11th Annual Meeting of the Northwest Section of APS
Volume 54, Number 6
Thursday–Saturday, May 14–16, 2009;
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Session G3: Particle Physics
1:30 PM–5:26 PM,
Saturday, May 16, 2009
Hennings
Room: 202
Chair: Stanley Yen, TRIUMF
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.NWS.G3.8
Abstract: G3.00008 : What we can expect from the first year of the LHC
3:26 PM–4:02 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Isabel Trigger
(TRIUMF)
The ATLAS and CMS experiments at the CERN Large Hadron Collider
have been
built and commissioned over more than a decade. They are the most
complex experiments ever assembled, but were
completed
in time for the first beams in the LHC in September 2008. The
accident which
interrupted the LHC startup did not interrupt the commissioning
of the
detectors with cosmic ray events, and the small amount of
single-beam data
collected in September was invaluable for timing in the detector.
ATLAS and
CMS will therefore be unusually well calibrated and understood by
the time
collision data become available in Fall 2009. The first part of
the talk will
discuss the expected performance of the detectors (with some bias
towards
ATLAS).
The rest of the talk will discuss physics analyses which
should be possible with the first year's running at the LHC.
Roughly 100-200~pb$^{-1}$ at a 10~TeV centre-of-mass energy are
needed to match
the Tevatron's
Standard Model Higgs sensitivity around 160~GeV - if all goes
according to
plan, the LHC may collect this by Fall 2010. About 100~pb$^{-1}$
at 10~TeV
would match the full Tevatron sample of top quarks; roughly twice
as much data
would be needed if the run were mainly at 8~TeV. Sensitivity to
$W'$ or $Z'$
resonances would match the Tevatron's with less than
100~pb$^{-1}$ at 8~TeV.
Prospects for discovering supersymmetry are even more promising:
in some models as little as
10~pb$^{-1}$ at 8~TeV could yield a 5~$\sigma$ discovery.
The next year is expected to be a critical period in defining the
future of
high energy physics, as the actual performance of the LHC and its
detectors
is tested with collision data. Discoveries of physics beyond the
Standard
Model could potentially be made by the end of the first year's
running,
especially if the start-up progresses smoothly.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.NWS.G3.8