# Measurement of $W^{\pm}$-boson and $Z$-boson production cross-sections   in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=2.76$ TeV with the ATLAS detector

**Authors:** ATLAS Collaboration

arXiv: 1907.03567 · 2020-02-28

## TL;DR

This paper reports measurements of W and Z boson production cross-sections at 2.76 TeV using ATLAS data, providing key insights into electroweak processes at this energy.

## Contribution

First measurement of W and Z boson production cross-sections at 2.76 TeV with detailed analysis and comparison to theoretical predictions.

## Key findings

- Total cross-sections for W+ and W- bosons measured with uncertainties.
- Z boson production cross-section determined with precision.
- Ratios and asymmetries analyzed to reduce systematic uncertainties.

## Abstract

The production cross-sections for $W^{\pm}$ and $Z$ bosons are measured using ATLAS data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.0 pb$^{-1}$ collected at a centre-of-mass energy $\sqrt{s}=2.76$ TeV. The decay channels $W \rightarrow \ell \nu$ and $Z \rightarrow \ell \ell $ are used, where $\ell$ can be an electron or a muon. The cross-sections are presented for a fiducial region defined by the detector acceptance and are also extrapolated to the full phase space for the total inclusive production cross-section. The combined (average) total inclusive cross-sections for the electron and muon channels are:   \begin{eqnarray} \sigma^{\text{tot}}_{W^{+}\rightarrow \ell \nu}& = & 2312 \pm 26\ (\text{stat.})\ \pm 27\ (\text{syst.}) \pm 72\ (\text{lumi.}) \pm 30\ (\text{extr.})\text{pb} \nonumber, \\ \sigma^{\text{tot}}_{W^{-}\rightarrow \ell \nu}& = & 1399 \pm 21\ (\text{stat.})\ \pm 17\ (\text{syst.}) \pm 43\ (\text{lumi.}) \pm 21\ (\text{extr.})\text{pb} \nonumber, \\ \sigma^{\text{tot}}_{Z \rightarrow \ell \ell}& = & 323.4 \pm 9.8\ (\text{stat.}) \pm 5.0\ (\text{syst.}) \pm 10.0\ (\text{lumi.}) \pm 5.5 (\text{extr.}) \text{pb} \nonumber. \end{eqnarray} Measured ratios and asymmetries constructed using these cross-sections are also presented. These observables benefit from full or partial cancellation of many systematic uncertainties that are correlated between the different measurements.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.03567/full.md

## Figures

21 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.03567/full.md

## References

80 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.03567/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.03567