ホーム > L3 Preprints > Studies of electroweak interactions and searches for new physics using photonic events with missing energy at the Large Electron-Positron Collider
In this thesis I study the production of photonic events with missing energy in e+e- collisions at the Large Electron-Positron (LEP) Collider. My analysis was based on 619 inverse picobarns of data collected by the L3 detector during 1998--2000 at center-of-mass energies between 189 and 208 GeV, the highest energies ever attained in an e+e- collider. I selected a high-purity sample of 2,022 well-reconstructed single- and multi-photon events with missing energy. I used this sample to study the pair-production of neutrinos accompanied by the emission of one or more photons. The average ratio of the measured to expected cross section was found to be R = 0.987±0.022(stat)±0.014 (syst). The number of light neutrino species was measured to be 2.98±0.05(stat)±0.04(syst), and the first direct evidence for the pair-production of electron neutrinos was found. The experimental errors in these results are smaller than those of comparable previous measurements. The selection results are also given in the form of tables, which can be used to test any future models involving photonic signatures at LEP. These measurements take advantage of the unique photon detection capability of the L3 Experiment. The performance and operation of the L3 electromagnetic calorimeter is discussed in detail, with an emphasis on its calibration and monitoring. In particular, I describe a novel calibration system based on a Radiofrequency Quadrupole accelerator, which allowed me to achieve a calibration precision of 0.5%. Reactions of the type "e+e- [arrow right] photons + invisible particles" are predicted by a broad range of theories beyond the Standard Model, including Supersymmetry and models with extra spatial dimensions and anomalous gauge-boson couplings. I found no evidence for such models and derived limits on the corresponding signal cross sections and model parameters. Among others, lower limits between 1.6 TeV and 0.66 TeV were set at the 95% confidence level on the new scale of gravity for the number of extra dimensions between 2 and 6.