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Computer simulation of electron positron annihilation process

Posted on:2004-03-05Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Stanford UniversityCandidate:Chen, YueFull Text:PDF
GTID:2450390011453457Subject:Physics
Abstract/Summary:
With the launching of the Next Linear Collider coming closer and closer, there is a pressing need for physicists to develop a fully-integrated computer simulation of e+e anniilation process at center-of-mass energy of 1TeV. A simulation program acts as the template for future experiments. Either new physics will be discovered, or current the-oretical uncertainties will shrink due to more accurate higher-order radiative correction calculations. The existence of an efficient and accurate simulation will help us understand the new data and validate (or veto) some of the theoretical models developed to explain new physics. It should handle well interfaces between different sectors of physics, e.g., interactions happening at parton levels well above the QCD scale which are described by perturbative QCD, and interactions happening at much lower energy scale, which combine partons into hadrons. Also it should achieve competitive speed in real time when the complexity of the simulation increases.; This thesis contributes some tools that will be useful for the development of such simulation programs. We begin our study by the development of a new Monte Carlo algorithm intended to perform efficiently in selecting weight-1 events when multiple parameter dimensions are strongly correlated. The algorithm first seeks to model the peaks of the distribution by features, adapting these features to the function using the EM algorithm. The representation of the distribution provided by these features is then improved using the VEGAS algorithm for the Monte Carlo integration. The two strategies mesh neatly into an effective multi-channel adaptive representation.; We then present a new algorithm for the simulation of parton shower processes in high energy QCD. We want to find an algorithm which is free of negative weights, produces its output as a set of exclusive events, and whose total rate exactly matches the full Feynman amplitude calculation. Our strategy is to create the whole QCD shower as a tree structure generated by a multiple Poisson process. Working with the whole shower allows us to include correlations between gluon emissions from different sources. QCD destructive interference is controlled by the implementation of “angular-ordering”, as in the HERWIG Monte Carlo program. We discuss methods for systematic improvement of the approach to include higher order QCD effects.
Keywords/Search Tags:QCD, Simulation, Monte carlo
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