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1\documentclass[preprint,times,5p,twocolumn]{elsarticle}
2\usepackage[ansinew]{inputenc}
3
4\usepackage{amsmath}
5\usepackage{epic}
6\usepackage{wrapfig}
7\usepackage{eepic}
8\usepackage{latexsym}
9\usepackage{array}
10\usepackage{multicol}
11
12\usepackage{fancyhdr}
13\usepackage{verbatim}
14%\addtolength{\textwidth}{1cm} \addtolength{\hoffset}{-0.5cm}
15\usepackage[colorlinks=true, pdfstartview=FitV, linkcolor=blue, citecolor=blue, urlcolor=blue, unicode]{hyperref}
16\usepackage{ifpdf}
17\usepackage{cite}
18
19\usepackage{enumitem}
20
21\newcommand{\dollar}{\$}
22
23\usepackage{graphicx}
24\graphicspath{{figures/}}
25
26
27\journal{Computer Physics Communications}
28
29\begin{document}
30
31\begin{frontmatter}
32
33\title{Delphes, a framework for fast simulation of a generic collider experiment}
34\author{S. Ovyn\corref{cor1}}
35\ead{severine.ovyn@uclouvain.be}
36
37\author{X. Rouby}
38\author{V. Lema\^itre}
39
40\address{Center for Particle Physics and Phenomenology (CP3),\\
41 Universit\'e catholique de Louvain,\\
42 B-1348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium}
43
44\begin{abstract}
45
46This paper presents a new \texttt{C++} framework, \textit{Delphes}, performing a
47fast multipurpose detector response simulation.
48The simulation includes a tracking system, embedded into a magnetic field,
49calorimeters and a muon system, and possible very forward detectors arranged
50along the beamline.
51The framework is interfaced to standard file formats and outputs observables such as isolated leptons,
52missing transverse energy and collection of jets which can be used for dedicated
53analyses. The simulation of the detector response takes into account the effect
54of magnetic field, the granularity of the calorimeters and subdetector
55resolutions.
56A simplified preselection can also be applied on processed events for trigger
57emulation. Detection of very forward scattered particles relies on the transport
58in beamlines with the \textit{Hector} software. Finally, the \textsc{FROG} 2D/3D
59event display is used for visualisation of the collision final states.
60\\ \\
61
62
63\textit{Preprint:} \texttt{CP3-09-01}, \texttt{arXiv:0903.2225 [hep-ph]}\\ \\
64\includegraphics[scale=0.8]{fig0}\\
65{\bf PROGRAM SUMMARY}\\
66\begin{small}
67\noindent
68{\em Program Title:} DELPHES \\
69{\em Current version:} 1.8 \\
70{\em Journal Reference:} \\
71{\em Catalogue identifier:} \\
72{\em Distribution format:} tar.gz \\
73{\em Programming language:} C++ \\
74%{\em Computer:} any computer with a C++ compiler and the ROOT environment \cite{bib:Root}
75 %Computer(s) for which program has been designed.
76%{\em Operating system:} \\
77 %Operating system(s) for which program has been designed.
78%{\em RAM:} bytes \\
79 %RAM in bytes required to execute program with typical data.
80%{\em Number of processors used:} \\
81 %If more than one processor.
82%{\em Supplementary material:} \\
83 % Fill in if necessary, otherwise leave out.
84%{\em Keywords:} Keyword one, Keyword two, Keyword three, etc. \\
85 % Please give some freely chosen keywords that we can use in a
86 % cumulative keyword index.
87%{\em Classification:} \\
88 %Classify using CPC Program Library Subject Index, see (
89 % http://cpc.cs.qub.ac.uk/subjectIndex/SUBJECT_index.html)
90 %e.g. 4.4 Feynman diagrams, 5 Computer Algebra.
91{\em External routines/libraries:} ROOT environment \\
92 % Fill in if necessary, otherwise leave out.
93{\em Subprograms used:} HepMC, StdHEP, FASTJET, \textit{Hector}, FROG. All provided within \textit{Delphes} distribution. \\
94{\em URL:}\href{http://www.fynu.ucl.ac.be/delphes.html}{http://www.fynu.ucl.ac.be/delphes.html}\\
95%{\em References:}
96%\begin{refnummer}
97%\item Reference 1 % This is the reference list of the Program Summary
98%\item Reference 2 % Type references in text as [1], [2], etc.
99%\item Reference 3 % This list is different from the bibliography, which
100 % you can use in the Long Write-Up.
101%\end{refnummer}
102\end{small}
103
104\begin{keyword}
105\textit{Delphes} \sep detector simulation \sep event reconstruction \sep trigger \sep \textsc{LHC}
106\PACS 29.85.-c \sep 07.05.Tp \sep 29.90.+r \sep 29.50.+v
107\end{keyword}
108
109\end{abstract}
110\cortext[cor1]{Corresponding author: +32.10.47.32.29.}
111\end{frontmatter}
112
113\section{Introduction}
114
115Multipurpose detectors at high energy colliders are very complex systems.
116Precise data analyses require a full detector simulation, including transport of
117the primary and secondary particles through the detector material accounting for
118the various detector inefficiencies, the dead material, the imperfections and
119the geometrical details. Their simulation is in general performed by means of
120the GEANT~\citep{bib:geant} toolkit and final observables used for analyses
121usually require sophisticated reconstruction algorithms.
122
123
124This complexity can only be handled by large collaborations.
125Phenomenological studies, looking for the observability of given signals,
126require in general only fast but realistic estimates of the expected signal
127signatures and their associated backgrounds.
128
129In this context, a new framework, called \textit{Delphes}~\citep{bib:delphes},
130has been developed, for a fast simulation of a general-purpose collider
131experiment~\citep{bib:othersim}.
132Using this framework, observables such as cross-sections and efficiencies after
133event selection can be estimated for specific processes.
134Starting from the output of event generators, the simulation of the detector
135response takes into account the subdetector resolutions, by smearing the
136kinematics of final-state particles (i.e. those considered as stable by the
137event generator
138\footnote{In the current \textit{Delphes} version, particles other than
139electrons ($e^\pm$), photons ($\gamma$), muons ($\mu^\pm$), neutrinos ($\nu_e$,
140$\nu_\mu$ and $\nu_\tau$) and neutralinos are simulated as hadrons for their
141interactions with the calorimeters. The simulation of stable particles beyond
142the Standard Model should therefore be handled with
143care~\citep{qr:invisibleparticles}.}).
144
145
146\textit{Delphes} includes the most crucial experimental features, such as
147(Fig.~\ref{fig:FlowChart}):
148\begin{enumerate}
149\item the geometry of both central and forward detectors,
150\item the effect of magnetic field on tracks,
151\item the reconstruction of photons, leptons, jets, $b$-jets, $\tau$-jets and
152missing transverse energy,
153\item a lepton isolation,
154\item a trigger emulation,
155\item an event display.
156\end{enumerate}
157
158\begin{figure*}[!ht]
159\begin{center}
160\includegraphics[scale=0.60]{fig1}
161\caption{Flow chart describing the principles behind \textit{Delphes}. Event
162files coming from external Monte Carlo generators are read by a converter stage
163(top).
164The kinematics variables of the final-state particles are then smeared
165according to the tunable subdetector resolutions.
166Tracks are reconstructed in a simulated solenoidal magnetic field and
167calorimetric cells sample the energy deposits. Based on these low-level objects,
168dedicated algorithms are applied for particle identification, isolation and
169reconstruction.
170The transport of very forward particles to the near-beam detectors is also
171simulated.
172Finally, an output file is written, including generator-level and
173analysis-object data.
174If requested, a fully parametrisable trigger can be emulated. Optionally, the
175geometry and visualisation files for the 3D event display can also be produced.
176All user parameters are set in the \textit{Detector/Smearing Card} and the
177\textit{Trigger Card}. }
178\label{fig:FlowChart}
179\end{center}
180\end{figure*}
181
182Although \textit{Delphes} yields much realistic results than a simple
183``parton-level" analysis, it has some limitations. Detector geometry is
184idealised, being uniform, symmetric around the beam axis, and having no cracks
185nor dead material. Secondary interactions, multiple scatterings, photon
186conversion and bremsstrahlung are also neglected.
187
188Several common datafile formats can be used as input in \textit{Delphes}
189\citep{qr:inputformat}, in order to process events from many different
190generators. \textit{Delphes} creates output data in a ROOT ntuple
191\citep{bib:Root}. This output contains a copy of the generator-level data, the
192analysis data objects after reconstruction, and possibly the results of the
193trigger emulation \citep{qr:outputformat}.
194In option \textit{Delphes} can produce a reduced output file in \texttt{*.lhco}
195text format, which is limited to the list of the reconstructed high-level
196objects in the final states~\citep{qr:lhco}.
197
198
199
200\section{Simulation of the detector response}
201
202The overall layout of the multipurpose detector simulated by \textit{Delphes}
203is shown in Fig.~\ref{fig:GenDet3}. It consists in a central tracking system
204(\textsc{TRACKER}) surrounded by an electromagnetic and a hadron calorimeters
205(\textsc{ECAL} and \textsc{HCAL}, each with a central region and two endcaps)
206and two forward calorimeters (\textsc{FCAL}). Finally, a muon system
207(\textsc{MUON}) encloses the central detector volume.
208
209A detector card \citep{qr:detectorcard} allows a large spectrum of running
210conditions by modifying basic detector parameters, including calorimeter and
211tracking coverage and resolution, thresholds or jet algorithm parameters.
212Even if \textit{Delphes} has been developped for the simulation of
213general-purpose detectors at the \textsc{LHC} (namely, \textsc{CMS} and
214\textsc{ATLAS}), this input parameter file interfaces a flexible parametrisation
215for other cases, e.g.\ at future linear colliders~\citep{qr:datacards}.
216The geometrical coverage of the various subsystems used in the default
217configuration are summarised in Tab.~\ref{tab:defEta}.
218
219\begin{table}[t]
220\begin{center}
221\caption{Default extension in pseudorapidity $\eta$ of the different subdetectors.
222Full azimuthal ($\phi$) acceptance is assumed.
223 \vspace{0.5cm}}
224\begin{tabular}{lcc}
225\hline
226 & $\eta$ & $\phi$ \\ \hline
227\textsc{TRACKER} & $[-2.5; 2.5]$ & $[-\pi ; \pi]$\\
228\textsc{ECAL}, \textsc{HCAL} & $[-1.7 ; 1.7]$ & $[-\pi ; \pi]$\\
229\textsc{ECAL}, \textsc{HCAL} endcaps & $[-3 ; -1.7]$ \& $[1.7 ; 3]$ & $[-\pi ; \pi]$\\
230\textsc{FCAL} & $[-5 ; -3]$ \& $[3 ;5]$ & $[-\pi ; \pi]$\\
231\textsc{MUON} & $[-2.4 ; 2.4]$ & $[-\pi ; \pi]$\\ \hline
232\end{tabular}
233\label{tab:defEta}
234\end{center}
235\end{table}
236
237\begin{figure}[!ht]
238\begin{center}
239\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig2}
240\caption{
241Profile of layout of the generic detector geometry assumed in \textit{Delphes}.
242The innermost layer, close to the interaction point, is a central tracking
243system (pink). It is surrounded by a central calorimeter volume (green) with
244both electromagnetic and hadronic sections. The outer layer of the central
245system (red) is muon system. In addition, two end-cap calorimeters (blue) extend
246the pseudorapidity coverage of the central detector.
247Additional forward detectors are not depicted.
248}
249\label{fig:GenDet3}
250\end{center}
251\end{figure}
252
253
254\subsection{Magnetic field}
255In addition to the subdetectors, the effects of a solenoidal magnetic field are
256simulated for the charged particles~\citep{qr:magneticfield}. This affects the
257position at which charged particles enter the calorimeters and their
258corresponding tracks. The field extension is limited to the tracker volume and
259is in particular not applied for muon chambers. This is not a limiting
260factor since the magnetic field is not used for the muon momentum smearing.
261
262
263\subsection{Tracks reconstruction}
264Every stable charged particle with a transverse momentum above some threshold
265and lying inside the detector volume covered by the tracker provides a track.
266By default, a track is assumed to be reconstructed with $90\%$ probability if
267its transverse momentum $p_T$ is higher than $0.9~\textrm{GeV}/c$ and if its
268pseudorapidity $|\eta| \leq 2.5$~\citep{qr:tracks}. This reconstruction efficiency is assumed to be uniform and independent of the particle type. No smearing is currently applied on track parameters. For each track, the positions at vertex $(\eta,\phi)$ and at the entry point in the calorimeter layers
269$(\eta,\phi)_{calo}$ are available while the helix parameters of tracks, especially the impact parameters are not.
270
271
272\subsection{Calorimetric cells}
273
274The response of the calorimeters to energy deposits of incoming particles
275depends on their segmentation and resolution, as well as on the nature of the
276particles themselves. In CMS and ATLAS detectors, for instance, the calorimeter
277characteristics are not identical in every direction, with typically finer
278resolution and granularity in the central
279regions~\citep{bib:cmsjetresolution,bib:ATLASresolution}. It is thus very
280important to compute the exact coordinates of the entry point of the particles
281into the calorimeters, in taking the magnetic field effect into account.
282
283The smallest unit for geometrical sampling of the calorimeters is a
284\textit{cell}; it segments the $(\eta,\phi)$ plane for the energy measurement.
285No longitudinal segmentation is available in the simulated
286calorimeters. \textit{Delphes} assumes that ECAL and HCAL have the same
287segmentations and that the detector is symmetric in $\phi$ and with respect to
288the $\eta=0$ plane~\citep{qr:calorimetriccells}.
289Fig.~\ref{fig:calosegmentation} illustrates the default calorimeter
290segmentation.
291
292\begin{figure}[!ht]
293\begin{center}
294\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig3}
295\caption{Default segmentation of the calorimeters in the $(\eta,\phi)$ plane. Only the central detectors (\textsc{ECAL}, \textsc{HCAL}) and \textsc{FCAL} are considered. $\phi$ angles are expressed in radians.}
296\label{fig:calosegmentation}
297\end{center}
298\end{figure}
299
300
301The calorimeter response is parametrised through a Gaussian smearing of the accumulated cell energy with a variance $\sigma$:
302\begin{equation}
303\frac{\sigma}{E} = \frac{S}{\sqrt{E}} \oplus \frac{N}{E} \oplus C,
304\label{eq:caloresolution}
305\end{equation}
306where $S$, $N$ and $C$ are the \textit{stochastic}, \textit{noise} and \textit{constant} terms respectively, $E$ is in GeV and $\oplus$ stands for quadratic additions~\citep{qr:energysmearing}.\\
307
308In the default parametrisation, ECAL and HCAL are assumed to cover the
309pseudorapidity range $|\eta|<3$, and FCAL between $3.0$ and $5.0$, with
310different response to electrons and photons, or to hadrons.
