@phdthesis{Weber2016, author = {Weber, Stefan}, title = {Simulation Studies on the New Small Wheel Shielding of the ATLAS Experiment and Design and Construction of a Test Facility for Gaseous Detectors}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133084}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2016}, abstract = {In this thesis two main projects are presented, both aiming at the overall goal of particle detector development. In the first part of the thesis detailed shielding studies are discussed, focused on the shielding section of the planned New Small Wheel as part of the ATLAS detector upgrade. Those studies supported the discussions within the upgrade community and decisions made on the final design of the New Small Wheel. The second part of the thesis covers the design, construction and functional demonstration of a test facility for gaseous detectors at the University of W{\"u}rzburg. Additional studies on the trigger system of the facility are presented. Especially the precision and reliability of reference timing signals were investigated.}, subject = {Teilchendetektor}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Herget2019, author = {Herget, Verena}, title = {A novel approach for the calibration of the hadronic recoil for the measurement of the mass of the W boson with the ATLAS Experiment}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-17782}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-177828}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2019}, abstract = {The measurement of the mass of the \$W\$ boson is currently one of the most promising precision analyses of the Standard Model, that could ultimately reveal a hint for new physics. The mass of the \$W\$ boson is determined by comparing the \$W\$ boson, which cannot be reconstructed directly, to the \$Z\$ boson, where the full decay signature is available. With the help of Monte Carlo simulations one can extrapolate from the \$Z\$ boson to the \$W\$ boson. Technically speaking, the measurement of the \$W\$ boson mass is performed by comparing data taken by the ATLAS experiment to a set of calibrated Monte Carlo simulations, which reflect different mass hypotheses.\ A dedicated calibration of the reconstructed objects in the simulations is crucial for a high precision of the measured value. The comparison of simulated \$Z\$ boson events to reconstructed \$Z\$ boson candidates in data allows to derive event weights and scale factors for the calibration. This thesis presents a new approach to reweight the hadronic recoil in the simulations. The focus of the calibration is on the average hadronic activity visible in the mean of the scalar sum of the hadronic recoil \$\Sigma E_T\$ as a function of pileup. In contrast to the standard method, which directly reweights the scalar sum, the dependency to the transverse boson momentum is less strongly affected here. The \$\Sigma E_T\$ distribution is modeled first by means of its pileup dependency. Then, the remaining differences in the resolution of the vector sum of the hadronic recoil are scaled. This is done separately for the parallel and the pterpendicular component of the hadronic recoil with respect to the reconstructed boson. This calibration was developed for the dataset taken by the ATLAS experiment at a center of mass energy of \$8\,\textrm{TeV}\$ in 2012. In addition, the same reweighting procedure is applied to the recent dataset with a low pileup contribution, the \textit{lowMu} runs at \$5\,\textrm{TeV}\$ and at \$13\,\textrm{TeV}\$, taken by ATLAS in November 2017. The dedicated aspects of the reweighting procedure are presented in this thesis. It can be shown that this reweighting approach improves the agreement between data and the simulations effectively for all datasets. The uncertainties of this reweighting approach as well as the statistical errors are evaluated for a \$W\$ mass measurement by a template fit to pseudodata for the \textit{lowMu} dataset. A first estimate of these uncertainties is given here. For the pfoEM algorithm a statistical uncertainty of \$17\,\text{MeV}\$ for the \$5\,\textrm{TeV}\$ dataset and of \$18\,\text{MeV}\$ for the \$13\,\textrm{TeV}\$ are found for the \$W \rightarrow \mu \nu\$ analysis. The systematic uncertainty introduced by the resolution scaling has the largest effect, a value of \$15\,\text{MeV}\$ is estimated for the \$13\,\textrm{TeV}\$ dataset in the muon channel.}, subject = {Standardmodell }, language = {en} }