Friday 10 June 2011

D0: no bump

This result has been known to all blog readers since yesterday, now it's officially out. The D0 collaboration just released a new analysis of the dijet invariant mass spectrum in W+2j events using 4.3 fb-1 of data. Recall that CDF, looking at the same final state, saw an unexpected bump in the dijet spectrum near 150 GeV which might be a sign of new physics beyond the Standard Model. D0 closely follows the CDF analysis. Their conclusion: no bump.
They place the 95% CL limit on the cross section of a hypothetical 145 GeV dijet resonance at the level of 2 picobarns. On the other hand, CDF estimates that fitting their signal requires a larger cross section, of order 4 picobarns, which D0 excludes at 4 sigma. It's not straightforward to draw firm conclusions from these numbers. Although both experiments use almost identical kinematic cuts, they have different detector response, quality cuts, etc., which leads to different results. For example, D0 has about 30% more events than CDF near 150 GeV (after scaling with luminosity). It would be illuminating to run realistic models explaining the CDF bump through both detector simulations in order to compare the efficiencies. That would allow us to quantify the discrepancy between CDF in D0 (it may well be much smaller than 4 sigma). In any case, not seeing any excess in the D0 data puts a lot of strain on any new physics explanation of the CDF excess.

For the moment I don't see any catch in the D0 analysis. Previously, D0 employed differential reweighting to model the W+jets background which might have scaled away any excess; however, the present analysis avoids this step. Also, the D0 data match the Standard Model predictions much better than the CDF ones, also away from the 150 GeV region, which suggests they have backgrounds under better control. Looking closer at the plots, it seems the main difference between the 2 experiments is their estimate of the QCD multijet contribution (kudos to Jay for that observation), but at this point it is not clear if this can explain the CDF bump.

In conclusion, the 2 Tevatron experiments got into an epic standoff. One holds 4 aces in his hand. The other says it's a cheat. We need a shootout to decide who's right :-)

The story is of course all over blogs, see e.g. Tommaso, Michael, Georgios, Peter, Lubos, Sean for more coverage.

21 comments:

Anonymous said...

D0+CDF result confirms that such analysis depends on the model too much to be believable (probably even with much higher statistics!). It just shows how hard it is to do measurements when background is dominating (and isn't flat). If CMS and ATLAS can provide better jet kinematical resolution, we will probably get a definite answer from them (and that by the end of summer).

I guess CDF guys should first agree on jet spectrum with D0 before making bold claims about new resonances (such are only a gamble for gaining reputation if by any chance they are right).

Luboš Motl said...

Dear Jester, it's misleading to say that only CDF says that it has 4 aces in their hand while D0 only screams that it's a cheat.

CDF holds 4.2 aces or so - as you mentioned some time ago - while D0 holds 4.3 aces in claiming that the picture on the CDF card (150 GeV resonance with 4 pb cross section) is bogus.

The probability that such a bump is consistent with the D0 data is 8 parts per million.

I am almost certain that D0 is right and CDF is wrong because there are many more ways in which one can be wrong than there are ways to do all the things right and confirm the Standard Model; the latter group of ways only includes 1 way - being nearly perfect. ;-)

X said...

Given that the data are the same, the only thing this comparison tells us is that there appears to be a large, uncontrolled (and usually unreported) systematic uncertainty in these experimental results.

Sociologically, it reaffirms the maxim: Physicists will look for systematic errors for exactly as long as it takes to accumulate enough to favor their favorite model. (Then, opposing physicists will look for more systematic errors until they find enough to favor their favorite model. See also the absurd back-and-forth on the Xenon results.)

Anonymous said...

After all, this peak issue has been useful. It has distracted the attention from the asymmetry allowing me to send papers first :)

Anonymous said...

Why is there a deficit at 255 GeV?

Rien said...

It seems the D0 simulation describes the background better than CDF, especially at lower dijet mass. Their data points are consistent with the simulation everywhere. I choose to trust D0 on this.

Anonymous said...

So what is left as an explanation? That CDF has some sort of very subtle detector flaw that has managed to evade 20 years of scrutiny?
Human error that has confounded 2 different but large (and well trained) groups of CDF analysts.
Or one of the weirdest statistical flukes in particle physics history.

None of the above sounds likely, but then it more or less has to be one of the above, assuming D0 really did use the identical Monte Carlo algorithms, and took close to the same cuts.

Kea said...

Wow, a disappearing 4 sigma bump! Pretty amazing. So no new stuff at the LHC, I guess ...

