-
In the standard model (SM), the associated
$ W + $ charm production in hadron collisions is described at leading order (LO) in perturbative quantum chromodynamics (QCD) by$ g+q \to W^- + c $ ,$ (q = d,s,b) $ and$ g+ {\bar q}\to W^+ + \bar c $ ,$ ({\bar q} = {\bar{d}}, {\bar{s}}, \bar b) $ . Although the d-quark parton distribution function (PDF) is large in the proton, the processes$ g + d \to W^- + c $ and$ g + {\bar{d}} \to W^+ + \bar c $ contribute only about 10% [1] to the total$ W + $ charm production rate, because it is suppressed by the small quark-mixing Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) matrix element [2]$ |V_{cd}| $ and$ |V_{\bar c{\bar{d}}}| $ . The major contribution to the total$ W + $ charm production rate is due to strange quark-gluon fusion$ g + s \to W^- + c $ , and$ g + {\bar{s}} \to W^+ + \bar c $ . The contribution from$ g+ b \to W^- + c $ and$ g + \bar b \to W^+ + \bar c $ is also heavily suppressed by the quark mixing matrix elements ($ |V_{cb}| $ ,$ |V_{\bar c\bar b}| $ ) and the b-quark PDF. The$ W + $ charm production cross-section is therefore particularly sensitive to the proton$ g(x, Q) $ and$ s(x, Q) $ PDFs [3] and to the magnitude of the CKM matrix element$ V_{cs} $ , where x is the momentum fraction of the proton carried by the s-quark, and Q is the hard scale. The study cited in Ref. [4] calculated the$ W + $ charm production at LO and next-to-leading order (NLO) in QCD, and found that the factorization and renormalization scale uncertainty in the NLO calculation is about 20%. Ref. [5] explored the strangeness degrees of freedom in the parton structure of the nucleon within the global analysis framework, and showed that the precise determination of the$ s(x,Q) $ PDF affects the$ W + $ charm cross-section. The$ s(x,Q) $ PDF has been determined by neutrino-nucleon deep inelastic scattering experiments at momentum transfer squared$ Q^2 = 10 $ GeV, and momentum fraction$ x \sim 0.1 $ [6, 7]. The Tevatron CDF [8] and D0 [9] experiments have measured the cross-section for charm quark produced in association with W bosons, using muon tagging of the charm-quark jet. The ATLAS collaboration [10] measured the total cross-section, differential cross-section as a function of the pseudorapidity of the lepton from the W boson decay, and the cross-section ratio of the production of a W boson in association with a single charm quark at$ \sqrt s = 7 $ TeV. The CMS experiment measured [11] total cross-sections$ ( \sigma(W^- + c), \sigma(W^+ + \bar{c})) $ , absolute and normalized differential cross-sections as a function of the absolute value of the pseudorapidity of the lepton from the W boson decay, and the cross-section ratio$ R^c = \sigma(W^+ + \bar c)/\sigma(W^- + c) $ at a center of mass energy 7 TeV for the fiducial region defined, namely$ \begin{array}{l} p_T^{j}> 25 \; {\rm GeV}, \;\; |\eta^j|<2.5, \;\; |\eta^l|<2.1, \\ p_T^{l}> 25 \; {\rm GeV}, \;\; {\rm for} \;\; W \to \mu \nu_{\mu},\\ p_T^{l}> 35 \; {\rm GeV}, \;\; {\rm for} \;\; W \to \mu \nu_{\mu} \;\; {\rm and}\;\; W \to e \nu_{e}. \end{array} $
(1) There are two different transverse momentum cuts for the charged lepton in the final state. When