311Muons and neutrinos are assumed not to interact with the
312calorimeters~\citep{qr:invisibleparticles}. The default values of the
313stochastic, noise and constant terms are given in Tab.~\ref{tab:defResol}.\\
314
315\begin{table}[!h]
316\begin{center}
317\caption{Default values for the resolution of the central and forward
318calorimeters (for both electromagnetic and hadronic parts). Resolution is
319parametrised by the \textit{stochastic} ($S$), \textit{noise} ($N$) and
320\textit{constant} ($C$) terms
321(Eq.~\ref{eq:caloresolution})~\citep{qr:resolutionterms}.
322\vspace{0.5cm}}
323\begin{tabular}[!h]{lccc}
324\hline
325 & $S$ (GeV$^{1/2}$) & $N$ (GeV) & $C$ \\\hline
326 ECAL & $0.05$ & $0.25$ & $0.0055$ \\
327 ECAL, end caps & $0.05$ & $0.25$ & $0.0055$ \\
328 FCAL, e.m. part & $2.084$ & $0$ & $0.107$ \\
329 HCAL & $1.5$ & $0$ & $0.05$\\
330 HCAL, end caps & $1.5$ & $0$ & $0.05$\\
331 FCAL, had. part & $2.7$ & $0$ & $0.13$\\
332\hline
333\end{tabular}
334\label{tab:defResol}
335\end{center}
336\end{table}
337
338
339Electrons and photons are assumed to leave their energy in the electromagnetic
340parts of the calorimeters (\textsc{ECAL} and \textsc{FCAL}, e.m.), while charged
341and neutral final-state hadrons are assumed to leave their entire energy
342interactin the hadronic parts (\textsc{HCAL} and \textsc{FCAL}, had.).
343Some long-living particles, such as the $K^0_s$ and $\Lambda$'s, with lifetime
344$c\tau$ smaller than $10~\textrm{mm}$ are considered as stable particles by the
345generators although they may decay before reaching the calorimeters. The energy
346smearing of such particles is therefore performed using the expected fraction of
347the energy, determined according to their decay products, that would be
348deposited into the \textsc{ECAL} ($E_{\textsc{ECAL}}$) and into the
349\textsc{HCAL} ($E_{\textsc{HCAL}}$). The positions of these deposits are identical to the one the mother particle would have hit.
350 Defining $F$ as the fraction of the energy
351leading to a \textsc{HCAL} deposit, the two energy values are given by
352\begin{equation}
353\left\{
354\begin{array}{l}
355E_{\textsc{HCAL}} = E \times F \\
356E_{\textsc{ECAL}} = E \times (1-F) \\
357\end{array}
358\right.
359\end{equation}
360where $0 \leq F \leq 1$. The resulting calorimetry energy measurement given
361after the application of the smearing is then $E = E_{\textsc{HCAL}} +
362E_{\textsc{ECAL}}$. For $K_S^0$ and $\Lambda$ hadrons, the energy fraction $F$ is assumed to be $0.7$~\citep{qr:emhadratios}.\\
363
364
365No sharing between neighbouring cells is implemented when particles enter a
366cell very close to its geometrical edge. Due to the finite segmentation, the
367smearing, as defined in Eq.~\ref{eq:caloresolution}, is applied directly on the
368accumulated electromagnetic and hadronic energies of each calorimetric cell. The
369calorimetric cells enter in the calculation of the missing transverse energy
370(\textsc{MET}), and are used as input for the jet reconstruction algorithms.
371
372The output file created by \textit{Delphes}~\citep{qr:analysistree} stores the
373final collections of particles ($e^\pm$, $\mu^\pm$, $\gamma$) and objects (light
374jets, $b$-jets, $\tau$-jets, $E_T^\textrm{miss}$). In addition, collections of
375tracks, calorimetric cells and hits in the very forward detectors (\textsc{ZDC},
376\textsc{RP220} and \textsc{FP420}, see Sec.~\ref{sec:vfd}) are added.
377
378\section{High-level reconstruction}
379
380While electrons,
381muons and photons are easily identified, other quantities are more difficult to
382evaluate as they rely on sophisticated algorithms (e.g. jets or missing energy).
383
384For most of these objects, their four-momentum and related quantities are
385directly accessible in \textit{Delphes} output ($E$, $\vec{p}$, $p_T$, $\eta$
386and $\phi$). Additional properties are available for specific objects (like the
387charge and the isolation status for $e^\pm$ and $\mu^\pm$, the result of
388application of $b$-tag for jets and time-of-flight for some detector hits).
389
390\subsection{Photon and charged lepton}
391From here onwards, \textit{electrons} refer to both positrons ($e^+$) and
392electrons ($e^-$), and $\textit{charged leptons}$ refer to electrons and muons
393($\mu^\pm$), leaving out the $\tau^\pm$ leptons as they decay before being
394detected.
395
396The electron, muon and photon collections contains only the true final-state
397particles identified via the generator-data. In addition, these particles must
398pass fiducial cuts taking into account the magnetic field effects and have a
399transverse momentum above some threshold (default: $p_T > 10~\textrm{GeV}/c$). Consequently, no fake candidates enter these collections. As effects like bremsstrahlung are not taken into account along the lepton propagation in the tracker, no clustering is
400needed for the electron reconstruction in \textit{Delphes}.
401
402%In your electron simulation you take only the energy from the electron itself, not from any physics bremsstrahlung that is often collinear with the electron (I mean the real emission bremststrahlung directly from the Z->ee decay, not from the magnetic field in the ID). This leads in Z->ee events to a visible distortion of the line shape. I am aware that there is no easy solution to this problem and just adding all photons in the same cell leads to bias for others reasons. However, the reader should be warned that the Z peak will be slightly shifted due to the missing bremsstrahlungs energy.
403
404
405\subsubsection*{Electrons and photons}
406Real electron ($e^\pm$) and photon candidates are identified if they fall into the acceptance of the tracking system and have a
407transverse momentum above some threshold (default: $p_T > 10~\textrm{GeV}/c$).
408\textit{Delphes} assumes a perfect
409algorithm for clustering and Brehmstrahlung recovery. Electron energy is smeared
410according to the resolution of the calorimetric cell where it points to, but
411independently from any other deposited energy in this cell.
412Electrons and photons may create a candidate in the jet collection. The $(\eta,
413\phi)$ position at vertex corresponds to corresponding track vertex.
414
415\subsubsection*{Muons}
416Generator-level muons entering the muon detector acceptance (default: $-2.4
417\leq \eta \leq 2.4$) and overpassing some threshold (default: $p_T >
41810~\textrm{GeV}/c$) are considered as good candidates for analyses.
419The application of the detector resolution on the muon momentum depends on a
420Gaussian smearing of the $p_T$~\citep{qr:muonsmearing}.
421Neither $\eta$ nor $\phi$ variables are modified beyond the calorimeters.
422Multiple scattering is neglected. This implies that low energy muons have in
423\textit{Delphes} a better resolution than in a real detector. At last, the
424particles which might leak out of the calorimeters into the muon systems
425(\textit{punch-through}) are not considered as muon candidates in
426\textit{Delphes}.
427
428\subsubsection*{Charged lepton isolation}
429\label{sec:isolation}
430
431To improve the quality of the contents of the charged lepton collections,
432isolation criteria can be applied. This requires that electron or muon
433candidates are isolated in the detector from any other particle, within a small
434cone. In \textit{Delphes}, charged lepton isolation demands by default that
435there is no other charged particle with $p_T>2~\textrm{GeV}/c$ within a cone of
436$\Delta R = \sqrt{\Delta \eta^2 + \Delta \phi^2} <0.5$ centered on the cell
437associated to the charged lepton $\ell$, obviously taking the magnetic field
438into account.
439
440The result (i.e.\ \textit{isolated} or \textit{not}) is added to the charged lepton measured properties.
441In addition, the sum $P_T$ of the transverse momenta of all tracks but the lepton one within the isolation cone is
442provided~\citep{qr:isolflag}:
443$$ P_T = \sum_{i \neq \ell}^\textrm{tracks} p_T(i)$$
444
445No calorimetric isolation is applied, but the charged lepton collections
446contain also the ratio $\rho_\ell$ between (1) the sum of the transverse
447energies in all calorimetric cells in a $N \times N$ grid around the lepton, and
448(2) the lepton transverse momentum~\citep{qr:caloisolation}:
449$$ \rho_\ell = \frac{\Sigma_i E_T(i)}{p_T(\ell)}~,~ i\textrm{ in }N \times N
450\textrm { grid centred on }\ell.$$
451
452Finally it should be mentioned that because photons from physics bremsstrahlung are not added to the electron, they appear in the calorimetric isolation energy. This can lead to unrealistically high isolation energies in the case of very high energetic electrons while in a full simulation most bremsstrahlung photons overlap with the electron and do therefore not enter in the isolation energy.
453
454\subsection{Jet reconstruction}
455
456A realistic analysis requires a correct treatment of partons which have
457hadronised. Therefore, the most widely currently used jet algorithms have been
458integrated into the \textit{Delphes} framework using the FastJet
459tools\footnote{A more detailed description of the jet algorithms is given in the
460User Manual, in appendix.}. Six different jet reconstruction schemes are
461available~\citep{bib:FASTJET,qr:jetalgo}: {\it CDF Jet Clusters}~\citep{bib:jetclu}, {\it CDF MidPoint}~\citep{bib:midpoint}, {\it Seedless Infrared Safe Cone}~\citep{bib:SIScone}, {\it Longitudinally invariant $k_t$ jet}~\citep{bib:ktjet}, {\it Cambridge/Aachen jet}~\citep{bib:aachen} and {\it Anti $k_t$ jet}~\citep{bib:antikt}. For all of them, the calorimetric
462cells are used as inputs. Jet algorithms differ in their sensitivity to soft
463particles or collinear splittings, and in their computing speed performances. By default, reconstruction uses the CDF cone algorithm. Jets are stored if their transverse energy is higher than $20~\textrm{GeV}$~\citep{qr:ptcutjet}.
464
465
466\subsubsection*{Energy flow}
467
468In jets, several particle can leave their energy in a given calorimetric cell,
469which broadens the jet energy resolution. However, the energy of charged
470particles associated to jets can be deduced from their associated track, thus
471providing a way to identify some of the components of cells with multiple hits.
472When the \textit{energy flow} is switched on in \textit{Delphes}, the energy of
473tracks pointing to calorimetric cells is subtracted and smeared separately,
474before running the chosen jet reconstruction algorithm. This option allows a
475better jet energy reconstruction~\citep{qr:energyflow}.
476
477\subsection{$b$-tagging}
478\label{btagging}
479
480A jet is tagged as $b$-jets if its direction lies in the acceptance of the
481tracker and if it is associated to a parent $b$-quark.
482The (mis)tagging relies on the identity of
483the most energetic parton within a cone around the jet axis, with a
484radius equal to the one used to reconstruct the jet (default: $\Delta R$ of
485$0.7$).
486By default, a $b$-tagging efficiency of $40\%$ is assumed if the jet has a
487parent $b$ quark. For $c$-jets and light jets (i.e.\ originating in $u$, $d$,
488$s$ quarks or in gluons), a fake $b$-tagging efficiency of $10 \%$ and $1 \%$
489is assumed respectively~\citep{qr:btag}. In current version of
490\textit{Delphes}, the displacement of secondary vertices is not taken into
491account.
492
493\subsection{Identification of hadronic \texorpdfstring{$\tau$}{\texttau} decays}
494
495Jets originating from $\tau$-decays are identified using a procedure consistent
496with the one applied in a full detector reconstruction~\citep{bib:cmsjetresolution}.
497The tagging relies on two properties of the $\tau$ lepton. First, $77\%$ of the
498$\tau$ hadronic decays contain only one charged hadron in combination with a few
499neutrals (\textit{1-prong}). Secondly, the particles arisen from the
500$\tau$ lepton produce narrow jets in the calorimeter (this is defined as the jet
501\textit{collimation}).
502
503\begin{figure}[!ht]
504\begin{center}
505\includegraphics[width=0.80\columnwidth]{fig4}
506\caption{Illustration of the identification of $\tau$-jets ($1-$prong). The jet cone is narrow and contains only one track. The small cone serves to apply the \textit{electromagnetic collimation}, while the broader cone is used to reconstruct the jet originating from the $\tau$-decay.}
507\label{h_WW_ss_cut1}
508\end{center}
509\end{figure}
510
511
512\begin{table}[!h]
513\begin{center}
514\caption{Default values for parameters used in $\tau$-jet reconstruction algorithm. Electromagnetic collimation requirements involve the inner \textit{small} cone radius $R^\textrm{em}$, the minimum transverse energy for calorimetric cells $E_T^\textrm{cell}$ and the collimation factor $C_\tau$. Tracking isolation constrains the number of tracks with a significant transverse momentum $p_T^\textrm{tracks}$ in a cone of radius $R^\textrm{tracks}$. Finally, the $\tau$-jet collection is purified by the application of a cut on the $p_T$ of $\tau$-jet candidates~\citep{qr:taujets}.
515\vspace{0.5cm} }
516\begin{tabular}[!h]{lll}
517\hline
518\multicolumn{3}{l}{\textbf{Electromagnetic collimation}} \\
519& $R^\textrm{em}$ & $0.15$\\
520& min $E_{T}^\textrm{cell}$ & $1.0$~GeV\\
521& $C_{\tau}$ & $0.95$\\
522\multicolumn{3}{l}{\textbf{Tracking isolation}} \\
523& $R^\textrm{tracks}$ & $0.4$\\
524& min $p_T^\textrm{tracks}$ & $2$ GeV$/c$\\
525\multicolumn{3}{l}{\textbf{$\tau$-jet candidate}} \\
526& $\min p_T$ & $10$ GeV$/c$\\
527\hline
528\end{tabular}
529\label{tab:tauRef}
530\end{center}
531\end{table}
532
533
534\subsubsection*{Electromagnetic collimation}
535
536To use the narrowness of the $\tau$-jet, the \textit{electromagnetic
537collimation} $C_{\tau}$ is defined as the sum of the energy of cells in a small
538cone of radius $R^\textrm{em}$ around the jet axis, divided by the energy of the
539reconstructed jet. To be taken into account, a calorimeter cell should have a
540transverse energy $E_T^\textrm{cell}$ above a given threshold. A large fraction
541of the jet energy is expected in this small cone. This fraction, or
542\textit{collimation factor}, is represented in Fig.~\ref{fig:tau2} for the
543default values (see Tab.~\ref{tab:tauRef}).
544
545\begin{figure}[!ht]
546\begin{center}
547\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig5}
548\caption{Distribution of the electromagnetic collimation $C_\tau$ variable for true $\tau$-jets, normalised to unity. This distribution is shown for associated $WH$ photoproduction~\citep{bib:whphotoproduction}, where the Higgs boson decays into a $W^+ W^-$ pair. Each $W$ boson decays into a $\ell \nu_\ell$ pair, where $\ell = e, \mu, \tau$.
549Events generated with MadGraph/MadEvent~\citep{bib:mgme}.
550Final state hadronisation is performed by \textit{Pythia}~\citep{bib:pythia}.
