High-fidelity simulation of particle-matter interactions provides the essential theoretical reference for diverse physics disciplines, yet generating synthetic datasets at the scale of current and future experiments has become prohibitive. Here, we introduce PHIN-GAN, a novel physics-informed generative adversarial network designed to address this challenge. We derive a set of analytical probability density functions, that effectively describe the ``straggling function'' identified with Landau. For the first time, this enables their continuous evaluation across the entire phase-space. These analytical forms are leveraged to enforce a parametric distribution-level learning objective. Rooted in first principles, PHIN-GAN offers a generalizable, interpretable and scalable proof-of-concept approach for a lossless generative model that maintains the high fidelity of the standard-bearer for simulating such interactions, namely GEANT4, at a fraction of the computational cost.
Earth's matter affects the oscillation of atmospheric neutrinos and antineutrinos differently depending on the neutrino mass ordering (NMO). As more neutrinos than antineutrinos are expected to be detected in the IceCube detector, this matter effect can be used to probe the NMO. The fraction of energy transferred to the nucleon during a neutrino interaction, known as the inelasticity, has a different distribution for neutrinos and antineutrinos because of their opposite chirality. This can in theory be used to statistically separate neutrinos from antineutrinos, but hasn't been exploited in IceCube DeepCore analyses yet. To this end, two new inelasticity reconstructions were developed using a graph neural network and an ensemble of two-dimensional convolutional neural networks. This presentation discusses the development and performances of these reconstruction algorithms. The inelasticity is then used as a fourth observable, along with the particle energy, direction and flavor, to calculate new NMO sensitivities and determine the impact of adding the inelasticity in the measurement of the NMO with the IceCube DeepCore and upcoming IceCube Upgrade detectors.
A search is presented for massive narrow-width resonances in the mass range of $1\text{-}4.5\,\text{TeV}$ decaying into pairs of Higgs bosons (HH), using proton-proton collision data at a center-of-mass energy of $13\,\text{TeV}$ collected with the CMS detector at the LHC during the $2016\text{-}2018$ data-taking. The data correspond to an integrated luminosity of $138~\mathrm{fb}^{-1}$. The analysis targets final states where one Higgs boson decays into a pair of bottom quarks and the other into a pair of tau leptons, $\mathrm{X}\rightarrow\mathrm{HH}\rightarrow \mathrm{b}\bar{\mathrm{b}}\,\tau^{+}\tau^{-}$. The observed data are found to be consistent with standard model background expectations. Upper limits at $95\%$ confidence level (CL) are set on the production cross section for resonant HH production for masses between $1$ and $4.5\,\text{TeV}$. This analysis sets the most sensitive LHC limits to date on $\mathrm{X}\rightarrow\mathrm{HH}\rightarrow \mathrm{b}\bar{\mathrm{b}}\,\tau^{+}\tau^{-}$ decays in the mass range of $1.4$ to $4.5\,\text{TeV}$.
Beyond $B$ physics, charm and $\tau$ physics constitute a central part of the Belle and Belle II physics programs. Here, we present recent results on charm baryon decays, including first measurements and observations of several previously unmeasured modes, together with new studies in $\tau$ physics. Particular emphasis is placed on searches for CP violation in $\tau$ decays and lepton-flavor-violating processes. In this context, a search for CP violation in $\tau \to \pi K_{S} \nu_{\tau}$ decays is reported for the first time.
Our recent study discussed the prospects for measuring single positrons produced in electron-laser collisions via the nonlinear Breit-Wheeler deep-tunneling process in the SLAC Experiment 320 at the FACET-II RF LINAC. In this work, we demonstrate how a tracking detector, that is a scaled-down version of the one discussed in the prospective simulation study, enables the measurement. This prototype detector, installed in Aug 2024, is built out of five layers of single ALPIDE chips. The data are taken from several standalone runs completed in Nov 2024 and Feb 2025. We use positrons generated through conversion of Bremsstrahlung photons as a proxy to the nonlinear Breit-Wheeler process. These positrons are produced by the beam electrons in a thin Beryllium foil close to the experiment's interaction point. The tracking approach used in this initial work is based on a Hough-Transform seeding algorithm followed by a straight line fit confined to the detector volume. Even with this relatively simple approach, we are able to measure a signal rate of $(1.20\pm0.06_{stat.}\pm0.56_{syst.})\times10^{-1}$ positrons per shot. This signal rate is comparable to the nonlinear Breit-Wheeler rate expected in the main experiment. Notably, the measurement is achieved under an extreme, unprecedented background hit density of ~1.7/mm$^2$, unlike the main experiment, where at least a twice lower density is expected. This large background is mostly due to secondary particles produced when the large flux of Bremsstrahlung photons interacts with the material of the beamline elements. When the foil is retracted, the false-positive signal rate is shown to be four orders of magnitude smaller than the signal rate. We further show that the high spatial tracking resolution of ~5 micron allows to characterize the positrons' spectra. The results are compared to simulations, which are found to be compatible with the data.