$ p_T^{l}> 25 \; {\rm GeV} $ , we only consider the muon decay channel ($ W\to \mu \nu_{\mu} $ ) for W boson; both muon ($ W\to \mu \nu_{\mu} $ ) and electron ($ W\to e \nu_e $ ) decay channels for W boson are considered, when$ p_T^{l}> 35 \; {\rm GeV} $ . This study is organized as follows: in Section 2, we present our results for various latest PDF sets and compare these with the CMS measurements of the total cross-section, absolute and normalized differential cross-sections, and ratios, as well as the correlation between the CT14NNLO PDFs and predictions for$ W+ $ charm data. In Section 3, we discuss the impact of the CMS$ W+ $ charm production 7 TeV data to the CT14NNLO PDFs. In Section 4, we draw our conclusions. -
In this section, we present a detailed numerical study of the
$ pp \to W + c + X $ process at the LHC at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV at NLO order QCD using the Monte-Carlo numerical calculation program MadGraph [12] with CT10NNLO [13], CT14NNLO [14], and MSTW2008NNLO [15] PDFs. PDF uncertainties on the theoretical predictions are given at the 68% confidence level (C.L.). We calculate the total cross-section, differential (absolute and normalized) cross-sections, and the cross-section ratio$ R^c = \sigma(W^+ + \bar c)/\sigma(W^- + c) $ with the$ W \to l \nu $ decay (where$ l = \mu $ or e). In our study, we use the same kinematical cuts as the CMS detector at the LHC at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV [11], that are given in section 1; both the factorization and renormalization scales are set to the value of the W boson mass$ \mu_R = \mu_F = m_{{\rm w}} $ ; the charm quark mass is considered and is set to 1.550 GeV; strong interaction coupling$ \alpha_s $ is set to 0.118, and for electro-weak parameters, the W boson mass is set to 80.385 GeV; Fermi coupling is set to$ 1.166\times10^{-5} $ $ {\rm GeV}^{-2} $ ; related CKM matrix elements are set to as$ V^{cd} = 0.225 $ and$ V^{cs} = 0.974 $ ; the mass of charged light leptons is considered and set to$ m_e = 0.511 $ MeV and$ m_{\mu} = 105.658 $ MeV. At LO, the Feynman diagrams for the hard scattering processes of the$ W+ $ charm production$ pp\to W +c+X $ are shown in Fig. 1. The main contribution for the cross-sections of$ W+ $ charm production comes from strange quark and gluon scattering, the down-quark contribution is strongly Cabibbo suppressed, and the contribution from the bottom quark and gluon scattering is negligible. -
The total cross-sections
$ \sigma(W^+ +\bar c) $ and$ \sigma(W^- + c) $ of the production of a W boson in association with a charm quark in pp collisions at$ \sqrt s = 7 $ TeV at NLO QCD are summarized in Table 1. PDF uncertainties are at 68% confidence level (C.L.), that are obtained from the error sets of CT10NNLO, CT14NNLO, and MSTW2008NNLO. The experimental measurements from CMS collaboration at the LHC at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV [11] are also included in this table. The comparison between theory predictions based on various PDF sets and experimental measurements are illustrated in Fig. 2. The predictions obtained with the CT10NNLO PDFs are in agreement with CMS measurements. The predictions obtained with CT14NNLO agree with CMS measurements within the uncertainty range. The prediction obtained with MSTW2008NNLO is less favored. Those differences in the size of the PDF uncertainties depend on a different methodology, and the parametrization of the$ s(x,Q) $ PDF used by different PDF sets.$ \sigma( pp \to W + c ) \times B( W \to l \nu ) $ /pbPDF sets $ p_T^l > 25 $ GeV$ p^l_T>35 $ GeVCT10NNLO ${108.1}^{+6.6{\text%}}_{-5.5{\text%}}$ $86.4^{+6.7{\text%}}_{-5.5{\text%}}$ CT14NNLO $100.4^{+7.1{\text%}}_{-10.0{\text%}}$ $80.1^{+7.2{\text%}}_{-10.1{\text%}}$ MSTW2008NNLO $98.5^{+2.1{\text%}}_{-2.6{\text%}}$ $78.7^{+2.1{\text%}}_{-2.6{\text%}}$ CMS 107.7 ± 3.1% (stat.) ± 6.4% (syst.) 84.1 ± 2.4% (stat.) ± 5.8% (syst.) Table 1. Total cross-section of