551Histogram entries correspond to true $\tau$-jets, matched with generator-level data. }
552\label{fig:tau2}
553\end{center}
554\end{figure}
555
556\subsubsection*{Tracking isolation}
557
558The tracking isolation for the $\tau$ identification requires that the number
559of tracks associated to particles with significant transverse momenta is one and
560only one in a cone of radius $R^\textrm{tracks}$ ($3-$prong $\tau$-jets are
561rejected)~\footnote{In release 1.9, the 3-prong tau decays are also included.}. This cone should be entirely incorporated into the tracker to be
562taken into account. Default values of these parameters are given in
563Tab.~\ref{tab:tauRef}.
564
565
566
567\begin{figure}[!ht]
568\begin{center}
569\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig6}
570\caption{Distribution of the number of tracks $N^\textrm{tracks}$ within a small jet cone for true $\tau$-jets, normalised to unity. Photoproduced $WH$ events, where $W$ bosons decay leptonically ($e,\mu,\tau$), as in Fig.~\ref{fig:tau2}.
571Histogram entries correspond to true $\tau$-jets, matched with generator-level data.}
572\label{fig:tau1}
573\end{center}
574\end{figure}
575
576
577\subsubsection*{Purity}
578Once both electromagnetic collimation and tracking isolation are applied, a
579threshold on the $p_T$ of the $\tau$-jet candidate is requested to purify the
580collection. This procedure selects $\tau$ leptons decaying hadronically with a
581typical efficiency of $66\%$.
582
583\subsection{Missing transverse energy}
584In an ideal detector, momentum conservation imposes the transverse momentum of
585the observed final state $\overrightarrow{p_T}^\textrm{obs}$ to be equal and
586in opposite direction to the $\overrightarrow{p_T}$ vector sum of the
587invisible particles, written $\overrightarrow{p_T}^\textrm{miss}$.
588The \textit{true} missing transverse energy, i.e.\ at generator-level, is
589calculated as the opposite of the vector sum of the transverse momenta of all
590visible particles -- or equivalently, to the vector sum of invisible particle
591transverse momenta.
592In a real experiment, calorimeters measure energy and not momentum. Any problem
593affecting the detector (dead channels, misalignment, noisy cells, cracks)
594worsens directly the measured missing transverse energy $\overrightarrow
595{E_T}^\textrm{miss}$. In \textit{Delphes}, \textsc{MET} is based on the
596calorimetric cells only. Muons and neutrinos are therefore
597not taken into account for its evaluation:
598\begin{equation}
599\overrightarrow{E_T}^\textrm{miss} = - \sum^\textrm{cells}_i \overrightarrow{E_T}(i)
600\end{equation}
601However, as muon candidates, tracks and calorimetric cells are available in the
602output file, the missing transverse energy can always be reprocessed a
603posteriori with more specialised algorithms. Moreover, the degradations of the missing transverse energy performance due to noise is not simulated.
604
605\section{Trigger emulation}
606
607Most of the usual trigger algorithms select events containing leptons, jets, and
608\textsc{MET} with an energy scale above some threshold. This is often expressed
609in terms of a cut on the transverse momentum of one or several objects of the
610measured event. Logical combinations of several conditions are also possible.
611For instance, a trigger path could select events containing at least one jet and
612one electron such as $p_T^\textrm{jet} > 100~\textrm{GeV}/c$ and $p_T^e >
61350~\textrm{GeV}/c$.
614
615A trigger emulation is included in \textit{Delphes}, using a fully
616parametrisable \textit{trigger table} \citep{qr:triggercard}. While triggers in real experiments are intrinsically based on reconstructed data with a worse
617resolution than final analysis information, in \textit{Delphes} the same information is used for the trigger emulation and for final analyses.
618
619\section{\label{sec:vfd}Very forward detector simulation}
620
621Collider experiments often have additional instrumentation along the beamline.
622These extend the $\eta$ coverage to higher values, for the detection of very
623forward final-state particles. In \textit{Delphes}, Zero Degree Calorimeters,
624roman pots and forward taggers have been implemented (Fig.~\ref{fig:fdets}),
625similarly as for CMS and ATLAS collaborations~\citep{bib:cmsjetresolution,
626bib:ATLASresolution}.
627
628\begin{figure}[!ht]
629\begin{center}
630\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig7}
631\caption{Default location of the very forward detectors, including
632\textsc{ZDC}, \textsc{RP220} and \textsc{FP420} in the \textsc{LHC} beamline.
633Incoming (beam 1, red) and outgoing (beam 2, black) beams on one side of the
634fifth interaction point (\textsc{IP5}, $s=0~\textrm{m}$ on the plot).
635The Zero Degree Calorimeter is located in perfect alignment with the beamline
636axis at the interaction point, at $140~\textrm{m}$, where the beam paths are
637well separated. The forward taggers are near-beam detectors located at
638$220~\textrm{m}$ and $420~\textrm{m}$. Beamline simulation with
639\textit{Hector}~\citep{bib:hector}. All very forward detectors are located
640symmetrically around the interaction point. }
641\label{fig:fdets}
642\end{center}
643\end{figure}
644
645\begin{table}[t]
646\begin{center}
647\caption{Default parameters for the forward detectors: distance from the
648interaction point and detector acceptance. The \textsc{LHC} beamline is assumed
649around the fifth \textsc{LHC} interaction point (\textsc{IP}). For the
650\textsc{ZDC}, the acceptance depends only on the pseudorapidity $\eta$ of the
651particle, which should be neutral and stable.
652It is expressed in terms of the particle energy ($E$).
653All detectors are located on both sides of the interaction point.
654\vspace{0.5cm}}
655\begin{tabular}{llcl}
656\hline
657Detector & Distance & Acceptance & \\ \hline
658\textsc{ZDC} & $\pm 140$ m & $|\eta|> 8.3$ & for $n$ and $\gamma$\\
659\textsc{RP220} & $\pm 220$ m & $E \in [6100 ; 6880]$ (GeV) & at $2~\textrm{mm}$\\
660\textsc{FP420} & $\pm 420$ m & $E \in [6880 ; 6980]$ (GeV) & at $4~\textrm{mm}$\\
661\hline
662\end{tabular}
663\label{tab:fdetacceptance}
664\end{center}
665\end{table}
666
667
668\subsection{Zero Degree Calorimeters}
669
670In direct sight of the interaction point, on both sides of the central
671detector, the Zero Degree Calorimeters (\textsc{ZDC}s) are located at zero
672angle, i.e.\ are aligned with the beamline axis at the interaction point. They
673are placed beyond the point where the paths of incoming and outgoing beams
674separate. These allow the measurement of stable neutral particles ($\gamma$ and
675$n$) coming from the interaction point, with large pseudorapidities (e.g.\
676$|\eta_{\textrm{n,}\gamma}| > 8.3$ in \textsc{ATLAS} and \textsc{CMS}).
677
678The trajectory of the neutrals observed in the \textsc{ZDC}s is a straight
679line, while charged particles are deflected away from their acceptance window by
680the powerful magnets located in front of them. The fact that additional charged
681particles may enter the \textsc{ZDC} acceptance is neglected in the current
682versions of \textit{Delphes}.
683
684The \textsc{ZDC}s have the ability to measure the time-of-flight of the particle.
685This corresponds to the delay $t$ after which the particle is observed in the
686detector, with respect to the bunch crossing reference time at the interaction
687point ($t_0$):
688\begin{equation}
689 t = t_0 + \frac{1}{v} \times \Big( \frac{s-z}{\cos \theta}\Big) \approx \frac{1}{c} \times (s-z),
690\end{equation}
691where $t_0$ is thus the true time coordinate of the vertex from which the
692particle originates, $v$ the particle velocity, $s$ is the \textsc{ZDC} distance
693to the interaction point, $z$ is the longitudinal coordinate of the vertex,
694$\theta$ is the particle emission angle. It is assumed that the neutral particle
695observed in the \textsc{ZDC} is highly relativistic and very forward.
696For the time-of-flight measurement, a Gaussian smearing can be applied according
697to the detector resolution
698(Tab.~\ref{tab:defResolZdc})~\citep{qr:resolutionterms}.
699
700
701The \textsc{ZDC}s are composed of an electromagnetic and a hadronic sections,
702for the measurement of photons and neutrons, respectively. The energy of the
703observed neutral is smeared according to Eq.~\ref{eq:caloresolution} and the
704corresponding section resolutions (Tab.~\ref{tab:defResolZdc}). The \textsc{ZDC}
705hits do not enter in the calorimeter cell list used for reconstruction of jets
706and missing transverse energy.
707
708\begin{table}[!h]
709\begin{center}
710\caption{Default values for the resolution of the zero degree calorimeters.
711Resolution on energy measurement is parametrised by the \textit{stochastic}
712($S$), \textit{noise} ($N$) and \textit{constant} ($C$) terms
713(Eq.~\ref{eq:caloresolution})~\citep{qr:resolutionterms}. The time-of-flight is
714smeared according to a Gaussian function.
715\vspace{0.5cm}}
716\begin{tabular}[!h]{llcc}
717\hline
718 \multicolumn{3}{l}{\textsc{ZDC}, electromagnetic part} & hadronic part \\
719 & $S$ (GeV$^{1/2}$) & $0.7$ & $1.38$\\
720 & $N$ (GeV) & $0$ & $0$ \\
721 & $C$ & $0.08$& $0.13$ \\
722 \multicolumn{4}{l}{\textsc{ZDC}, timing resolution} \\
723 & $\sigma_t$ (s) & $0$ & \\
724\hline
725\end{tabular}
726\label{tab:defResolZdc}
727\end{center}
728\end{table}
729
730The reconstructed ZDC hits correspond to neutral particles with a lifetime long
731enough to reach these detectors (default: $c \tau \geq 140~\textrm{m}$) and very
732large pseudorapidities (default: $|\eta|>8.3$).
733Photons and neutrons are identified if their energy overpasses a given threshold
734(def. $E_\gamma \leq 20$~GeV and $E_n \leq 50$~GeV)~\citep{qr:fwdneutrals}.
735
736
737
738\subsection{Forward taggers}
739
740Forward taggers (called here \textsc{RP220}, for ``roman pots at
741$220~\textrm{m}$'' and \textsc{FP420} for ``forward proton taggers at
742$420~\textrm{m}$'', as at the \textsc{LHC}) are meant for the measurement of
743particles following very closely the beam path. Such devices, also used at
744\textsc{HERA} and Tevatron, are located very far away from the interaction point
745(further than $150$~m in the \textsc{LHC} case).
746
747To be able to reach these detectors, particles must have a charge identical to
748the beam particles, and a momentum very close to the nominal value of the beam
749particles. These taggers are near-beam detectors located a few millimetres from
750the true beam trajectory and this distance defines their acceptance
751(Tab.~\ref{tab:fdetacceptance}). For instance, roman pots at $220~\textrm{m}$
752from the \textsc{IP} and $2~\textrm{mm}$ from the beam will detect all forward
753protons with an energy loss between $120$ and $900~\textrm{GeV}$~\citep{bib:hector}.
754In \textit{Delphes}, extra hits coming from the beam-gas events or
755secondary particles hitting the beampipe in front of the detectors are not taken
756into account.
757
758While neutral particles propagate along a straight line to the \textsc{ZDC}, a
759dedicated simulation of the transport of charged particles is needed for
760\textsc{RP220} and \textsc{FP420}. This fast simulation uses the \textit{Hector}
761software~\citep{bib:hector}, which includes the chromaticity effects and the
762geometrical aperture of the beamline elements of any arbitrary collider.
763
764Forward taggers are able to measure the hit positions ($x,y$) and angles
765($\theta_x,\theta_y$) in the transverse plane at the location of the detector
766($s$ meters away from the \textsc{IP}), as well as the
767time-of-flight\footnote{It is worth noting that for both \textsc{CMS} and
768\textsc{ATLAS} experiments, the taggers located at $220$~m are not able to
769measure the time-of-flight, contrary to \textsc{FP420} detectors.} ($t$). Out of
770these the particle energy ($E$) and the momentum transfer it underwent during
771the interaction ($q^2$) can be reconstructed at the analysis level (it is not
772implemented in the current versions of \textit{Delphes}). The time-of-flight
773measurement can be smeared with a Gaussian distribution (default value
774$\sigma_t = 0~\textrm{s}$)~\citep{qr:protontaggers}.
775
776
777
778\section{Validation}
779
780\textit{Delphes} performs a fast simulation of a collider experiment.
781Its performances in terms of computing time and data size are directly
782proportional to the number of simulated events and on the considered physics
783process. As an example, $10,000$ $pp \rightarrow t \bar t X$ events are
784processed in $110~\textrm{s}$ on a regular laptop and use less than
785$250~\textrm{MB}$ of disk space.
786The quality and validity of the output are assessed by comparing the
787resolutions on the reconstructed data to the expectations of both
788\textsc{CMS}~\citep{bib:cmsjetresolution} and
789\textsc{ATLAS}~\citep{bib:ATLASresolution} detectors.
790
791Electrons and muons resolutions in \textit{Delphes} match by construction the
792experiment designs, as the Gaussian smearing of their kinematics properties is
793defined according to the detector specifications. Similarly, the $b$-tagging
794efficiency (for real $b$-jets) and misidentification rates (for fake $b$-jets)
795are taken directly from the expected values of the experiment. Unlike these objects, jets and missing transverse energy should be carefully
796cross-checked.
797
798\subsection{Jet resolution}
799
800The majority of interesting processes at the \textsc{LHC} contain jets in the
801final state. The jet resolution obtained using \textit{Delphes} is therefore a
802crucial point for its validation, both for \textsc{CMS}- and \textsc{ATLAS}-like
803detectors. This validation is based on $pp \rightarrow gg$ events produced with
804MadGraph/MadEvent and hadronised
805using \textit{Pythia}~\citep{bib:mgme,bib:pythia}.
806
807For a \textsc{CMS}-like detector, a similar procedure as the one explained in
808published results is applied here. The events were arranged in $14$ bins of
809gluon transverse momentum $\hat{p}_T$. In each $\hat{p}_T$ bin, every jet in
810\textit{Delphes} is matched to the closest jet of generator-level particles,
811using the spatial separation between the two jet axes
812\begin{equation}
813\Delta R = \sqrt{ \big(\eta^\textrm{rec} - \eta^\textrm{MC} \big)^2 +
814\big(\phi^\textrm{rec} - \phi^\textrm{MC} \big)^2}<0.25.
815\end{equation}
816The jets made of generator-level particles, here referred as \textit{MC jets},
817are obtained by applying the algorithm to all particles considered as stable
818after hadronisation. Jets produced by \textit{Delphes}
819and satisfying the matching criterion are called hereafter \textit{reconstructed
820jets}. All jets are computed with the clustering algorithm (JetCLU) with a cone
821radius $R$ of $0.7$.
