-quark pair in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, Dale ; et al.
JHEP 06 (2022) 097, 2022.
Inspire Record 1967501 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.114360

The associated production of a Higgs boson and a top-quark pair is measured in events characterised by the presence of one or two electrons or muons. The Higgs boson decay into a $b$-quark pair is used. The analysed data, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 139 fb$^{-1}$, were collected in proton-proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider between 2015 and 2018 at a centre-of-mass energy of $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV. The measured signal strength, defined as the ratio of the measured signal yield to that predicted by the Standard Model, is $0.35^{+0.36}_{-0.34}$. This result is compatible with the Standard Model prediction and corresponds to an observed (expected) significance of 1.0 (2.7) standard deviations. The signal strength is also measured differentially in bins of the Higgs boson transverse momentum in the simplified template cross-section framework, including a bin for specially selected boosted Higgs bosons with transverse momentum above 300 GeV.

1 data table match query

The ratios $S/B$ (black solid line, referring to the vertical axis on the left) and $S/\sqrt{B}$ (red dashed line, referring to the vertical axis on the right) for each category in the inclusive analysis in the dilepton channel (left) and in the single-lepton channels (right), where $S$ ($B$) is the number of selected signal (background) events predicted by the simulation and normalised to a luminosity of 139 fb$^{-1}$ .


Correlations between flow and transverse momentum in Xe+Xe and Pb+Pb collisions at the LHC with the ATLAS detector: a probe of the heavy-ion initial state and nuclear deformation

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abbott, D.C. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.C 107 (2023) 054910, 2023.
Inspire Record 2075412 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.139082

The correlations between flow harmonics $v_n$ for $n=2$, 3 and 4 and mean transverse momentum $[p_\mathrm{T}]$ in $^{129}$Xe+$^{129}$Xe and $^{208}$Pb+$^{208}$Pb collisions at $\sqrt{s_{\mathrm{NN}}}=5.44$ TeV and 5.02 TeV, respectively, are measured using charged particles with the ATLAS detector. The correlations are sensitive to the shape and size of the initial geometry, nuclear deformation, and initial momentum anisotropy. The effects from non-flow and centrality fluctuations are minimized, respectively, via a subevent cumulant method and event activity selection based on particle production in the very forward rapidity. The results show strong dependences on centrality, harmonic number $n$, $p_{\mathrm{T}}$ and pseudorapidity range. Current models describe qualitatively the overall centrality- and system-dependent trends but fail to quantitatively reproduce all the data. In the central collisions, where models generally show good agreement, the $v_2$-$[p_\mathrm{T}]$ correlations are sensitive to the triaxiality of the quadruple deformation. The comparison of model to the Pb+Pb and Xe+Xe data suggests that the $^{129}$Xe nucleus is a highly deformed triaxial ellipsoid that is neither a prolate nor an oblate shape. This provides strong evidence for a triaxial deformation of $^{129}$Xe nucleus using high-energy heavy-ion collision.

1 data table match query

$\rho_{3}$ Combined_subevent method, for Xe+Xe 5.44 TeV, $|\eta|$<2.5, 0.5< $p_{T}$ <5.0 GeV vs $\Sigma E_{T}$ based Centrality


Pursuit of paired dijet resonances in the Run 2 dataset with ATLAS

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abeling, Kira ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 108 (2023) 112005, 2023.
Inspire Record 2682337 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.140530

New particles with large masses that decay into hadronically interacting particles are predicted by many models of physics beyond the Standard Model. A search for a massive resonance that decays into pairs of dijet resonances is performed using 140 fb$^{-1}$ of proton$-$proton collisions at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector during Run 2 of the Large Hadron Collider. Resonances are searched for in the invariant mass of the tetrajet system, and in the average invariant mass of the pair of dijet systems. A data-driven background estimate is obtained by fitting the tetrajet and dijet invariant mass distributions with a four-parameter dijet function and a search for local excesses from resonant production of dijet pairs is performed. No significant excess of events beyond the Standard Model expectation is observed, and upper limits are set on the production cross-sections of new physics scenarios.

1 data table match query

The average dijet invariant mass distributions in data, along with the fitted background estimates for 0.28 < $\alpha$ < 0.30.


Search for a new pseudoscalar decaying into a pair of muons in events with a top-quark pair at $\sqrt{s} = 13$~TeV with the ATLAS detector

The ATLAS collaboration Aad, Georges ; Abbott, Braden Keim ; Abeling, Kira ; et al.
Phys.Rev.D 108 (2023) 092007, 2023.
Inspire Record 2654723 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.139987

A search for a new pseudoscalar $a$-boson produced in events with a top-quark pair, where the $a$-boson decays into a pair of muons, is performed using $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV $pp$ collision data collected with the ATLAS detector at the LHC, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of $139\, \mathrm{fb}^{-1}$. The search targets the final state where only one top quark decays to an electron or muon, resulting in a signature with three leptons $e\mu\mu$ and $\mu\mu\mu$. No significant excess of events above the Standard Model expectation is observed and upper limits are set on two signal models: $pp \rightarrow t\bar{t}a$ and $pp \rightarrow t\bar{t}$ with $t \rightarrow H^\pm b$, $H^\pm \rightarrow W^\pm a$, where $a\rightarrow\mu\mu$, in the mass ranges $15$ GeV $ < m_a < 72$ GeV and $120$ GeV $ \leq m_{H^{\pm}} \leq 160$ GeV.

1 data table match query

Cutflow for the signal mass point $t\bar{t}a$, $m_{a} = 60$ GeV, as well as the dominant backgrounds estimated from simulation ($t\bar{t}Z$, $WZ$, $t\bar{t}H$) and data, for the corresponding signal mass hypothesis, for the muon channel $\mu\mu\mu$. For the signal yields, a cross section times branching ratio of 1 fb is assumed. The yields are presented before the profile likelihood fit.