$ \sigma(pp\to W + c )\times B(W\to\ l \nu) .$ Figure 2. (color online) Comparison of theoretical predictions for total cross-section
$ \sigma(W + c) $ computed with MadGraph using the CT10NNLO, CT14NNLO, and MSTW2008NNLO PDFs with CMS measurements. The left figure contains the prediction for the lepton from W boson decay with$ p^l_T > 25 $ GeV, while the right figure is for the case$ p^l_T > 35 $ GeV. The solid vertical line shows the central value of the measurement, the inner error band corresponds to the statistical uncertainty, and the outer error band to the sum in quadrature of the statistical and systematic uncertainties.Our MadGraph calculations of the d,
$ {\bar{d}} $ , s, and$ {\bar{s}} $ quarks contributions (in pb) to the LO$ W + $ charm total cross-sections with NNLO PDFs for the leptonic decay channel$ W \to e\nu $ are shown in Table 2. The strange quark contributes the most to this$ W+ $ charm production. With regard to the parametrization of the strange-quark content of the proton, CTEQ-TEA and MSTW2008 PDF groups make different assumptions in their global fits. In CT10NNLO and CT14NNLO, the strange quark is parameterized symmetrically$ s = {\bar{s}} $ , and in MSTW2008, it is parameterized asymmetrically,$ s - {\bar{s}} \neq 0 $ . Hence, corresponding theoretical predictions differ accordingly. For MSTW2008, the production of$ W^+ + c $ is slightly larger than the$ W^+ + \bar c $ , as expected because of the$ s-{\bar{s}} $ asymmetry. Because of the dominance of the d quark over the$ {\bar{d}} $ -quark in the proton, the production of$ W^- + c $ is larger than$ W^+ + \bar c $ . The numbers in brackets correspond to$ p_T^{l}>35 $ GeV.Subprocess CT10NNLO CT14NNLO MSTW2008NNLO $ {\bar{s}} + g \to W^+ + \bar c $ 35.82(28.72) 32.85(26.28) 31.59(25.49) $ {\bar{d}} + g \to W^+ + \bar c $ 2.33(1.89) 2.37(1.92) 2.43(1.96) $ s + g \to W^- + c $ 35.85(28.78) 32.89(26.32) 32.49(26.15) $ d + g \to W^- + c $ 4.50(3.73) 4.58(3.78) 4.66(3.86) Table 2. LO contributions of d,
$ {\bar{d}} $ , s and$ {\bar{s}} $ quarks to$ \sigma(pp\to W + c )\times B(W\to\ l \nu) $ within the kinematic region$ p_T^{\rm jet} > 25 $ GeV,$ |\eta^{\rm jet}| < 2.5 $ , lepton pseudorapidity range$ |\eta_l|<2.1 $ and$ p_T^{l}>25(35) $ GeV. -
The absolute and normalized differential cross-sections are obtained by MadGraph using the same setup as the CMS collaboration at the LHC and a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV. In Fig. 3 and Fig. 4, we compare the absolute and normalized differential cross-sections in bins of lepton pseudo-rapidity with CMS measurements. The absolute and normalized differential cross-sections with PDF uncertainty at 68% C.L. are summarized in Tables 3 and 4, and the CMS 7 TeV measurement with statistical and systematic uncertainty is given in the last column. There is good agreement between theoretical predictions and measured distributions. The comparisons among predictions from various PDFs may lead to different conclusions. For instance, the predictions based on CT14NNLO and MSTW2008NNLO PDFs are smaller than the predictions based on CT10NNLO PDFs, and PDF uncertainties of CT14NNLO PDFs are much larger than the PDF uncertainties of CT10NNLO and MSTW2008NNLO.