822
823The ratio of the transverse energies of every reconstructed jet
824$E_T^\textrm{rec}$ to its corresponding \textsc{MC} jet $E_T^\textrm{MC}$ is
825calculated in each $\hat{p}_T$ bin. The $E_T^\textrm{rec}/E_T^\textrm{MC}$
826histogram is fitted with a Gaussian distribution in the interval \mbox{$\pm
8272$~\textsc{RMS}} centred around the mean value. The resolution in each
828$\hat{p}_T$ bin is obtained by the fit mean $\langle x \rangle$ and variance
829$\sigma^2(x)$:
830\begin{equation}
831\frac{\sigma \Big (\frac{E_T^\textrm{rec}}{E_T^\textrm{MC}} \Big)_\textrm{fit}}{
832\Big \langle \frac{E_T^\textrm{rec}}{E_T^\textrm{MC}} \Big
833\rangle_\textrm{fit}}~
834\Big( \hat{p}_T(i) \Big)\textrm{, for all }i.
835\end{equation}
836
837\begin{figure}[!ht]
838\begin{center}
839\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig8}
840\caption{Resolution of the transverse energy of reconstructed jets
841$E_T^\textrm{rec}$ as a function of the transverse energy of the closest jet of
842generator-level particles $E_T^\textrm{MC}$, in a \textsc{CMS}-like detector.
843The jets events are reconstructed with the JetCLU clustering algorithm with a
844cone radius of $0.7$ and no energy flow correction. The maximum separation between the reconstructed and
845\textsc{MC}-jets is $\Delta R= 0.25$. Dotted line is the fit result for
846comparison to the \textsc{CMS} resolution~\citep{bib:cmsjetresolution}, in blue.
847The $pp \rightarrow gg$ dijet events have been generated with MadGraph/MadEvent
848and hadronised with \textit{Pythia}.}
849\label{fig:jetresolcms}
850\end{center}
851\end{figure}
852
853The resulting jet resolution as a function of $E_T^\textrm{MC}$ is shown in
854Fig.~\ref{fig:jetresolcms}.
855This distribution is fitted with a function of the following form:
856\begin{equation}
857\frac{a}{E_T^\textrm{MC}}\oplus \frac{b}{\sqrt{E_T^\textrm{MC}}}\oplus c,
858\label{eq:fitresolution}
859\end{equation}
860where $a$, $b$ and $c$ are the fit parameters.
861It is then compared to the resolution published by the \textsc{CMS}
862collaboration~\citep{bib:cmsjetresolution}. The resolution curves from
863\textit{Delphes} and \textsc{CMS} are in good agreement.
864
865Similarly, the jet resolution is evaluated for an \textsc{ATLAS}-like detector.
866The $pp \rightarrow gg$ events are here arranged in $8$ adjacent bins in $p_T$.
867A $k_T$ reconstruction algorithm with $R=0.6$ is chosen and the maximal matching
868distance between the \textsc{MC}-jets and the reconstructed jets is set to
869$\Delta R=0.2$. The relative energy resolution is evaluated in each bin by:
870\begin{equation}
871\frac{\sigma(E)}{E} = \sqrt{~~ \Bigg \langle ~\Bigg( \frac{E^\textrm{rec} -
872E^\textrm{MC}}{E^\textrm{rec}} \Bigg)^2 ~ \Bigg \rangle ~ - ~ \Bigg \langle
873\frac{E^\textrm{rec} - E^\textrm{MC}}{ E^\textrm{rec} } \Bigg \rangle^2}.
874\end{equation}
875
876Figure~\ref{fig:jetresolatlas} shows a good agreement between the resolution
877obtained with \textit{Delphes}, the result of the fit with
878Equation~\ref{eq:fitresolution} and the corresponding curve provided by the
879\textsc{ATLAS} collaboration~\citep{bib:ATLASresolution}.
880
881\begin{figure}[!ht]
882\begin{center}
883\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig9}
884\caption{Relative energy resolution of reconstructed jets as a function of the
885energy of the closest jet of generator-level particles $E^\textrm{MC}$, in an
886\textsc{ATLAS}-like detector. The jets are reconstructed with the $k_T$
887algorithm with a radius $R=0.6$ and no energy flow correction. The maximal
888matching distance between
889\textsc{MC}- and reconstructed jets is $\Delta R=0.2$. Only central jets are
890considered ($|\eta|<0.5$). Dotted line is the fit result for comparison to the
891\textsc{ATLAS} resolution~\citep{bib:ATLASresolution}, in blue. The $pp
892\rightarrow gg$ di-jet events have been generated with MadGraph/MadEvent and
893hadronised with \textit{Pythia}.}
894\label{fig:jetresolatlas}
895\end{center}
896\end{figure}
897
898
899\subsection{MET resolution}
900
901All major detectors at hadron colliders have been designed to be as hermetic as
902possible in order to detect the presence of one or more neutrinos and/or new
903weakly interacting particles through apparent missing transverse energy.
904The resolution of the $\overrightarrow{E_T}^\textrm{miss}$ variable, as
905obtained with \textit{Delphes}, is then crucial.
906
907The samples used to study the \textsc{MET} performance are identical to those
908used for the jet validation. It is worth noting that the contribution to
909$E_T^\textrm{miss}$ from muons is negligible in the studied sample. Indeed for e.g.$W\rightarrow \mu \nu$ samples the missing transverse energy should be corrected for the presence of muons.
910The input samples are divided in five bins of scalar $E_T$ sums $(\Sigma E_T)$.
911This sum, called \textit{total visible transverse energy}, is defined as the
912scalar sum of transverse energy in all cells. The quality of the \textsc{MET}
913reconstruction is checked via the resolution on its horizontal component
914$E_x^\textrm{miss}$.
915
916The $E_x^\textrm{miss}$ resolution is evaluated in the following way. The
917distribution of the difference between $E_x^\textrm{miss}$ in \textit{Delphes}
918and at generator-level is fitted with a Gaussian function in each $(\Sigma E_T)$
919bin. The fit \textsc{RMS} gives the \textsc{MET} resolution in each bin.
920The resulting value is presented in Fig.~\ref{fig:resolETmis} as a function of
921the total visible transverse
922energy, for \textsc{CMS}- and \textsc{ATLAS}-like detectors.
923
924\begin{figure}[!ht]
925\begin{center}
926\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig10}
927\includegraphics[width=\columnwidth]{fig10b}
928\caption{$\sigma(E^\textrm{mis}_{x})$ as a function on the scalar sum of all
929cells ($\Sigma E_T$) for $pp \rightarrow gg$ events, for a \textsc{CMS}-like
930detector (top) and an \textsc{ATLAS}-like detector (bottom), for di-jet events
931produced with MadGraph/MadEvent and hadronised with \textit{Pythia}.}
932\label{fig:resolETmis}
933\end{center}
934\end{figure}
935
936The resolution $\sigma_x$ of the horizontal component of \textsc{MET} is
937observed to behave like
938\begin{equation}
939\sigma_x = \alpha ~\sqrt{E_T}~~~(\mathrm{GeV}^{1/2}),
940\end{equation}
941where the $\alpha$ parameter depends on the resolution of the calorimeters.
942
943The \textsc{MET} resolution expected for the \textsc{CMS} detector for similar
944events is $\sigma_x = (0.6-0.7) ~ \sqrt{E_T} ~ \mathrm{GeV}^{1/2}$ with no
945pile-up (i.e. extra simultaneous $pp$ collision occurring at high-luminosity in
946the same bunch crossing)~\citep{bib:cmsjetresolution}, which compares very well
947with the $\alpha = 0.63$ obtained with \textit{Delphes}. Similarly, for an
948\textsc{ATLAS}-like detector, a value of $0.53$ is obtained by \textit{Delphes}
949for the $\alpha$ parameter, while the experiment expects it in the range $[0.53~
950;~0.57]$~\citep{bib:ATLASresolution}.
951
952\subsection{\texorpdfstring{$\tau$}{\texttau}-jet efficiency}
953Table~\ref{tab:taurecoefficiency} lists the reconstruction efficiencies in
954\textit{Delphes} for the hadronic $\tau$-jets from $H,Z \rightarrow \tau^+
955\tau^-$. The mass of the Higgs boson is set successively to $140$ and
956$300~\textrm{GeV}/c^2$. The inclusive gauge boson productions ($pp \rightarrow
957HX$ and $pp \rightarrow ZX$) are performed with MadGraph/MadEvent and the $\tau$
958lepton decay and further hadronisation are handled by \textit{Pythia/Tauola}.
959All reconstructed $\tau$-jets are $1-$prong, and follow the definition described
960in section~\ref{btagging}, which is very close to an algorithm of the
961\textsc{CMS} experiment~\citep{bib:cmstauresolution}. At last, corresponding
962efficiencies published by the \textsc{CMS} and \textsc{ATLAS} experiments are
963quoted for comparison. The level of agreement is satisfactory provided possible
964differences due to the event generation chain and the detail of reconstruction
965algorithms.
966
967\begin{table}[!h]
968\begin{center}
969\caption{Reconstruction efficiencies of $\tau$-jets in $\tau^+ \tau^-$ decays
970from $Z$ or $H$ bosons, in \textit{Delphes}, \textsc{CMS} and \textsc{ATLAS}
971experiments~\citep{bib:cmstauresolution,bib:ATLASresolution}. Two scenarios for
972the mass of the Higgs boson are investigated. Events generated with
973MadGraph/MadEvent and hadronised with \textit{Pythia}. The decays of $\tau$
974leptons is handled by the \textit{Tauola} version embedded in
975\textit{Pythia}.\vspace{0.5cm}}
976\begin{tabular}{lrlrl}
977\hline
978 & \textsc{CMS}&Delphes & \textsc{ATLAS}&Delphes
979\\
980$Z \rightarrow \tau^+ \tau^-$ & $38.2\%$ & $32.4\pm1.8\%$ & $33\%$ & $28.6\pm 1.9\%$ \\
981$H(140) \rightarrow \tau^+ \tau^-$ & $36.3\%$ & $39.9\pm1.6\%$ & & $32.8\pm 1.8\%$ \\
982$H(300) \rightarrow \tau^+ \tau^-$ & $47.3\%$ & $49.7\pm1.5\%$ & & $43.8\pm 1.6\%$ \\
983\hline
984
985\end{tabular}
986\label{tab:taurecoefficiency}
987\end{center}
988\end{table}
989
990
991\section{Visualisation}
992
993When performing an analysis, a visualisation tool is useful to convey
994information about the detector layout and the event topology in a simple way.
995The \textit{Fast and Realistic OpenGL Displayer} \textsc{FROG}~\citep{bib:FROG}
996has been interfaced in \textit{Delphes}, allowing an easy display of the defined
997detector configuration~\citep{qr:frog}.
998
999Two and three-dimensional representations of the detector configuration can be
1000used for communication purposes, as they clearly illustrate the geometric
1001coverage of the different detector subsystems.
1002As an example, the generic detector geometry assumed in this paper is shown in
1003Fig.~\ref{fig:GenDet3}. The extensions of the central
1004tracking system, the central calorimeters and both forward calorimeters are
1005visible. Note that only the geometrical coverage is depicted and that the
1006calorimeter segmentation is not taken into account in the drawing of the
1007detector.
1008
1009Deeper understanding of interesting physics processes is possible by displaying
1010the events themselves. The visibility of each set of objects ($e^\pm$,
1011$\mu^\pm$, $\tau^\pm$, jets, transverse missing energy) is enhanced by a colour
1012coding. Moreover, kinematics information of each object is visible by a simple
1013mouse action. As an illustration, an associated photoproduction of a $W$ boson
1014and a $t$ quark~\citep{bib:wtphotoproduction} is shown in Fig.~\ref{fig:wt}.
1015
1016\begin{figure}[!ht]
1017\begin{center}
1018\includegraphics[width=0.9\columnwidth]{fig12}
1019\caption{Example of $pp(\gamma p \rightarrow Wt)pY$ event display in side (left)
1020and transverse (right) views, with $t \rightarrow Wb$. One
1021$W$ boson decays into a $\mu \nu_\mu$ pair and the second one into a $e \nu_e$
1022pair. The surviving proton leaves a forward hemisphere with no hadronic
1023activity. The isolated muon is shown as the dark blue vector. Around the
1024electron, in red, is reconstructed a fake $\tau$-jet (blue cone surrounding a
1025green arrow). The reconstructed missing energy is visible in grey. }
1026\label{fig:wt}
1027\end{center}
1028\end{figure}
1029
1030\section{Conclusion and perspectives}
1031
1032We have described here the major features of the \textit{Delphes} framework,
1033intended for the fast simulation of a collider experiment. This framework is a
1034tool meant for feasibility studies in phenomenology, gauging the observability
1035of model predictions in collider experiments.
1036
1037\textit{Delphes} takes as an input the output of event-generators and yields
1038analysis-object data in the form of \texttt{TTree} in a \texttt{*.root} file.
1039The simulation includes central and forward detectors to produce realistic
1040observables using standard reconstruction algorithms.
1041Moreover, the framework allows trigger emulation and 3D event visualisation.
1042
1043\textit{Delphes} has been developed using the parameters of the \textsc{CMS}
1044experiment but can be easily extended to \textsc{ATLAS} and other
1045non-\textsc{LHC} experiments, as at Tevatron or at the \textsc{ILC}. Further
1046developments include a more flexible design for the subdetector assembly, a
1047better $b$-tag description and possibly the implementation of an event mixing
1048module for pile-up event simulation. This framework has already been used for
1049several analyses~\citep{bib:wtphotoproduction, bib:papierquisortirajamais,
1050bib:papiersimon}, in particular in photon-induced interactions at the
1051\textsc{LHC}.
1052
1053
1054\section*{Acknowledgements}
1055\addcontentsline{toc}{section}{Acknowledgements}
1056The authors would like to thank Jer\^ome de Favereau, Christophe Delaere, Muriel Vander Donckt and David d'Enterria for useful discussions and comments, and Loic Quertenmont for support in interfacing \textsc{FROG}. We are also really grateful to Alice Dechambre and Simon de Visscher for being beta testers of the complete package.
1057Part of this work was supported by the Belgian Federal Office for Scientific, Technical and Cultural Affairs through the Interuniversity Attraction Pole P6/11.
1058
1059
1060\begin{thebibliography}{99}
1061\addcontentsline{toc}{section}{References}
1062
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1064
1065\bibitem{bib:delphes} \textit{Delphes}, \href{http://www.fynu.ucl.ac.be/delphes.html}{www.fynu.ucl.ac.be/delphes.html}
1066\bibitem{bib:othersim} Other less sophisticated software for fast simulation: \textit{AcerDET} E. Richter-Was, \href{http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/0207355}{arXiv:hep-ph/0207355v1}; \textit{PGS}, John Conway et al, \href{http://www.physics.ucdavis.edu/~conway/research/software/pgs/pgs4-general.htm}{http://www.physics.ucdavis.edu/~conway/}
1067
1068\bibitem{bib:Root} %\textsc{ROOT}, \textit{An Object Oriented Data Analysis Framework},
1069R. Brun, F. Rademakers, Nucl. Inst. \& Meth. in \textbf{Phys. Res. A} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0168-9002(97)00048-X}{389 (1997) 81-86}.