A search for Higgs boson (H) production in association with two vector bosons (V = W, Z) via vector boson scattering (VBS) is presented using proton-proton collision data collected at $\sqrt{s}$ = 13 TeV by the CMS experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb$^{-1}$. Events containing two forward jets consistent with VBS, a large-radius jet from the decay of a boosted H to a pair of b quarks, and 0, 1, or 2 charged leptons coming from V decays are selected. The process is excluded at 95% CL for observed (expected) values of the VVHH coupling modifier $\kappa_\mathrm{VV}$ outside the interval 0.40 $\lt$ $\kappa_\mathrm{VV}$ $\lt$ 1.60 (0.34 $\lt$ $\kappa_\mathrm{VV}$ $\lt$ 1.66), assuming standard model values for all other couplings, thus establishing a novel probe of the VVHH interaction. Constraints are also set on the individual $\kappa_\mathrm{2W}$ and $\kappa_\mathrm{2Z}$ coupling modifiers, and on the allowed region in the $\kappa_\mathrm{2W}$-$\kappa_\mathrm{2Z}$ plane.
The VISPA project is a self-managed, mid-scale computing cluster that supports physics data analysis in research and teaching. Because the cluster is housed in a 1970s institute building with limited retrofit options, conventional efficiency upgrades would yield only minor energy savings. We therefore target sustainability primarily through user-centric measures. A monitoring system now records per-job energy consumption, while real-time data on the renewable share of the German power grid enable `green-window' scheduling. Users can query their individual energy consumption and carbon footprints, receive weekly reports, and tag jobs by project for aggregate accounting; memory records from previous runs help avoid oversubscription. All options are voluntary, fostering a cultural shift rather than imposing hard constraints. A simulation framework evaluates the potential impact of these measures. Together, the technological and behavioral interventions aim at medium- to long-term reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions by increasing resource awareness within the scientific community.
Deep-inelastic $e/\mu$ scattering data off targets ranging from deuterium to lead indicate that the nuclear modifications to the structure functions of bound nucleons are minimal in the kinematic region around the peak of the valence quark distributions. An analysis of world measurements of the isoscalar cross-section ratios $\sigma^A/\sigma^{{}^2\text{H}}$ in the region of $0.25 \leq x \leq 0.35$ shows a remarkable cancellation across all nuclei, with an average value of $0.9985 \pm 0.0022$. We discuss these results and possible interpretations in the context of a microscopic model of nuclear modifications of the structure functions.
We investigate the three-body $DDK$ system with quantum numbers $I(J^P) = \frac{1}{2}(0^-)$ within a coupled-channel framework that incorporates both $DDK$ and $D^{*}D^{*}K$ configurations. The $D^{(*)}D^{(*)}$ interactions are described using the one-boson-exchange model constrained by the heavy-quark symmetry and fitted to the pole positions of $X(3872)$, $T_{cc}^+$, and $Z_c(3900)$. The $D^{(*)}K$ interaction is from the chiral effective theory, motivated by the molecular interpretation of $D_{s0}^*(2317)$, and is further constrained by lattice-QCD results for the $DK$ scattering lengths. The resulting three-body problem is solved using the Gaussian expansion method, while the complex scaling method is employed to search for possible resonant states. We find that coupled-channel effects from $D^{*}D^{*}K$ are negligible, and the $DDK$ system supports a deeply bound state across a wide range of parameters. Depending on the long-range behavior of the $DK$ interaction, an additional shallow state may emerge near the particle-dimer ($D$-$DK$) threshold. The deeply bound state exhibits a compact three-body structure, whereas the shallow state displays characteristic features of a three-body halo configuration. No clear resonance poles are identified within the explored parameter region. Similar results are obtained for the $D^{*}D^{*}K$ system. These findings may provide new insight into few-body dynamics in systems involving charmed mesons and kaons.
We review recent developments on the QCD phase diagram at small chemical potentials and increasing temperature. There are three regimes/phases in QCD which differ by symmetries, degrees of freedom and N_c scaling: the hadron gas below the chiral restoration temperature T_ch, the stringy fluid between T_ch and the deconfinement temperature T_d and the quark-gluon plasma above T_d.