Figure 3. (color online) Comparison of theoretical predictions for differential cross-sections,
$ {\rm d}\sigma(W+c)/{\rm d}|\eta| $ , as a function of absolute value of pseudorapidity of lepton from W-boson decay, with CMS measurements. Theoretical predictions at NLO are calculated using MadGraph with CT10NNLO, CT14NNLO and MSTW2008NNLO PDFs. The left figure shows the predictions for the lepton from W boson decay with$ p^l_T > 25 $ GeV, and the right with$ p^l_T > 35 $ GeV. Error bars on theoretical predictions show 68% C.L..Figure 4. (color online) Comparison of theoretical predictions for normalized differential cross-sections,
$ {\rm d}\sigma(W+c)/\sigma {\rm d}|\eta| $ , as a function of absolute value of pseudorapidity of lepton from W-boson decay, with CMS measurements. Theoretical predictions at NLO are calculated using MadGraph with CT10NNLO, CT14NNLO and MSTW2008NNLO PDFs. The left figure shows the predictions for the lepton from the W boson decay with$ p^l_T > 25 $ GeV, and the right with$ p^l_T > 35 $ GeV.$ p_T^l>25 $ GeV$ |\eta^l| $ CT10NNLO CT14NNLO MSTW2008NNLO CMS measurement [0,0.35] $65.7_{-5.7{\text%}}^{+6.1{\text%}}$ $60.5_{-9.4{\text%}}^{+6.8{\text%}}$ $59.2_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+2.3{\text%}}$ 68.7 ± 3.9% ± 6.7% [0.35,0.7] $62.8_{-5.6{\text%}}^{+6.2{\text%}}$ $58.1_{-9.5{\text%}}^{+6.9{\text%}}$ $57.0_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+2.3{\text%}}$ 59.9 ± 4.2% ± 6.7% [0.7,1.1] $56.9_{-5.5{\text%}}^{+6.4{\text%}}$ $52.6_{-9.8{\text%}}^{+7.0{\text%}}$ $51.6_{-2.6{\text%}}^{+2.2{\text%}}$ 56.7 ± 4.2% ± 6.7% [1.1,1.6] $46.8_{-5.7{\text%}}^{+7.0{\text%}}$ $43.8_{-10.4{\text%}}^{+7.4{\text%}}$ $42.9_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+2.2{\text%}}$ 44.8 ± 4.2% ± 7.1% [1.6,2.1] $33.9_{-6.2{\text%}}^{+8.5{\text%}}$ $32.0_{-11.3{\text%}}^{+8.7{\text%}}$ $31.5_{-2.9{\text%}}^{+2.4{\text%}}$ 35.1 ± 4.8% ± 6.8% $ p_T^l>35 $ GeV$ |\eta^l| $ CT10NNLO CT14NNLO MSTW2008NNLO CMS measurement [0,0.35] $53.4_{-5.8{\text%}}^{+6.2{\text%}}$ $49.2_{-9.5{\text%}}^{+6.9{\text%}}$ $48.1_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+2.3{\text%}}$ 52.3 ± 3.3% ± 6.1% [0.35,0.7] $50.9_{-5.7{\text%}}^{+6.3{\text%}}$ $46.9_{-9.7{\text%}}^{+6.9{\text%}}$ $46.1_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+2.3{\text%}}$ 49.2 ± 3.3% ± 6.1% [0.7,1.1] $45.7_{-5.6{\text%}}^{+6.6{\text%}}$ $42.2_{-10.0{\text%}}^{+7.0{\text%}}$ $41.6_{-2.6{\text%}}^{+2.2{\text%}}$ 45.5 ± 3.3% ± 5.9% [1.1,1.6] $37.1_{-5.7{\text%}}^{+7.2{\text%}}$ $34.5_{-10.6{\text%}}^{+7.5{\text%}}$ $34.0_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+2.2{\text%}}$ 34.2 ± 3.5% ± 6.1% [1.6,2.1] $26.1_{-6.3{\text%}}^{+8.9{\text%}}$ $24.6_{-11.4{\text%}}^{+9.0{\text%}}$ $24.3_{-3.0{\text%}}^{+2.4{\text%}}$ 26.6 ± 3.8% ± 6.4% Table 3. Theory predictions of differential cross-sections