1070\bibitem{bib:ExRootAnalysis} %\textit{The} \textsc{ExRootAnalysis} \textit{analysis steering utility},
1071P. Demin, (2006), unpublished. Now part of MadGraph/MadEvent.
1072\bibitem{bib:cmsjetresolution} The \textsc{CMS} Collaboration, \textbf{CERN/LHCC} \href{http://documents.cern.ch/cgi-bin/setlink?base=LHCc&categ=public&id=LHCc-2006-001}{2006-001}.
1073\bibitem{bib:ATLASresolution} The \textsc{ATLAS} Collaboration, \textbf{CERN-OPEN} 2008-020, \\arXiv:\href{http://arxiv.org/abs/arxiv:0901.0512}{0901.0512v1}[hep-ex].
1074\bibitem{bib:hector} %\textit{Hector}, \textit{a fast simulator for the transport of particles in beamlines},
1075X. Rouby, J. de Favereau, K. Piotrzkowski, \textbf{JINST} \href{http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/1748-0221/2/09/P09005}{2 P09005 (2007)}.
1076\bibitem{bib:FASTJET} %\textit{The} FastJet \textit{package},
1077M. Cacciari, G.P. Salam, \textbf{Phys. Lett. B} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.physletb.2006.08.037}{641 (2006) 57}.
1078\bibitem{bib:jetclu} %\textsc{CDF} Run I legacy algorithm,
1079F. Abe et al. (CDF Coll.), \textbf{Phys. Rev. D} \href{http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.45.1448}{45 (1992) 1448}.
1080\bibitem{bib:midpoint} %Run II Jet Physics: Proceedings of the Run II QCD and Weak Boson Physics Workshop,
1081G.C. Blazey, et al., arXiv:\href{http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ex/0005012}{0005012}[hep-ex].
1082\bibitem{bib:SIScone} %\textsc{SISC}one, \textit{A practical Seedless Infrared-Safe Cone jet algorithm},
1083G.P. Salam, G. Soyez, \textbf{JHEP} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1126-6708/2007/05/086}{05 (2007) 086}.
1084\bibitem{bib:ktjet} S. Catani, Y.L. Dokshitzer, M.H. Seymour, B.R. Webber, \textbf{Nucl. Phys. B} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0550-3213(93)90166-M}{406 (1993) 187}; S.D. Ellis, D.E. Soper, \textbf{Phys. Rev. D} \href{http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.48.3160}{48 (1993) 3160}.
1085\bibitem{bib:aachen} Y.L. Dokshitzer, G.D. Leder, S. Moretti, B.R. Webber, \textbf{JHEP} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1126-6708/1998/01/011}{08} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1126-6708/1998/01/011}{(1997) 001}; M. Wobisch, T. Wengler, arXiv:\href{http://arxiv.org/abs/hep-ph/9907280}{9907280}[hep-ph].
1086\bibitem{bib:antikt} %\textit{The anti-kt jet clustering algorithm},
1087M. Cacciari, G.P. Salam, G. Soyez, \textbf{JHEP} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1126-6708/2008/04/063}{04 (2008) 063}.
1088\bibitem{bib:pdg} C. Amsler et al. (Particle Data Group), \textbf{Phys. Lett. B} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.physletb.2008.07.018}{667 (2008) 1}.
1089\bibitem{bib:whphotoproduction} S. Ovyn, \textbf{Nucl. Phys. Proc. Suppl.} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2008.07.034}{179-180 (2008) 269-276}.
1090\bibitem{bib:mgme} %\textsc{MadGraph/MadEvent v4}, \textit{The New Web Generation},
1091J. Alwall, et al., \textbf{JHEP} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1126-6708/2007/09/028}{09 (2007) 028}.
1092\bibitem{bib:pythia} %\textsc{Pythia 6.4}, \textit{Physics and Manual},
1093T. Sjostrand, S. Mrenna, P. Skands, \textbf{JHEP} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1126-6708/2006/05/026}{05 (2006) 026}.
1094\bibitem{bib:cmstauresolution} %\textit{Study of $\tau$-jet identification in CMS},
1095R. Kinnunen, A.N. Nikitenko, \textbf{CMS NOTE} \href{http://cdsweb.cern.ch/record/687274}{1997/002}.
1096\bibitem{bib:FROG} L. Quertenmont, V. Roberfroid, \textbf{CMS CR} \href{http://cms.cern.ch/iCMS/jsp/openfile.jsp?type=CR&year=2009&files=CR2009_028.pdf}{2009/028}, arXiv:\href{http://arxiv.org/abs/0901.2718}{0901.2718v1}[hep-ex].
1097\bibitem{bib:wtphotoproduction} J. de Favereau de Jeneret, S. Ovyn,
1098\textbf{Nucl. Phys. Proc. Suppl.}
1099\href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2008.07.040}{179-180 (2008)}
1100\href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2008.07.040}{277-284}; S. Ovyn, J.
1101de Favereau de Jeneret, \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1393/ncb/i2008-10684-5}{Nuovo
1102Cimento B}, arXiv:0806.4841[hep-ph].
1103
1104\bibitem{bib:papierquisortirajamais}J. de Favereau~et~al, \href{http://arxiv.org/abs/0908.2020}{arXiv:0908.2020v1} [hep-ph] (2008), to be published in EPJ.
1105
1106\bibitem{bib:papiersimon} S. de Visscher, J.M. Gerard, M. Herquet, V.
1107Lema\^itre, F. Maltoni, \textbf{JHEP}
1108\href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1126-6708/2009/08/042}{08 (2009) 042}.
1109
1110\bibitem{bib:mcfio} P. Lebrun, L. Garren, Copyright (c) 1994-1995 Universities Research Association, Inc.
1111\bibitem{bib:stdhep} L.A. Garren, M. Fischler, \href{http://cepa.fnal.gov/psm/stdhep/c++}{cepa.fnal.gov/psm/stdhep/c++}
1112\bibitem{bib:hepmc} M. Dobbs and J.B. Hansen, \textbf{Comput. Phys. Commun.} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0010-4655(00)00189-2}{134 (2001) 41}.
1113\bibitem{bib:lhe} J. Alwall, et al., \textbf{Comput. Phys. Commun.} \href{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cpc.2006.11.010}{176:300-304,2007}.
1114
1115\end{thebibliography}
1116
1117
1118
1119% references to code
1120\renewcommand\refname{Internal code references}
1121\begin{thebibliography}{2}
1122\addcontentsline{toc}{section}{Internal code references}
1123
1124\bibitem[a]{qr:inputformat} The standard Monte Carlo event structures \texttt{StdHEP}~\citep{bib:stdhep} and \texttt{HepMC}~\citep{bib:hepmc} can be used as an input. Besides, \textit{Delphes} can also provide detector response for events read in ``Les Houches Event Format'' (LHEF~\citep{bib:lhe}) and \texttt{*.root} files obtained from \texttt{*.hbook} using the \texttt{h2root} utility from the ROOT framework~\citep{bib:Root}.
1125See the following classes: \texttt{HEPEVTConverter}, \texttt{HepMCConverter}, \texttt{LHEFConverter}, \texttt{STDHEPConverter} and \texttt{DelphesRootConverter}.
1126
1127\bibitem[b]{qr:outputformat} The ROOT output files are created using the \texttt{ExRootAnalysis} utility~\citep{bib:ExRootAnalysis}. Generator-level data are located under the \texttt{GEN} tree, the analysis data objects after reconstruction under the \texttt{Analysis} tree, and the results of the trigger emulation under the \texttt{Trigger} tree.
1128
1129\bibitem[c]{qr:lhco} Set the \texttt{FLAG\_LHCO} variable to $1$ or $0$ in the detector card to switch on/off the creation of \texttt{*.lhco} output file.
1130
1131\bibitem[d]{qr:invisibleparticles} The list of particles considered as invisible is accessible in the \texttt{PdgParticle} class. This list currently contains the PIDs 12, 14, 16, 1000022, 1000023, 1000025, 1000035 and 1000045, in absolute values.
1132
1133\bibitem[e]{qr:detectorcard}The detector card is the \texttt{data/DetectorCard.dat} file. This file is parsed by the \texttt{SmearUtil} class.
1134
1135\bibitem[f]{qr:datacards} Detector and trigger cards for the \textsc{ATLAS} and \textsc{CMS} experiments are also provided in \texttt{data/} directory.
1136
1137\bibitem[g]{qr:resolutionterms}The resolution terms in the detector card are named \texttt{ELG\_Xyyy} or \texttt{HAD\_Xyyy}, refering to electromagnetic and hadronic terms (resp.); \texttt{X} is replaced by \texttt{S}, \texttt{N}, \texttt{C} for the stochastic, noise and constant terms; and finally \texttt{yyy} is \texttt{cen} for central part, \texttt{ec} for end-caps, \texttt{fwd} for the forward calorimeters and \texttt{zdc} for the zero-degree calorimeters.
1138
1139\bibitem[h]{qr:magneticfield} See the \texttt{TrackPropagation} class.
1140
1141\bibitem[i]{qr:tracks} See the \texttt{TRACK\_eff} and \texttt{TRACK\_ptmin} terms in the detector card.
1142
1143\bibitem[j]{qr:energysmearing} The response of the detector is applied to the electromagnetic and the hadronic particles through the \texttt{SmearElectron} and \texttt{SmearHadron} methods in the \texttt{SmearUtil} class.
1144
1145\bibitem[k]{qr:emhadratios} To implement different ratios for other particles, see the \texttt{BlockClasses} class.
1146
1147\bibitem[l]{qr:calorimetriccells} As the detector is assumed to be cylindrical (e.g.\ symmetric in $\phi$ and with respect to the $\eta=0$ plane), the detector card stores the number of calorimetric cells with $\phi=0$ and $\eta>0$ (default: $40$ cells). For a given $\eta$, the size of the $\phi$ segmentation is also specified. See the \texttt{TOWER\_number}, \texttt{TOWER\_eta\_edges} and \texttt{TOWER\_dphi} variables in the detector card.
1148
1149\bibitem[m]{qr:analysistree} All these processed data are located under the \texttt{Analysis} tree.
1150
1151\bibitem[n]{qr:muonsmearing} See the \texttt{SmearMuon} method in the \texttt{SmearUtil} class.
1152
1153\bibitem[o]{qr:isolflag} See the \texttt{IsolFlag} and \texttt{IsolPt} values in the \texttt{Electron} or \texttt{Muon} collections in the \texttt{Analysis} tree, as well as the \texttt{ISOL\_PT} and \texttt{ISOL\_Cone} variables in the detector card.
1154
1155\bibitem[p]{qr:caloisolation} Calorimetric isolation parameters in the detector card are \texttt{ISOL\_Calo\_ET} and \texttt{ISOL\_Calo\_Grid} in the detector card.
1156
1157\bibitem[q]{qr:fwdneutrals} These thresholds are defined by the \texttt{ZDC\_gamma\_E} and \texttt{ZDC\_n\_E} variables in the detector card.
1158
1159\bibitem[r]{qr:jetalgo} The choice is done by allocating the \texttt{JET\_jetalgo } input parameter in the detector card.
1160
1161\bibitem[s]{qr:ptcutjet} See the \texttt{PTCUT\_jet }variable in the detector card.
1162
1163%\bibitem[t]{qr:jetparams} See the \texttt{JET\_coneradius} and \texttt{JET\_seed} variables in the detector card. The existing FastJet code has been modified to allow easy modification of the cell pattern in $(\eta, \phi)$ space. In following versions of \textit{Delphes}, a new dedicated plug-in will be created on this purpose.
1164
1165\bibitem[u]{qr:energyflow} Set \texttt{JET\_Eflow} to $1$ or $0$ in the detector card in order to switch on or off the energy flow for jet reconstruction.
1166
1167\bibitem[v]{qr:btag} Corresponding to the \texttt{BTAG\_b}, \texttt{BTAG\_mistag\_c} and \texttt{BTAG\_mistag\_l} constants, for the efficiency of tagging of a $b$-jet, the efficiency of mistagging a $c$-jet as a $b$-jet, and the
1168efficiency of mistagging a light jet ($u$,$d$,$s$,$g$) as a $b$-jet.
1169
1170\bibitem[w]{qr:taujets} See the following parameters in the detector card:\\
1171\texttt{TAU\_energy\_scone } for $R^\textrm{em}$; \texttt{JET\_M\_seed } for min $E_{T}^\textrm{cell}$;
1172\texttt{TAU\_energy\_frac} for $C_{\tau}$; \texttt{TAU\_track\_scone} for $R^\textrm{tracks}$;
1173 \texttt{PTAU\_track\_pt } for min $p_T^\textrm{tracks}$ and \texttt{TAUJET\_pt} for $\min p_T$.
1174
1175
1176\bibitem[x]{qr:triggercard} The trigger card is the \texttt{data/TriggerCard.dat} file. Default trigger files are also available for CMS-like and ATLAS-like detectors
1177
1178\bibitem[y]{qr:protontaggers} The resolution is defined by the \texttt{RP220\_T\_resolution} and \texttt{RP420\_T\_resolution} parameters in the detector card.
1179
1180\bibitem[z]{qr:frog} To prepare the visualisation, the \texttt{FLAG\_FROG} parameter should be equal to $1$.
1181
1182\end{thebibliography}
1183
1184
1185
1186
1187\onecolumn
1188\appendix
1189
1190\section{User manual}
1191
1192The available \texttt{C++}-code is compressed in a zipped tar file which contains everything needed to run the \textit{Delphes} package, assuming a running \textsc{ROOT} installation. The package includes \texttt{ExRootAnalysis}~\citep{bib:ExRootAnalysis}, \textit{Hector}~\citep{bib:hector}, FastJet~\citep{bib:FASTJET}, and \textsc{FROG}~\citep{bib:FROG}, as well as the conversion codes to read standard \mbox{StdHEP} input files (\texttt{mcfio} and \texttt{stdhep})~\citep{bib:mcfio} and HepMC~\citep{bib:hepmc}.
1193In order to visualise the events with the \textsc{FROG} software, a few additional external libraries may be required, as explained in \href{http://projects.hepforge.org/FROG/}{http://projects.hepforge.org/FROG/}.
1194
1195\subsection{Getting started}
1196
1197In order to run \textit{Delphes} on your system, first download its sources and compile them:\\
1198\begin{quote}\texttt{wget http://www.fynu.ucl.ac.be/users/s.ovyn/Delphes/files/Delphes\_V\_*.tar.gz}\end{quote}
1199Replace the \texttt{*} symbol by the proper version number. Always refer to the download page on the \textit{Delphes} website \href{http://www.fynu.ucl.ac.be/users/s.ovyn/Delphes/download.html}{http://www.fynu.ucl.ac.be/users/s.ovyn/Delphes/download.html}. Current version of Delphes for this manual is V 1.8 (July 2009).