Andrew Oh-Willeke said...

"So what is left as an explanation? That CDF has some sort of very subtle detector flaw that has managed to evade 20 years of scrutiny? Human error that has confounded 2 different but large (and well trained) groups of CDF analysts."

Error is probably too mechanical a word for what is going here, which apparently involves the baseline background calculations. Nobody suggests that the difference is due to a simple calculation error, and neither group calculating a background is claiming that their estimation of the background is exact either. Both quantitatively approximating the background by making assumptions about what approximating shortcuts are material and what are not without knowing precisely how much those approximations really differ from an exact mathematical calculation that is beyond our capacity to carry out even though the Standard Model supplies an equation for that calculation that we are simply unable to solve exactly analytically as opposed to by numerical approximation.

It sounds like the issues are with the strategic decisions that the two groups took to develop a method to approximate a background from the same Standard Model QCD equation, rather than anything about the physical experiment or data screens used. And, the fact that one or the other is closer to the truth here doesn't necessarily mean that one approximation or the other is more accurate in all circumstances. An approximation that may be important in the background in lots of experiments may be unimportant in this one, or visa versa. Approximating backgrounds is an art as much as it is a cut and dried procedure. Something as simple as a well chosen decision to use polar rather than x and y coordinates in a given equation, or visa versa, based on the nature of the data inputs, could materially affect the accuracy of the background estimation in some little part of an overall plot that is much larger than the one focused on and reproduced in articles and blogs.

In this case, I think that there is a good chance that the two background calculation groups may manage to reconcile their efforts and reach a mutual consensus on which is best (possibly a mix of the two methods), in part, because from a sociological perspective, there is less of a psychological need to defend an outlier result when there is no single theoretical explanation of it that is really compelling even though there are multiple possible theories that could explain it. It is easier to back off of a result that could be any of a half dozen things that there was no consensus predicting before the experiment was done, than it is to back off, for example, data that would convincingly and unequivocally show a 4th generation top quark, and couldn't be anything else, if true.

Ulla said...

If this is an oscillation?

Anonymous said...

Sure, it is an oscillation between ignorance and rush to judgment.

Matti Pitkänen said...

Neither CDF nor D0 is cheating and the only rational approach is to ask whether there is a new physics based explanation not only for CDF bump but also for the CDF-D0 discrepancy. For an approach along these lines see this.

Anonymous said...

there's no one here from Cern?

some friends told me that CMS announced something last Friday at the Higgs seminar

Kea said...

Hang on. What is the significance of D0's observed yellow Gaussian? Is that in the paper?

Anonymous said...

CMS also published something related to the tt asymmetry : http://arxiv.org/abs/1106.2142

Their conclusion is interesting : "These limits disfavour the FCNC interpretation of the Tevatron results."

Anonymous said...

About the no same sign tops, I agree this is very interesting, but it's not exactly a surprise. You can see from the plots in 1101.5625 that for the AFB models which yield this final state, the signal is so immense that discovery would have been possible months ago, if this were the mechanism behind the Tevatron anomaly. The lack of five sigma papers leads one to draw the obvious conclusion... Of course, it's really great to see the explicit limits!

It might also be worth pointing out that this result by no means excludes all of the t-channel models for the top AFB, just the simplest ones where the mediator carries no charge. There are plenty of nice t-channel models left to be ruled out using other signals.

Gordon Watts said...

Congrats! ;-)

Rafael Lopes de Sá said...

Welcome. Hope you have fun!

Anonymous said...

When are you gonna tell us everything about Z' at CMS?

Heather Logan said...

On page 4 of their preprint D0 say that the diboson background monte carlo is generated with PYTHIA and then normalized to the NLO cross section from MCFM. But then on page 5 they state that they do a fit of the backgrounds to data, in which "the cross sections for diboson and W+jets production in the MC are floated with no constraint".

Does the fitted diboson cross section agree with the MCFM NLO prediction? This question is not answered anywhere in the preprint.

(This raises a question to me about whether a bump in the D0 data could be fitted away using the shoulder of the W+jets background if the diboson cross section is allowed to float freely.)

Walter said...

Hi Heather, just counting the events in the Dzero di-boson peak it gives around twice the number of events compared to the CDF peak. The CDF di-boson cross section is fixed to NLO.
This is one of the more worrying aspects of the D0 analysis. They have a very different lepton isolation from CDF, but that cannot account for a factor of two...