$ {\rm d} \sigma( pp \to W + c ) \times B( W \to l \nu )/ {\rm d} |\eta^l| $ with PDF uncertainty at 68% C.L., last three column for CMS 7 TeV measurement with statistical and systematic uncertainty.$ p_T^l>25 $ GeV$ |\eta^l| $ CT10NNLO CT14NNLO MSTW2008NNLO CMS measurement [0,0.35] $0.607_{-2.2{\text%}}^{+1.2{\text%}}$ $0.602_{-1.5{\text%}}^{+1.4{\text%}}$ $0.601_{-0.6{\text%}}^{+0.7{\text%}}$ 0.638 ± 2.5% ± 1.9% [0.35,0.7] $0.581_{-1.7{\text%}}^{+0.9{\text%}}$ $0.578_{-1.2{\text%}}^{+1.1{\text%}}$ $0.578_{-0.4{\text%}}^{+0.5{\text%}}$ 0.556 ± 2.9% ± 2.2% [0.7,1.1] $0.527_{-0.7{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ $0.524_{-0.5{\text%}}^{+0.4{\text%}}$ $0.524_{-0.2{\text%}}^{+0.2{\text%}}$ 0.527 ± 2.8% ± 2.1% [1.1,1.6] $0.433_{-0.8{\text%}}^{+1.3{\text%}}$ $0.436_{-0.9{\text%}}^{+0.8{\text%}}$ $0.435_{-0.4{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ 0.416 ± 2.9% ± 2.2% [1.6,2.1] $0.314_{-2.3{\text%}}^{+4.2{\text%}}$ $0.318_{-2.5{\text%}}^{+3.0{\text%}}$ $0.320_{-1.3{\text%}}^{+1.1{\text%}}$ 0.326 ± 3.7% ± 2.8% $ p_T^l>35 $ GeV$ |\eta^l| $ CT10NNLO CT14NNLO MSTW2008NNLO CMS measurement [0,0.35] $0.618_{-2.3{\text%}}^{+1.3{\text%}}$ $0.615_{-1.6{\text%}}^{+1.5{\text%}}$ $0.611_{-0.6{\text%}}^{+0.7{\text%}}$ 0.622 ± 2.1% ± 1.6% [0.35,0.7] $0.589_{-1.8{\text%}}^{+1.0{\text%}}$ $0.586_{-1.3{\text%}}^{+1.1{\text%}}$ $0.585_{-0.5{\text%}}^{+0.6{\text%}}$ 0.585 ± 2.4% ± 1.7% [0.7,1.1] $0.529_{-0.7{\text%}}^{+0.4{\text%}}$ $0.527_{-0.5{\text%}}^{+0.4{\text%}}$ $0.528_{-0.2{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ 0.541 ± 2.2% ± 1.7% [1.1,1.6] $0.429_{-0.8{\text%}}^{+1.4{\text%}}$ $0.431_{-1.0{\text%}}^{+0.9{\text%}}$ $0.432_{-0.4{\text%}}^{+0.4{\text%}}$ 0.407 ± 2.5% ± 2.0% [1.6,2.1] $0.302_{-2.5{\text%}}^{+4.7{\text%}}$ $0.307_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+3.4{\text%}}$ $0.309_{-1.5{\text%}}^{+1.3{\text%}}$ 0.316 ± 3.2% ± 2.2% Table 4. Theory predictions of normalized differential cross-sections
$ (1/\sigma(W+c)) {\rm d}\sigma(W+c)/{\rm d}|\eta| $ with PDF uncertainty at 68% C.L., last column depicts CMS 7 TeV measurement with statistical and systematic uncertainty. -
We calculated total (
$ \sigma(W^- + c), \sigma(W^+ + \bar c) $ ) and differential (absolute and normalized) cross-sections independently under the same conditions in Subsections 2.1 and 2.2. The CMS[11] collaboration introduced the charged cross-section ratio,$ R^c = \frac{\sigma(W^+ + \bar{c})}{\sigma(W^- + c)}. $
(2) The advantage of using this ratio is that many of the theoretical and experimental uncertainties can cancel. The comparison of the total cross-section ratio and differential cross-section ratio with PDF uncertainty at 68% C.L. with CMS data are shown in Fig. 5 and Fig. 6, the left column corresponds to