1200
1201\begin{quote}
1202\begin{verbatim}
1203me@mylaptop:~$ tar -xvf Delphes_V_*.tar.gz
1204me@mylaptop:~$ cd Delphes_V_*.*
1205me@mylaptop:~$ ./genMakefile.tcl > Makefile
1206me@mylaptop:~$ make
1207\end{verbatim}
1208\end{quote}
1209Due to the large number of external utilities, the number of printed lines during the compilation can be high. The user should not pay attention to possible warning messages, which are due to the external packages used by \textit{Delphes}. When compilation is completed, the following message is printed:
1210\begin{quote}
1211\begin{verbatim}
1212me@mylaptop:~$ Delphes has been compiled
1213me@mylaptop:~$ Ready to run
1214\end{verbatim}
1215\end{quote}
1216
1217\subsection{Running \textit{Delphes} on your events}
1218
1219In this sub-appendix, we will explain how to use \textit{Delphes} to perform a fast simulation of a general-purpose detector on your event files. The first step to use \textit{Delphes} is to create the list of input event files (e.g.\ {\verb inputlist.list }). It is important to notice that all the files comprised in the list file should have the same of extension (\texttt{*.hep}, \texttt{*.lhe}, \texttt{*.hepmc} or \texttt{*.root}). In the simplest way to run \textit{Delphes}, you need this input file and you need to specify the name of the output file that will contain the generator-level data (\texttt{GEN} tree), the analysis data objects after reconstruction (\texttt{Analysis} tree), and the results of the trigger emulation (\texttt{Trigger} tree).
1220
1221\begin{quote}
1222\begin{verbatim}
1223me@mylaptop:~$ ./Delphes inputlist.list OutputRootFileName.root
1224\end{verbatim}
1225\end{quote}
1226
1227\subsubsection{Setting up the configuration}
1228
1229The program is driven by two datacards (default cards are {\verb data/DetectorCard.dat } and {\verb data/TriggerCard.dat }) which allow the user to choose among a large spectrum of running conditions. Please note that if the user does not provide these datacards, the running will be done using the default parameters defined in the constructor of the class \texttt{RESOLution} (see next). If you choose a different detector or running configuration, you will need to edit the datacards accordingly. Detector and trigger cards are provided in the \texttt{data/} subdirectory for the \textsc{CMS} and \textsc{ATLAS} experiments.
1230
1231\begin{enumerate}
1232\item{\bf The detector card }
1233It contains all pieces of information needed to run \textit{Delphes}:
1234\begin{itemize}
1235 \item detector parameters, including calorimeter and tracking coverage and resolutions, transverse energy thresholds for object reconstruction and jet algorithm parameters.
1236 \item six flags ({\verb FLAG_bfield }, {\verb FLAG_vfd }, {\verb FLAG_RP }, {\verb FLAG_trigger }, {\verb FLAG_FROG } and {\verb FLAG_LHCO }), should be set in order to configure the magnetic field propagation, the very forward detectors simulation, the use of very forward taggers, the trigger selection, the preparation for \textsc{FROG} display and the creation of an output file in \texttt{*.LHCO} text format (respectively).
1237 \end{itemize}
1238
1239If no datacard is provided by the user, the default smearing and running parameters are used (corresponding to tables~\ref{tab:defEta},~\ref{tab:defResol}).\\
1240Definition of the sub-detector extensions:
1241\begin{quote}
1242\begin{verbatim}
1243CEN_max_tracker 2.5 // Maximum tracker coverage
1244CEN_max_calo_cen 1.7 // central calorimeter coverage
1245CEN_max_calo_ec 3.0 // calorimeter endcap coverage
1246CEN_max_calo_fwd 5.0 // forward calorimeter pseudorapidity coverage
1247CEN_max_mu 2.4 // muon chambers pseudorapidity coverage
1248\end{verbatim}
1249\end{quote}
1250Definition of the sub-detector resolutions:
1251\begin{quote}
1252\begin{verbatim}
1253# Energy resolution for electron/photon in central/endcap/fwd/zdc calos
1254# \sigma/E = C + N/E + S/\sqrt{E}, E in GeV
1255ELG_Scen 0.05 // S term for central ECAL
1256ELG_Ncen 0.25 // N term
1257ELG_Ccen 0.005 // C term
1258ELG_Sec 0.05 // S term for ECAL endcap
1259ELG_Nec 0.25 // N term
1260ELG_Cec 0.005 // C term
1261ELG_Sfwd 2.084 // S term for FCAL
1262ELG_Nfwd 0. // N term
1263ELG_Cfwd 0.107 // C term
1264ELG_Szdc 0.70 // S term for ZDC
1265ELG_Nzdc 0. // N term
1266ELG_Czdc 0.08 // C term
1267
1268# Energy resolution for hadrons in central/endcap/fwd/zdc calos
1269# \sigma/E = C + N/E + S/\sqrt{E}, E in GeV
1270HAD_Scen 1.5 // S term for central HCAL
1271HAD_Ncen 0. // N term
1272HAD_Ccen 0.05 // C term
1273HAD_Sec 1.5 // S term for HCAL endcap
1274HAD_Nec 0. // N term
1275HAD_Cec 0.05 // C term
1276HAD_Sfwd 2.7 // S term for FCAL
1277HAD_Nfwd 0. // N term
1278HAD_Cfwd 0.13 // C term
1279HAD_Szdc 1.38 // S term for ZDC
1280HAD_Nzdc 0. // N term
1281HAD_Czdc 0.13 // C term
1282
1283# Time resolution for ZDC/RP220/RP420
1284ZDC_T_resolution 0 // in s
1285RP220_T_resolution 0 // in s
1286RP420_T_resolution 0 // in s
1287
1288# Muon smearing
1289MU_SmearPt 0.01 // transverse momentum Pt in GeV/c
1290
1291# Tracking efficiencies
1292TRACK_ptmin 0.9 // minimal pT
1293TRACK_eff 90 // efficiency associated to the tracking (%)
1294\end{verbatim}
1295\end{quote}
1296Definitions related to the calorimetric cells:
1297\begin{quote}
1298\begin{verbatim}
1299# Calorimetric towers
1300TOWER_number 40
1301TOWER_eta_edges 0. 0.087 0.174 0.261 0.348 0.435 0.522 0.609 0.696 0.783
1302 0.870 0.957 1.044 1.131 1.218 1.305 1.392 1.479 1.566 1.653
1303 1.740 1.830 1.930 2.043 2.172 2.322 2.500 2.650 2.868 2.950
1304 3.125 3.300 3.475 3.650 3.825 4.000 4.175 4.350 4.525 4.700
1305 5.000
1306
1307TOWER_dphi 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 10
1308 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 20 20
1309\end{verbatim}
1310\end{quote}
1311\texttt{TOWER\_eta\_edges} is the list of the edges in $\eta$ of all cells, in the $\eta>0$ hemisphere (the detector is supposed to be symmetric with respect to the $\eta=0$ plane, as well as around the $z$-axis). Starts with the lower edge of the most central tower (default: $\eta = 0$) and ends with the higher edge of the most forward tower.
1312\texttt{TOWER\_dphi} lists the tower size in $\phi$ (in degree), assuming that all cells are similar in $\phi$ for a given $\eta$.\\
1313Thresholds applied for storing the reconstructed objects in the final collections:
1314\begin{quote}
1315\begin{verbatim}
1316# Thresholds for reconstructed objects, in GeV/c
1317PTCUT_elec 10.0
1318PTCUT_muon 10.0
1319PTCUT_jet 20.0
1320PTCUT_gamma 10.0
1321PTCUT_taujet 10.0
1322
1323# Thresholds for reconstructed objects in ZDC, E in GeV
1324ZDC_gamma_E 20
1325ZDC_n_E 50
1326\end{verbatim}
1327\end{quote}
1328Definitions of variables related to the charged lepton isolation:
1329\begin{quote}
1330\begin{verbatim}
1331# Charged lepton isolation. Pt and Et in GeV
1332ISOL_PT 2.0 //minimal pt of tracks for isolation criteria
1333ISOL_Cone 0.5 //Cone for isolation criteria
1334ISOL_Calo_Cone 0.4 //Cone for calorimetric isolation
1335ISOL_Calo_ET 2.0 //minimal tower E_T for isolation criteria. 1E99 means "off"
1336ISOL_Calo_Grid 3 //Grid size (N x N) for calorimetric isolation
1337\end{verbatim}
1338\end{quote}
1339Definitions of variables related to the jet reconstruction:
1340\begin{quote}
1341\begin{verbatim}
1342# General jet variable
1343JET_coneradius 0.7 // generic jet radius
1344JET_jetalgo 1 // 1 for Cone algorithm,
1345 // 2 for MidPoint algorithm,
1346 // 3 for SIScone algorithm,
1347 // 4 for kt algorithm
1348 // 5 for Cambridge/Aachen algorithm
1349 // 6 for anti-kt algorithm
1350JET_seed 1.0 // minimum seed to start jet reconstruction, in GeV
1351JET_Eflow 1 // Energy flow: perfect energy assumed in the tracker coverage.
1352 // 1 is 'on' ; 0 is 'off'
1353
1354# Tagging definition
1355BTAG_b 40 // b-tag efficiency (%)
1356BTAG_mistag_c 10 // mistagging (%)
1357BTAG_mistag_l 1 // mistagging (%)
1358\end{verbatim}
1359\end{quote}
1360Switches for options
1361\begin{quote}
1362\begin{verbatim}
1363# FLAGS
1364FLAG_bfield 1 //1 to run the bfield propagation else 0
1365FLAG_vfd 1 //1 to run the very forward detectors else 0
1366FLAG_RP 1 //1 to run the very forward detectors else 0
1367FLAG_trigger 1 //1 to run the trigger selection else 0
1368FLAG_FROG 1 //1 to run the FROG event display
1369FLAG_LHCO 1 //1 to run the LHCO
1370\end{verbatim}
1371\end{quote}
1372Parameters for the magnetic field simulation:
1373\begin{quote}
1374\begin{verbatim}
1375# In case BField propagation allowed
1376TRACK_radius 129 // radius of the BField coverage, in cm
1377TRACK_length 300 // length of the BField coverage, in cm
1378TRACK_bfield_x 0 // X component of the BField, in T
1379TRACK_bfield_y 0 // Y component of the BField, in T
1380TRACK_bfield_z 3.8 // Z component of the BField, in T
1381\end{verbatim}
1382\end{quote}
1383Parameters related to the very forward detectors
1384\begin{quote}
1385\begin{verbatim}
1386# Very forward detector extension, in pseudorapidity
1387# if allowed
1388VFD_min_zdc 8.3 // Zero-Degree neutral Calorimeter
1389VFD_s_zdc 140 // distance of the ZDC, from the IP, in [m]
1390
1391#\textit{Hector} parameters
1392RP_220_s 220 // distance of the RP to the IP, in meters
1393RP_220_x 0.002 // distance of the RP to the beam, in meters
1394RP_420_s 420 // distance of the RP to the IP, in meters
1395RP_420_x 0.004 // distance of the RP to the beam, in meters
1396RP_beam1Card data/LHCB1IR5_v6.500.tfs // beam optics file, beam 1
1397RP_beam2Card data/LHCB2IR5_v6.500.tfs // beam optics file, beam 2
1398RP_IP_name IP5 // tag for IP in \textit{Hector} ; 'IP1' for ATLAS
1399RP_offsetEl_x 0.097 // horizontal separation between both beam, in meters
1400RP_offsetEl_y 0 // vertical separation between both beam, in meters
1401RP_offsetEl_s 120 // distance of beam separation point, from IP
1402RP_cross_x -500 // IP offset in horizontal plane, in micrometers
1403RP_cross_y 0 // IP offset in vertical plane, in micrometers
1404RP_cross_ang_x 142.5 // half-crossing angle in horizontal plane, in microrad
1405RP_cross_ang_y 0 // half-crossing angle in vertical plane, in microrad
1406\end{verbatim}
1407\end{quote}
1408Others parameters:
1409\begin{quote}
1410\begin{verbatim}
1411# In case FROG event display allowed
1412NEvents_FROG 100
1413# Number of events to process
1414NEvents -1 // -1 means 'all'
1415
1416# input PDG tables
1417PdgTableFilename data/particle.tbl // table with particle pid,mass,charge,...
1418\end{verbatim}
1419\end{quote}
1420
1421In general, energies, momenta and masses are expressed in GeV, GeV$/c$, GeV$/c^2$ respectively, and magnetic fields in T.
1422Geometrical extension are often referred in terms of pseudorapidity $\eta$, as the detectors are supposed to be symmetric in $\phi$. From version 1.8 onwards, the number of events to run is also be included in the detector card (\texttt{NEvents}). For version 1.7 and earlier, the parameters related to the calorimeter endcaps (\texttt{CEN\_max\_calo\_ec}, \texttt{ELG\_Sec}, \texttt{ELG\_Nec}, \texttt{ELG\_Cec}, \texttt{HAD\_Sec}, \texttt{HAD\_Nec} and \texttt{HAD\_Cec}) did not exist in the detector cards; in addition, some other variables had different names (\texttt{HAD\_Scen} was \texttt{HAD\_Sfcal}, \texttt{HAD\_Ncen} was \texttt{HAD\_Nfcal}, \texttt{HAD\_Ccen} was \texttt{HAD\_Cfcal}, \texttt{HAD\_Sfwd} was \texttt{HAD\_Shf}, \texttt{HAD\_Nfwd} was \texttt{HAD\_Nhf}, \texttt{HAD\_Cfwd} was \texttt{HAD\_Chf}). However, these cards are still completely compatible with new versions of \textit{Delphes}. In such a case, the calorimeter endcaps are simply assumed to be located at the edge of the central calorimeter volumes, with the same resolution values.
1423
1424\item{\bf The trigger card }
1425
1426This card contains the definitions of all trigger-bits. Cuts can be applied on the transverse momentum $p_T$ of electrons, muons, jets, $\tau$-jets, photons and the missing transverse energy. The following codes should be used so that \textit{Delphes} can correctly translate the input list of trigger-bits into selection algorithms:
1427
1428\begin{quote}
1429\begin{tabular}{ll}
1430{\it Trigger code} & {\it Corresponding object}\\
1431{\verb ELEC_PT } & electron \\
1432{\verb IElec_PT } & isolated electron \\
1433{\verb MUON_PT } & muon \\
1434{\verb IMuon_PT } & isolated muon \\
1435{\verb JET_PT } & jet \\
1436{\verb TAU_PT } & $\tau$-jet \\
1437{\verb ETMIS_PT } & missing transverse energy \\
1438{\verb GAMMA_PT } & photon \\
1439{\verb Bjet_PT } & $b$-jet \\
1440\end{tabular}
1441\end{quote}
1442
1443Each line in the trigger datacard is allocated to exactly one trigger-bit and starts with the name of the corresponding trigger.
1444Logical combination of several conditions is also possible. If the trigger-bit requires the presence of multiple identical objects, the order of their $p_T$ thresholds is very important: they must be defined in \textit{decreasing} order. The transverse momentum $p_T$ is expressed in \mbox{GeV/$c$}. Finally, the different requirements on the objects must be separated by a {\verb && } flag.
