Version 137 (modified by 11 days ago) ( diff ) | ,
---|
A framework for fast simulation of a generic collider experiment
Delphes is a C++ framework, performing a fast multipurpose detector response simulation. The simulation includes a tracking system, embedded into a magnetic field, calorimeters and a muon system. The framework is interfaced to standard file formats (e.g. Les Houches Event File or HepMC) and outputs observables such as isolated leptons, missing transverse energy and collection of jets which can be used for dedicated analyses. The simulation of the detector response takes into account the effect of magnetic field, the granularity of the calorimeters and sub-detector resolutions. Visualisation of the final state particles is also built-in using the corresponding ROOT library.
Community and support
The Delphes development model is community-based. Users willing to participate are encouraged to fork Delphes Git repository and to submit pull requests for improvements and bug fixes. The Delphes core development team from the CP3 center of the Université catholique de Louvain is in charge of the maintenance, releases, and general support to users via the ticket system.
Documentation
Documentation is collected in the WorkBook. Good starting point is the Quick Tour.
The Delphes project documentation is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
References
If you use Delphes as part of a publication, you should include a citation to:
JHEP 02 (2014) 057 [ arXiv:1307.6346 [hep-ex] ]
Optionally, you can also include a citation to:
J.Phys.Conf.Ser. 523 (2014) 012033 [ inspire link ]
J.Phys.Conf.Ser. 608 (2015) 1, 012045 [ inspire link ]
Also, please note that Delphes relies on a few external packages. If they are used they should be cited as well. For instance, the jet clustering procedure in Delphes is performed via the FastJet package. If your analysis involves jets, you should explicitly include both a reference for the FastJet package and for the relevant clustering algorithm you are using.
For more information on how to properly cite FastJet, please visit this page.
Git access
The code is now fully on GitHub. You can get the latest version of the code using the command:
git clone https://github.com/delphes/delphes.git
Latest tickets
Results (1 - 10 of 512)
Ticket | Resolution | Summary | Reporter | Status | Priority | Modified |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1594 | Jet matching with Pythia 8.3 | new | minor | 3 weeks | ||
#1598 | Question on PDG code = 0 on B-tagging module | new | minor | 6 months | ||
#1597 | Inquiry Regarding Particle Status in Delphes | new | minor | 7 months | ||
#1596 | Meaning of Delphes “Track” outputs | new | minor | 7 months | ||
#1595 | eFlowTracks for some dark matter particles | new | minor | 7 months | ||
#1592 | Reading Delphes files with uproot ("fBits is not always 4 bytes") | new | minor | 9 months | ||
#1593 | Replicating fatjet clustering with pyjet | new | major | 9 months | ||
#1591 | Weird tracks' momenta for smeared tracks after SimpleCalorimeter module | new | critical | 9 months | ||
#1589 | Delphes Installation doesn't work on Mac 12.5 | new | minor | 11 months | ||
#1588 | How to access positron branch and make Et plots for positron using delphes.root file | new | major | 12 months |