$ p_T^l > 25 $ GeV, and right one corresponds to$ p_T^l > 35 $ GeV. The total cross-section ratio and differential cross-section ratio are also summarized in Table 5 and Table 6. From Tables 5 and 6, we see that the total cross-section ratio, differential cross-section ratio, and the associated PDF uncertainties are different for the CT10, CT14, and MSTW2008 PDF sets. These differences arise from the parametrization assumptions in each global analysis. For example, the CT10 and CT14 PDF sets assume$ s(x,Q) = {\bar{s}}(x,Q) $ , cross-section ratios almost exclusively are determined by the$ d-{\bar{d}} $ asymmetry and with a very small PDF uncertainty. In contrast, the MSTW08 PDF set assumes asymmetric strangeness$s(x,Q)\! -\! {\bar{s}}(x,Q) \!\neq\!$ $ 0 $ , that yields a larger PDF uncertainty in the prediction.Figure 5. (color online) Comparison of theoretical prediction of total cross-section ratio
$ \sigma(W^+ + \bar c)/\sigma(W^- + c) $ for three different PDF sets with CMS measurements.Figure 6. (color online) Comparison of theoretical prediction of differential cross-section ratio for three different PDF sets with CMS data.
$ \sigma(W^+ + \bar c)/\sigma(W^- + c) $ PDF sets $ p^l_T>25 $ GeV$ p^l_T>35 $ GeVCT10NNLO $0.944_{-0.3{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ $0.942_{-0.3{\text%}}^{+0.4{\text%}}$ CT14NNLO $0.946_{-0.7{\text%}}^{+0.4{\text%}}$ $0.940_{-0.7{\text%}}^{+0.4{\text%}}$ MSTW2008NNLO $0.920_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+2.2{\text%}}$ $0.916_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+2.3{\text%}}$ CMS 0.954 ± 2.5% (stat.) ± 0.4% (syst.) 0.938 ± 2.0% (stat.) ± 0.6% (syst.) Table 5. Theoretical prediction of total cross-section ratio of
$ \sigma(W^+ + \bar c)/\sigma(W^- + c) $ $ p_T^l>25 $ GeV$ |\eta^l| $ CT10NNLO CT14NNLO MSTW2008NNLO CMS measurement [0,0.35] $ 0.966_{-0.2{\text%}}^{+0.2{\text%}}$ $ 0.977_{-0.4{\text%}}^{+0.2{\text%}}$ $ 0.958_{-2.8{\text%}}^{+1.2{\text%}}$ 1.013 ± 5.1% ± 0.5% [0.35,0.7] $ 0.968_{-0.2{\text%}}^{+0.2{\text%}}$ $ 0.962_{-0.4{\text%}}^{+0.2{\text%}}$ $ 0.953_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+1.4{\text%}}$ 0.960 ± 5.5% ± 0.5% [0.7,1.1] $ 0.959_{-0.3{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ $ 0.947_{-0.6{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ $ 0.928_{-2.6{\text%}}^{+1.9{\text%}}$ 0.897 ± 5.7% ± 0.9% [1.1,1.6] $ 0.935_{-0.4{\text%}}^{+0.5{\text%}}$ $ 0.935_{-0.9{\text%}}^{+0.5{\text%}}$ $ 0.898_{-3.1{\text%}}^{+2.8{\text%}}$ 1.062 ± 5.7% ± 1.3% [1.6,2.1] $ 0.881_{-0.8{\text%}}^{+1.0{\text%}}$ $ 0.818_{-1.5{\text%}}^{+1.0{\text%}}$ $ 0.852_{-4.6{\text%}}^{+4.1{\text%}}$ 0.776 ± 7.5% ± 2.1% $ p_T^l>35 $ GeV$ |\eta^l| $ CT10NNLO CT14NNLO MSTW2008NNLO CMS measurement [0,0.35] $ 0.966_{-0.2{\text%}}^{+0.2{\text%}}$ $ 0.970_{-0.4{\text%}}^{+0.2{\text%}}$ $ 0.955_{-2.9{\text%}}^{+1.2{\text%}}$ 0.993 ± 4.1% ± 0.7% [0.35,0.7] $ 0.968_{-0.2{\text%}}^{+0.2{\text%}}$ $ 0.957_{-0.5{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ $ 0.949_{-2.7{\text%}}^{+1.4{\text%}}$ 0.977 ± 4.0% ± 0.7% [0.7,1.1] $ 0.953_{-0.3{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ $ 0.947_{-0.6{\text%}}^{+0.3{\text%}}$ $ 0.931_{-2.6{\text%}}^{+2.0{\text%}}$ 0.927 ± 4.3% ± 0.9% [1.1,1.6] $ 0.931_{-0.5{\text%}}^{+0.5{\text%}}$ $ 0.930_{-1.0{\text%}}^{+0.6{\text%}}$ $ 0.892_{-3.3{\text%}}^{+3.0{\text%}}$ 0.948 ± 4.9% ± 1.1% [1.6,2.1] $ 0.877_{-0.8{\text%}}^{+1.1{\text%}}$ $ 0.882_{-1.7{\text%}}^{+1.2{\text%}}$ $ 0.836_{-5.0{\text%}}^{+4.5{\text%}}$ 0.784 ± 6.4% ± 1.4% Table 6. Theoretical prediction of differential cross-section ratio with PDF uncertainty at 68% C.L., last column depicts CMS 7 TeV measurement with statistical and systematic uncertainty.