1445The default trigger card can be found in the data repository of \textit{Delphes} (\texttt{data/TriggerCard.dat}), as well as for both \textsc{CMS} and \textsc{ATLAS} experiments at the \textsc{LHC}.
1446An example of trigger table consistent with the previous rules is given here:
1447\begin{quote}
1448\begin{verbatim}
1449SingleJet >> JET_PT: '200'
1450DoubleElec >> ELEC_PT: '20' && ELEC_PT: '10'
1451SingleElec and Single Muon >> ELEC_PT: '20' && MUON_PT: '15'
1452\end{verbatim}
1453\end{quote}
1454\end{enumerate}
1455
1456\subsubsection{Running the code}
1457
1458First, create the detector and trigger cards (\texttt{data/DetectorCard.dat} and \texttt{data/TriggerCard.dat}). \\
1459Then, create a text file containing the list of input files that will be used by \textit{Delphes} (with extension \texttt{*.lhe}, \texttt{*.hepmc}, \texttt{*.root} or \texttt{*.hep}).
1460To run the code, type the following command (in one line)
1461\begin{quote}
1462\begin{verbatim}
1463me@mylaptop:~$ ./Delphes inputlist.list OutputRootFileName.root
1464 data/DetectorCard.dat data/TriggerCard.dat
1465\end{verbatim}
1466\end{quote}
1467As a reminder, typing the \texttt{./Delphes} command simply displays the correct usage:
1468
1469\begin{quote}
1470\begin{verbatim}
1471me@mylaptop:~$ ./Delphes
1472 Usage: ./Delphes input_file output_file [detector_card] [trigger_card]
1473 input_list - list of files in Ntpl, StdHep, HepMC or LHEF format,
1474 output_file - output file.
1475 detector_card - Card containing resolution variables for detector simulation (optional)
1476 trigger_card - Card containing the trigger algorithms (optional)
1477\end{verbatim}
1478\end{quote}
1479
1480
1481\subsection{Getting the \textit{Delphes} information}
1482
1483\subsubsection{Contents of the \textit{Delphes} ROOT trees}
1484
1485The \textit{Delphes} output file (\texttt{*.root}) is subdivided into three \textit{trees}, corresponding to generator-level data, analysis-object data and trigger output. These \textit{trees} are structures that organise the output data into \textit{branches} containing data (or \textit{leaves}) related with each others, like the kinematics properties ($E$, $p_x$, $\eta$, $\ldots$) of a given particle.
1486
1487Here is the exhaustive list of \textit{branches} availables in these \textit{trees}, together with their corresponding physical objet and \texttt{ExRootAnalysis} C++ class name:
1488\begin{quote}
1489\begin{tabular}{lll}
1490\textbf{GEN \texttt{Tree}} & &\\
1491~~~Particle & generator particles from \textsc{hepevt} & {\verb GenParticle }\\
1492\multicolumn{3}{l}{}\\
1493\textbf{Trigger \texttt{Tree}} & &\\
1494~~~TrigResult & Acceptance of different trigger-bits & {\verb TRootTrigger }\\
1495\multicolumn{3}{l}{}\\
1496\textbf{Analysis \texttt{Tree}} & & \\
1497~~~Tracks & Collection of tracks & {\verb TRootTracks }\\
1498~~~CaloTower & Calorimetric cells & {\verb TRootCalo }\\
1499~~~Electron & Collection of electrons & {\verb TRootElectron }\\
1500~~~Photon & Collection of photons & {\verb TRootPhoton }\\
1501~~~Muon & Collection of muons & {\verb TRootMuon }\\
1502~~~Jet & Collection of jets & {\verb TRootJet }\\
1503~~~TauJet & Collection of jets tagged as $\tau$-jets & {\verb TRootTauJet }\\
1504~~~ETmis & Transverse missing energy information & {\verb TRootETmis }\\
1505~~~ZDChits & Hits in the Zero Degree Calorimeters & {\verb TRootZdcHits }\\
1506~~~RP220hits & Hits in the first proton taggers & {\verb TRootRomanPotHits }\\
1507~~~FP420hits & Hits in the next proton taggers & {\verb TRootRomanPotHits }\\
1508\end{tabular}
1509\end{quote}
1510The third column shows the names of the corresponding classes to be written in a \textsc{ROOT} tree.
1511The bin number in the unique leaf in the \texttt{trigger} tree (namely, \texttt{TrigResult.Accepted}) corresponds to the trigger number in the provided list. In addition, the result of the global trigger decision upon each event (i.e.\ the logical \texttt{OR} of all trigger conditions) is stored in the first bin (number 0) of this leaf.
1512In \texttt{Analysis} tree, all classes except \texttt{TRootTracks}, \texttt{TRootCalo}, \texttt{TRootTrigger}, \texttt{TRootETmis} and \texttt{TRootRomanPotHits} inherit from the class \texttt{TRootParticle} which includes the following data members (stored as \textit{leaves} in \textit{branches} of the \textit{trees}):
1513\begin{quote}
1514\begin{tabular}{ll}
1515\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Most common leaves}}\\
1516 \texttt{~~~float E; }&\texttt{ // particle energy in GeV }\\
1517 \texttt{~~~float Px; }&\texttt{ // particle momentum vector (x component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1518 \texttt{~~~float Py; }&\texttt{ // particle momentum vector (y component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1519 \texttt{~~~float Pz; }&\texttt{ // particle momentum vector (z component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1520 \texttt{~~~float PT; }&\texttt{ // particle transverse momentum in GeV$/c$ }\\
1521 \texttt{~~~float Eta; }&\texttt{ // particle pseudorapidity }\\
1522 \texttt{~~~float Phi; }&\texttt{ // particle azimuthal angle in rad }\\
1523\end{tabular}
1524\end{quote}
1525
1526In addition to their kinematics, some additional properties are available for specific objects:
1527\begin{quote}
1528\begin{tabular}{ll}
1529\multicolumn{2}{l}{{\bf Leaves in the \texttt{Particle} branch (\texttt{GEN} tree)}} \\
1530 \texttt{~~~int PID; }&\texttt{ // particle HEP ID number }\\
1531 \texttt{~~~int Status; }&\texttt{ // particle status }\\
1532 \texttt{~~~int M1; }&\texttt{ // particle 1st mother }\\
1533 \texttt{~~~int M2; }&\texttt{ // particle 2nd mother }\\
1534 \texttt{~~~int D1; }&\texttt{ // particle 1st daughter }\\
1535 \texttt{~~~int D2; }&\texttt{ // particle 2nd daughter }\\
1536 \texttt{~~~float Charge; }&\texttt{ // electrical charge in units of e}\\
1537 \texttt{~~~float T; }&\texttt{ // particle vertex position (t component, in mm$/c$) }\\
1538 \texttt{~~~float X; }&\texttt{ // particle vertex position (x component, in mm) }\\
1539 \texttt{~~~float Y; }&\texttt{ // particle vertex position (y component, in mm) }\\
1540 \texttt{~~~float Z; }&\texttt{ // particle vertex position (z component, in mm) }\\
1541 \texttt{~~~float M; }&\texttt{ // particle mass in GeV$/c^2$}\\
1542\end{tabular}
1543\end{quote}
1544\begin{quote}
1545\begin{tabular}{ll}
1546\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Additional leaves in \texttt{Electron} and \texttt{Muon} branches} (\texttt{Analysis} tree)} \\
1547 \texttt{~~~int Charge } &\texttt{ // particle Charge }\\
1548 \texttt{~~~bool IsolFlag } &\texttt{ // stores the result of the tracking isolation test }\\
1549 \texttt{~~~float IsolPt } &\texttt{ // sum of all track pt in isolation cone (GeV/c) }\\
1550 \texttt{~~~float EtaCalo } &\texttt{ // particle pseudorapidity when entering the calo }\\
1551 \texttt{~~~float PhiCalo } &\texttt{ // particle azimuthal angle in rad when entering the calo }\\
1552 \texttt{~~~float EHoverEE }&\texttt{ // hadronic energy over electromagnetic energy }\\
1553 \texttt{~~~float EtRatio } &\texttt{ // calo Et in NxN-cell grid around the muon over the muon Et }\\
1554\end{tabular}
1555\end{quote}
1556\begin{quote}
1557\begin{tabular}{ll}
1558\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Additional leaf in the \texttt{Jet} branch (\texttt{Analysis} tree)}} \\
1559 \texttt{~~~bool Btag } &\texttt{ // stores the result of the b-tagging }\\
1560 \texttt{~~~int NTracks }&\texttt{ // number of tracks associated to the jet }\\
1561 \texttt{~~~float EHoverEE }&\texttt{ // hadronic energy over electromagnetic energy }\\
1562\end{tabular}
1563\end{quote}
1564\begin{quote}
1565\begin{tabular}{ll}
1566\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Leaves in the \texttt{Tracks} branch (\texttt{Analysis} tree)}}\\
1567 \texttt{~~~float Eta } &\texttt{ // pseudorapidity at the beginning of the track }\\
1568 \texttt{~~~float Phi } &\texttt{ // azimuthal angle at the beginning of the track }\\
1569 \texttt{~~~float EtaOuter }&\texttt{ // pseudorapidity at the end of the track }\\
1570 \texttt{~~~float PhiOuter }&\texttt{ // azimuthal angle at the end of the track }\\
1571 \texttt{~~~float PT } &\texttt{ // track transverse momentum in GeV$/c$ }\\
1572 \texttt{~~~float E } &\texttt{ // track energy in GeV }\\
1573 \texttt{~~~float Px } &\texttt{ // track momentum vector (x component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1574 \texttt{~~~float Py } &\texttt{ // track momentum vector (y component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1575 \texttt{~~~float Pz } &\texttt{ // track momentum vector (z component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1576 \texttt{~~~float Charge } &\texttt{ // track charge in units of $e$ }\\
1577\end{tabular}
1578\end{quote}
1579\begin{quote}
1580\begin{tabular}{ll}
1581\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Leaves in the \texttt{CaloTower} branch (\texttt{Analysis} tree)}}\\
1582 \texttt{~~~float Eta } &\texttt{ // pseudorapidity of the cell }\\
1583 \texttt{~~~float Phi } &\texttt{ // azimuthal angle of the cell in rad }\\
1584 \texttt{~~~float E } &\texttt{ // cell energy in GeV }\\
1585 \texttt{~~~float E\_em } &\texttt{ // electromagnetic component of the cell energy in GeV}\\
1586 \texttt{~~~float E\_had } &\texttt{ // hadronic component of the cell energy in GeV}\\
1587 \texttt{~~~float ET } &\texttt{ // cell transverse energy in GeV }\\
1588& \\
1589\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Leaves in the \texttt{ETmis} branch (\texttt{Analysis} tree)}}\\
1590 \texttt{~~~float Phi } &\texttt{ // azimuthal angle of the transverse missing energy in rad }\\
1591 \texttt{~~~float ET } &\texttt{ // transverse missing energy in GeV }\\
1592 \texttt{~~~float Px } &\texttt{ // x component of the transverse missing energy in GeV }\\
1593 \texttt{~~~float Py } &\texttt{ // y component of the transverse missing energy in GeV }\\
1594\end{tabular}
1595\end{quote}
1596
1597The hits in very forward detector (\textsc{ZDC, RP220, FP420}) have some common data. In particular, the \texttt{side} variable tells in which detector (left:-1 or right:+1 of the interaction point) the hit has been seen. Moreover, some generator level data is provided for information, as the correspondance with the contents of the \texttt{GEN} tree is not possible. These generator-level data correspond to the particle kinematics (energy, momentum, angle) and identification (pid).
1598
1599\begin{quote}
1600\begin{tabular}{ll}
1601\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Common leaves for ZDC, RP220, FP420}}\\
1602 \texttt{~~~float T } &\texttt{ // time of flight in s }\\
1603 \texttt{~~~float E } &\texttt{ // measured/smeared energy in GeV }\\
1604 \texttt{~~~int side }&\texttt{ // -1 or +1 }\\
1605\multicolumn{2}{l}{Generator level data}\\
1606 \texttt{~~~int pid; }&\texttt{ // particle ID }\\
1607 \texttt{~~~float genPx; }&\texttt{ // particle momentum vector (x component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1608 \texttt{~~~float genPy; }&\texttt{ // particle momentum vector (y component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1609 \texttt{~~~float genPz; }&\texttt{ // particle momentum vector (z component) in GeV$/c$ }\\
1610 \texttt{~~~float genPT; }&\texttt{ // particle transverse momentum in GeV$/c$ }\\
1611 \texttt{~~~float genEta; }&\texttt{ // particle pseudorapidity }\\
1612 \texttt{~~~float genPhi; }&\texttt{ // particle azimuthal angle in rad }\\
1613\end{tabular}
1614\end{quote}
1615
1616\begin{quote}
1617\begin{tabular}{ll}
1618\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Additional leaves in the \texttt{ZDChits} branch (\texttt{Analysis} tree)}}\\
1619 \texttt{~~~int hadronic\_hit} &\texttt{// 0(is not hadronic) or 1(is hadronic) }
1620\end{tabular}
1621\end{quote}
1622
1623\begin{quote}
1624\begin{tabular}{ll}
1625\multicolumn{2}{l}{\textbf{Additional leaves in the \texttt{RP220hits} and \texttt{FP420hits} branches (\texttt{Analysis} tree)}}\\
1626 \texttt{~~~flaot S } &\texttt{ // detector position from IP in m } \\
1627 \texttt{~~~float X } &\texttt{ // hit horizontal position in m } \\
1628 \texttt{~~~float Y } &\texttt{ // hit vertical position in m } \\
1629 \texttt{~~~float TX } &\texttt{ // hit horizontal angle in rad } \\
1630 \texttt{~~~float TY } &\texttt{ // hit vertical angle in rad } \\
1631 \texttt{~~~float q2 } &\texttt{ // reconstructed momentum transfer in GeV$^2$ }
1632\end{tabular}
1633\end{quote}
1634The hit position is computed from the center of the beam position, not from the edge of the detector.
1635
1636\subsection{Deeper description of jet algorithms}
1637
1638In this section, we briefly describe the differences between the six jet algorithms interfaced in \textit{Delphes}, via the FastJet utiliy~\citep{bib:FASTJET}. Jet algorithms differ in their sensitivity to soft particles or collinear splittings, and in their computing speed performances. The first three belong to the cone algorithm class while the last three are using a sequential recombination scheme. For all of them, the calorimetric cells are used as inputs for the jet clustering.
1639
1640\subsubsection*{Cone algorithms}
1641
1642\begin{enumerate}
1643
1644\item {\it CDF Jet Clusters}~\citep{bib:jetclu}: Basic cone reconstruction algorithm used by the \textsc{CDF} experiment in Run II). All cells lying in a circular cone around the jet axis with a transverse energy $E_T$ higher than a given threshold are used to seed the jet candidates. This algorithm is fast but sensitive to both soft particles and collinear splittings.
