A precision measurement of the mass of the top quark.

The standard model of particle physics contains parameters--such as particle masses--whose origins are still unknown and which cannot be predicted, but whose values are constrained through their interactions. In particular, the masses of the top quark (M(t)) and W boson (M(W)) constrain the mass of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abazov, V, Abbott, B, Abdesselam, A, Abolins, M, Abramov, V, Acharya, B, Adams, D, Adams, M, Ahmed, SN, Alexeev, G, Alton, A, Alves, G, Arnoud, Y, Avila, C, Babintsev, V, Babukhadia, L, Bacon, T, Baden, A, Baffioni, S, Baldin, B, Balm, P, Banerjee, S, Barberis, E, Baringer, P, Barreto, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2004
Description
Summary:The standard model of particle physics contains parameters--such as particle masses--whose origins are still unknown and which cannot be predicted, but whose values are constrained through their interactions. In particular, the masses of the top quark (M(t)) and W boson (M(W)) constrain the mass of the long-hypothesized, but thus far not observed, Higgs boson. A precise measurement of M(t) can therefore indicate where to look for the Higgs, and indeed whether the hypothesis of a standard model Higgs is consistent with experimental data. As top quarks are produced in pairs and decay in only about 10(-24) s into various final states, reconstructing their masses from their decay products is very challenging. Here we report a technique that extracts more information from each top-quark event and yields a greatly improved precision (of +/- 5.3 GeV/c2) when compared to previous measurements. When our new result is combined with our published measurement in a complementary decay mode and with the only other measurements available, the new world average for M(t) becomes 178.0 +/- 4.3 GeV/c2. As a result, the most likely Higgs mass increases from the experimentally excluded value of 96 to 117 GeV/c2, which is beyond current experimental sensitivity. The upper limit on the Higgs mass at the 95% confidence level is raised from 219 to 251 GeV/c2.