-
One way to determine the sensitivity of a specific data point to some PDF
$ f_i(x, Q) $ at a given x and Q is to compute a correlation cosine between the theoretical prediction for this point and the PDFs of various flavors [16 –18]. Therefore, we will study the correlations between CT14NNLO PDFs of various flavors at specific x and each data point of CMS 7 TeV$ W+ $ charm production with transverse momentum of the charged lepton from W boson decay at the$ p_T^l>35 $ GeV region. However, first we briefly provide the definition of the correlation cosine. If there are two variables$ X(\vec{a_j}) $ and$ Y(\vec{a_j}) $ in the parameter space, where$ {a_j} $ are the PDF parameters, then the correlation cosine can be expressed as:$ {\rm cos}\phi = \frac{\vec{\nabla} X \cdot \vec{\nabla} Y}{|\vec{\nabla} X| |\vec{\nabla} Y|}, $
where
$ \vec{\nabla} X $ and$ \vec{\nabla} Y $ are gradient of the variables$ X(a_j) $ and$ Y(a_j) $ . For$ X(a_i) $ , ith component of gradient vector is$ (\vec{\nabla} X)_j = \frac{\partial X}{\partial a_j} = \frac{1}{2}(X^+(a_j)-X^-(a_j)), $
where
$ X^+(a_j) $ and$ X^-(a_j) $ are computed from the two sets of PDFs along the positive and negative direction of the i-th eigenvector. The quantity$ {\rm cos}\phi $ characterizes whether the variables X and Y are correlated ($ {\rm cos}\phi\sim 1 $ ), anti-correlated ($ {\rm cos}\phi\sim -1 $ ), or not correlated ($ {\rm cos}\phi\sim0 $ ).Figure 7 shows the correlation cosine between each data point and CT14NNLO PDF flavors at
$ Q = 1.3 $ GeV and$ Q = 100 $ GeV. CMS 7 TeV$ W+ $ charm data contains 17 data points, and thus there are 17 lines for certain flavors in Fig. 7. Correlations of$ s(x,Q) $ PDF and$ g(x,Q) $ PDF with each data point are given at the first row in Fig. 7. Correlations of$ u(x,Q) $ PDF and$ {\bar u}(x,Q) $ PDF with each data point are given at the second row in Fig. 7. Finally, correlations of$ d(x,Q) $ PDF and$ {\bar{d}}(x,Q) $ PDF with each data point are given at the third row in Fig. 7. In each subfigure, the correlation between one of the PDF flavors with each data point is distinguished by different type of line. Solid, long-dashed-dotted, dotted, short-dashed, and short-dashed-dotted lines correspond to correlation of differential cross-section, differential cross-section ratio, normalized differential cross-section, total cross-section and total cross-section ratio data, respectively. As we discussed in Section 2, differential cross-section, differential cross-section ratio, and normalized differential cross-section data has included five data points that are measured by five rapidity bin ranges. The lines with a darker color correspond to the higher rapidity bin range.Figure 7. (color online) Correlation