1645
1646\item {\it CDF MidPoint}~\citep{bib:midpoint}: Cone reconstruction algorithm developed for the \textsc{CDF} Run II to reduce infrared and collinear sensitivities compared to purely seed-based cone by adding `midpoints' (energy barycentres) in the list of cone seeds.
1647
1648\item {\it Seedless Infrared Safe Cone}~\citep{bib:SIScone}: The \textsc{SISC}one algorithm is simultaneously insensitive to additional soft particles and collinear splittings, and fast enough to be used in experimental analysis.
1649
1650\end{enumerate}
1651
1652
1653\subsubsection*{Recombination algorithms}
1654
1655The three sequential recombination jet algorithms are safe with respect to soft radiations (\textit{infrared}) and collinear splittings. They rely on recombination schemes where calorimeter cell pairs are successively merged.
1656The definitions of the jet algorithms are similar except for the definition of the \textit{distances} $d$ used during the merging procedure. Two such variables are defined: the distance $d_{ij}$ between each pair of cells $(i,j)$, and a variable $d_{iB}$ (\textit{beam distance}) depending on the transverse momentum of the cell $i$.
1657The jet reconstruction algorithm browses the calorimetric cell list. It starts by finding the minimum value $d_\textrm{min}$ of all the distances $d_{ij}$ and $d_{iB}$. If $d_\textrm{min}$ is a $d_{ij}$, the cells $i$ and $j$ are merged into a single cell with a four-momentum $p^\mu = p^\mu (i) + p^\mu (j)$ (\textit{E-scheme recombination}). If $d_\textrm{min}$ is a $d_{iB}$, the cell is declared as a final jet and is removed from the input list. This procedure is repeated until no cells are left in the input list. Further information on these jet algorithms is given here below, using $k_{ti}$, $y_{i}$ and $\phi_i$ as the transverse momentum, rapidity and azimuth of calorimetric cell $i$ and $\Delta R_{ij}= \sqrt{(y_i-y_j)^2+(\phi_i-\phi_j)^2}$ as the jet-radius parameter:
1658
1659\begin{enumerate}[start=4]
1660
1661\item {\it Longitudinally invariant $k_t$ jet}~\citep{bib:ktjet}, with
1662 $d_{ij} = \min(k_{ti}^2,k_{tj}^2) \times \frac{\Delta R_{ij}^2}{R^2}$ and $d_{iB}=k_{ti}^2$,
1663\item {\it Cambridge/Aachen jet}~\citep{bib:aachen}, with $d_{ij} = \frac{\Delta R_{ij}^2}{R^2}$ and $d_{iB}=1$,
1664\item {\it Anti $k_t$ jet}~\citep{bib:antikt}, where hard jets are exactly circular in the $(y,\phi)$ plane:
1665$d_{ij} = \min(1/k_{ti}^2,1/k_{tj}^2) \times \frac{\Delta R_{ij}^2}{R^2}$ and $d_{iB}=\frac{1}{k_{ti}^2}$.
1666\end{enumerate}
1667
1668
1669\subsection{Running an analysis on your \textit{Delphes} events}
1670
1671To analyse the \textsc{ROOT} ntuple produced by \textit{Delphes}, the simplest way is to use the {\verb Analysis_Ex.cpp } code which is coming in the {\verb Examples } repository of \textit{Delphes}. Note that all of this is optional and done to facilitate the analyses, as the output from \textit{Delphes} is viewable with the standard \textsc{ROOT} \texttt{TBrowser} and can be analysed using the \texttt{MakeClass} facility.
1672As an example, here is a simple overview of a \texttt{myoutput.root} file created by \textit{Delphes}:
1673\begin{quote}
1674\begin{verbatim}
1675me@mylaptop:~$ root -l myoutput.root
1676root [0]
1677Attaching file myoutput.root as _file0...
1678root [1] .ls
1679TFile** myoutput.root
1680 TFile* myoutput.root
1681 KEY: TTree GEN;1 Analysis tree
1682 KEY: TTree Analysis;1 Analysis tree
1683 KEY: TTree Trigger;1 Analysis tree
1684root [2] TBrowser t;
1685root [3] Analysis->GetEntries()
1686(const Long64_t)200
1687root [4] GEN->GetListOfBranches()->ls()
1688OBJ: TBranchElement Event Event_ : 0 at: 0x9108f30
1689OBJ: TBranch Event_size Event_size/I : 0 at: 0x910cfd0
1690OBJ: TBranchElement Particle Particle_ : 0 at: 0x910c6b0
1691OBJ: TBranch Particle_size Particle_size/I : 0 at: 0x9111c58
1692root [5] Trigger->GetListOfLeaves()->ls()
1693OBJ: TLeafElement TrigResult_ TrigResult_ : 0 at: 0x90f90a0
1694OBJ: TLeafElement TrigResult.Accepted Accepted[TrigResult_] : 0 at: 0x90f9000
1695OBJ: TLeafI TrigResult_size TrigResult_size : 0 at: 0x90fb860
1696\end{verbatim}
1697\end{quote}
1698The \texttt{.ls} command lists the current keys available and in particular the three \textit{tree} names.
1699\mbox{\texttt{TBrowser t}} launches a browser and the \texttt{GetEntries()} method outputs the number of data in the corresponding \textit{tree}.
1700The list of \textit{branches} or \textit{leaves} can be displayed with the \texttt{GetListOfBranches()} and \texttt{GetListOfLeaves()} methods, pointing to the \texttt{ls()} one. In particular, it is possible to shown only parts of the output, using wildcard characters (\texttt{*}):
1701\begin{quote}
1702\begin{verbatim}
1703root [6] Analysis->GetListOfLeaves()->ls("*.E")
1704OBJ: TLeafElement Jet.E E[Jet_] : 0 at: 0xa08bc68
1705OBJ: TLeafElement TauJet.E E[TauJet_] : 0 at: 0xa148910
1706OBJ: TLeafElement Electron.E E[Electron_] : 0 at: 0xa1d8a50
1707OBJ: TLeafElement Muon.E E[Muon_] : 0 at: 0xa28ac80
1708OBJ: TLeafElement Photon.E E[Photon_] : 0 at: 0xa33cd88
1709OBJ: TLeafElement Tracks.E E[Tracks_] : 0 at: 0xa3cced0
1710OBJ: TLeafElement CaloTower.E E[CaloTower_] : 0 at: 0xa4ba188
1711OBJ: TLeafElement ZDChits.E E[ZDChits_] : 0 at: 0xa54a3c8
1712OBJ: TLeafElement RP220hits.E E[RP220hits_] : 0 at: 0xa61e648
1713OBJ: TLeafElement FP420hits.E E[FP420hits_] : 0 at: 0xa6d0920
1714\end{verbatim}
1715\end{quote}
1716
1717To draw a particular leaf, either double-click on the corresponding name in the \texttt{TBrowser} or use the \texttt{Draw} method of the corresponding \textit{tree}.
1718\begin{quote}
1719\begin{verbatim}
1720root [7] Trigger->Draw("TrigResult.Accepted");
1721\end{verbatim}
1722\end{quote}
1723Mathematical operations on several \textit{leaves} are possible within a given \textit{tree}, following the C++ syntax:
1724\begin{quote}
1725\begin{verbatim}
1726root [8] Analysis->Draw("Muon.Px * Muon.Px");
1727root [9] Analysis->Draw("sqrt(pow(Muon.E,2) - pow(Muon.Pz,2) + pow(Muon.PT,2))");
1728\end{verbatim}
1729\end{quote}
1730Finally, to prepare an deeper analysis, the \texttt{MakeClass} method is useful. It creates two files (\texttt{*.h} and \texttt{*.C}) with automatically generated code that allows the access to all branches and leaves of the corresponding tree:
1731\begin{quote}
1732\begin{verbatim}
1733root [10] Trigger->MakeClass()
1734Info in <TTreePlayer::MakeClass>: Files: Trigger.h and
1735 Trigger.C generated from TTree: Trigger
1736\end{verbatim}
1737\end{quote}
1738For more information, refer to ROOT documentation. Moreover, an example of code (based on the output of \texttt{MakeClass}) is provided in the \texttt{Examples/} directory.
1739
1740To run the \texttt{Examples/Analysis\_Ex.cpp} code, the two following arguments are required: a text file containing the input \textit{Delphes} \texttt{root} files to run, and the name of the output \texttt{root} file.
1741 \begin{quote}
1742\begin{verbatim}
1743me@mylaptop:~$ ./Analysis_Ex input_file.list output_file.root
1744\end{verbatim}
1745 \end{quote}
1746One can easily edit, modify and compile (\texttt{make}) changes in this file.
1747
1748\subsubsection{Adding the trigger information}
1749The \texttt{Examples/Trigger\_Only.cpp} code permits to run the trigger selection separately from the general detector simulation on output \textit{Delphes} root files. A \textit{Delphes} \texttt{root} file is mandatory as an input argument for the \texttt{Trigger\_Only} routine. The new \textit{tree} containing the trigger result data will be appended to this file.
1750The trigger datacard is also necessary. To run the code:
1751 \begin{quote}
1752\begin{verbatim}
1753me@mylaptop:~$ ./Trigger_Only input_file.root data/TriggerCard.dat
1754\end{verbatim}
1755 \end{quote}
1756
1757\subsection{Running the FROG event display}
1758
1759\begin{itemize}
1760\item If the { \verb FLAG_FROG } was switched on in the smearing card, two files have been created during the running of \textit{Delphes}: \texttt{DelphesToFROG.vis} and \texttt{DelphesToFROG.geom }. They contain all the needed pieces of information to run \textsc{FROG}.
1761\item To display the events and the geometry, you first need to compile \textsc{FROG}. Go to the {\verb Utilities/FROG } and type {\verb make }. This compilation is done once for all, with this geometry (i.e.\ as long as the \texttt{*vis} and \texttt{*geom} files do not change).
1762\item Go back into the main directory and type
1763\begin{quote}
1764\texttt{me@mylaptop:~\$ ./Utilities/FROG/FROG}
1765\end{quote}
1766\end{itemize}
1767
1768\subsection{LHCO file format}
1769 The \texttt{*LHCO} file format is a text-\textsc{ASCII} data format briefly discussed here. An exhaustive description is provided on \href{http://v1.jthaler.net/olympicswiki}{http://v1.jthaler.net/olympicswiki}. This section is based on this webpage.
1770Only final high-level objects are available in the \texttt{LHCO} format, and their properties are arranged in columns. Each row corresponds to an object in the event and all events are written after each other. Comment-lines starts with a hash \texttt{\#} symbol.
1771
1772\begin{verbatim}
1773 # typ eta phi pt jmas ntrk btag had/em dum1 dum2
1774 0 57 0
1775 1 0 1.392 -2.269 19.981 0.000 0.000 0.000 4.605 0.000 0.000
1776 2 3 1.052 2.599 29.796 3.698 -1.000 0.000 0.320 0.000 0.000
1777 3 4 1.542 -2.070 84.308 41.761 7.000 0.000 1.000 0.000 0.000
1778 4 4 1.039 0.856 58.992 34.941 1.000 0.000 1.118 0.000 0.000
1779 5 4 1.052 2.599 29.796 3.698 0.000 0.000 0.320 0.000 0.000
1780 6 4 0.431 -2.190 22.631 3.861 0.000 0.000 1.000 0.000 0.000
1781 7 6 0.000 0.845 62.574 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
1782\end{verbatim}
1783Each row in an event starts with a unique number (i.e.\ in first column).
1784Row \texttt{0} contains the event number (here: \texttt{57}) and some trigger information (here: \texttt{0}. This very particular trigger encoding is not implemented in \textit{Delphes}.).
1785Subsequent rows list the reconstructed high-level objects.
1786Each row is organised in columns, which details the object kinematics as well as more specific information, such as isolation criteria or $b$-tagging.
1787
1788\paragraph{1st column (\texttt{\#})}
1789The first column is the line number in the event. Each event starts with a 0 and contains as many lines as needed to list all high-level objects.
1790
1791\paragraph{2nd column (\texttt{typ})}
1792The second column gives the object identification code, or \textit{type}.
1793The different object types are:\\
1794\begin{tabular}{ll}
1795 \texttt{0}& for a photon ($\gamma$)\\
1796 \texttt{1}& for an electron ($e^\pm$)\\
1797 \texttt{2}& for a muon ($\mu^\pm$)\\
1798 \texttt{3}& for a hadronically-decaying tau ($\tau$-jet)\\
1799 \texttt{4}& for a jet\\
1800 \texttt{6}& for a missing transverse energy ($E_T^\textrm{miss}$)\\
1801\end{tabular}\\
1802Object type \texttt{5} is not defined.
1803An event always ends with the row corresponding to the missing transverse energy (type \texttt{6}).
1804
1805\paragraph{3rd (\texttt{eta}) and 4th (\texttt{phi}) columns}
1806The third and forth columns gives the object pseudorapidity $\eta$ and azimuth $\phi$. This latter quantity is expressed in radians, ranging from $-\pi$ to $\pi$.
1807
1808\paragraph{5th (\texttt{pt}) and 6th (\texttt{jmass}) columns}
1809The fifth column provides the object transverse momentum ($p_T$ in GeV$/c$) or energy ($E_T$ in GeV), while the invariant mass ($M$ in GeV/$c^2$) is in the sixth column.
1810
1811\paragraph{7th column (\texttt{ntrk})}
1812The seventh column reports the total number of tracks associated to the objects. This is \texttt{0} for photons, \texttt{$\pm$ 1} for charged leptons including taus (where the sign reports the lepton measured charge) and a positive number (\texttt{$\geq$ 0}) for jets.
1813
1814\paragraph{8th column (\texttt{btag})}
1815The eighth column tells whether a jet is tagged as a $b$-jet (\texttt{1}) or not (\texttt{0}).
1816This is always \texttt{0} for electrons, photons and missing transverse energy.
1817For muons, the closest jet in searched for, in terms of $\Delta R$. The integer-part of the quoted number is the row-number (column 1) of this jet.
1818
1819\paragraph{9th column (\texttt{had/em})}
1820For jets, electrons and photons, the ninth column is the ration between hadronic and electromagnetic energies in the calorimetric cells associated to the object. This is always \texttt{0} for missing transverse energy.
1821For muons, this number (\texttt{aaa.bb}) reports two values related to the muon isolation (section \ref{sec:isolation}). The integer part (\texttt{aaa}) is transverse momentum sum $P_T$ (in GeV/$c$) and the fractional part (\texttt{bb}) is the energy ratio $\rho_\mu$.
1822
1823
1824\paragraph{10th and 11th columns (\texttt{dum1} and \texttt{dum2})}
1825The last two columns are currently not used.
1826
1827\paragraph{Warning}
1828Inherently to the data format itself, the \texttt{*LHCO} output contains only a fraction of the available data. Moreover, dealing with text file may have various drawbacks, such as the output file size and the time needed for its creation. Whenever possible, working on the \texttt{*root} output file should be preferred.
1829
1830\end{document}
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