$ \cos\phi $ between CT14NNO PDFs at the specific x value on the horizontal axis and CT14NNLO predictions at NLO for CMS 7 TeV$ W+ $ charm production at$ Q = 1.3 $ GeV(left panel) and$ Q = 100 $ GeV(right panel).In the case of the total cross-section, differential cross-section and ratio,
$ s(x,Q) $ PDF correlations are most significant ($ \cos{\phi}\sim 1 $ ) at x from few times$ 10^{-2} $ to few times$ 10^{-1} $ , when$ Q = 1.3 $ GeV and$ Q = 100 $ GeV, respectively. However, at other x range, the$ s(x,Q) $ PDFs correlation is not very strong. There are no clear relations between the rapidity bin range and correlation cosine, however it can be seen from two subfigures at the first row that each data point in various rapidity bins has a strong correlation with$ s(x,Q) $ PDF at the x-region mentioned above. There is other information for the normalized differential cross-section, which includes five data points that are partially correlated and partially anti-correlated, and represented with each flavor, as illustrated in each subfigure of Fig. 7 with five dashed-lines (red or blue) that are inconsistent with other types of lines. Correlated data points prefer PDFs to become larger, and anti-correlated data points prefer PDFs to become smaller. Hence, the impact of normalized cross-section data on PDFs is neutralized. Not considering the correlations with normalized cross-section data, the d(anti) quark and u(anti) PDFs are anti-correlated at$ x<0.4 $ region, and small at all x-regions when both$ Q = 1.3 $ GeV and$ Q = 100 $ GeV, which can be seen in subfigures in the second and third rows of Fig. 7. Thus, those data points without normalized cross-section data prefer d(anti) quark and u(anti) PDFs to become smaller in the$ x<0.4 $ region. Gluon's correlation is likewise miniscule in the x-region, which can be seen in the subfigures in the first row of Fig. 7. One can conclude that CMS 7 TeV$ W+ $ charm data have larger impact on$ s(x,Q) $ PDF in CT14NNLO than other flavors.
QCD analysis of CMS W + charm measurements at LHC with ${\sqrt { s} = 7\; {\bf{TeV}}}$ and implications for strange PDF
- Received Date: 2019-08-02
- Accepted Date: 2019-10-09
- Available Online: 2019-12-01
Abstract: We calculate cross-sections and cross-section ratios of a charm quark production in association with a W gauge boson at next-to-leading order QCD using MadGraph and CT10NNLO, CT14NNLO, and MSTW2008NNLO PDFs. We compare the results with measurements from the CMS detector at the LHC at a center-of-mass energy of 7 TeV. Moreover, we calculate absolute and normalized differential cross-sections as well as differential cross-section ratios as a function of the lepton pseudorapidity from the W boson decay. The correlation between the CT14NNLO PDFs and predictions for