We report on an experimental demonstration of efficient neutron generation based on direct laser acceleration in microwire-array targets irradiated by ultrashort (tens of femtoseconds) laser pulses. The optimal array period was identified, at which the maximum proton energy and the number of protons with energies exceeding $1~\mathrm{MeV}$ were significantly increased. Using a $1~\mathrm{PW}$, $\sim25~\mathrm{fs}$ laser at a moderate intensity of $\sim10^{20}~\mathrm{W/cm^2}$, a high neutron yield of up to $(8.33\pm0.84)\times10^{6}~\mathrm{n/sr/J}$ was detected from the LiD converter via $^7\mathrm{Li}(p,n)$ and $\mathrm{D}(p,n)^3\mathrm{He}$ nuclear reactions. Self-consistent integrated simulations reproduced the experimental results and predicted that with a Be converter, a forward pulsed neutron source with an unprecedented yield per joule of $3.67\times10^{7}~\mathrm{n/sr/J}$ can be obtained under identical laser conditions. This type of neutron source is favorable for applications that require a high repetition rate utilizing compact and economical laser systems.
High-energy-resolution GaN $\alpha$-particle detectors have significant potential for space radiation, nuclear instrumentation, and harsh-environment applications. However, existing GaN $\alpha$-particle detectors still face several key challenges, including reducing the dead-layer thickness, suppressing leakage current under high reverse bias, improving energy resolution, and clarifying the physical mechanism underlying the low-energy tail phenomenon. This study presents a vertical homoepitaxial GaN $\alpha$-particle detector integrating a 20-nm ultrathin dead layer and a guard-ring structure. The detector exhibits an ultralow leakage current of 2.195 nA at -200 V and an intrinsic energy resolution of 2.69% with a charge collection efficiency (CCE) of 95.9% at -260 V. More importantly, this work demonstrates for the first time through Geant4 simulations that depletion-width nonuniformity is the dominant source of partial energy leakage, leading to an extended low-energy tail in the energy spectrum. We establish a depletion-width nonuniformity model and observe good agreement between simulation and experiment. This finding provides practical guidance for the design and optimization of high-performance GaN-based radiation detectors.
Low-Gain Avalanche Diodes (LGADs) are fast silicon sensors with internal charge multiplication and are key candidates for precision timing layers in future high-energy hadron colliders. Their operation in harsh radiation environments, however, is limited by acceptor removal in the gain layer, which reduces the active acceptor concentration and degrades the internal electric field required for avalanche multiplication. Improving the radiation tolerance of the gain layer is therefore essential for future 4D tracking applications. In this work, we investigated several LGAD prototypes produced in collaboration with Hamamatsu Photonics K.K. (HPK), featuring modified gain-layer designs, including oxygen-modified, carbon-implanted, and boron--phosphorus compensated structures. The sensors were studied after proton and reactor-neutron irradiation. Radiation tolerance was characterized using the acceptor-removal coefficient extracted from IV measurements and the operation voltage required to recover the timing performance after irradiation. The results show that carbon implantation is the only approach among those studied here that provides a clear improvement in radiation tolerance. In contrast, neither oxygen-related modification, including the Partially Activated Boron (PAB) approach, nor gain-layer compensation alone yields a significant improvement, and the compensated carbon-implanted structure shows no clear advantage over the carbon-only case. In addition, the acceptor-removal coefficient is found to depend on the irradiation particle type and energy.
DUNE (Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment) is a long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiment currently under construction, whose far detectors will be the largest liquid argon time projection chambers ever built. This detector design calls for custom-built cryogenic front-end electronics to attain the required detector performance. This paper describes the charge readout electronics that will be used in the DUNE horizontal drift (HD) far detector and presents performance results using data from the ProtoDUNE-HD detector, a 770 ton liquid argon time projection chamber operated at the CERN Neutrino Platform in 2024 that served as the final prototype of the DUNE HD design.
We report a detailed simulation study of the search for $s$-channel Higgs boson production in $e^+e^-$ collisions at a center-of-mass (c.m.) energy of $\sqrt{s}=125\,\mathrm{GeV}$ at the CERN Future Circular Collider (FCC-ee), as a means to constrain the electron Yukawa coupling, $y_e$. The process of interest is $e^+e^-\to H\to WW^*\to \ell^\pm\nu + jj$ with four different $WW^*$ final states considered, involving both on- and off-shell $W$ bosons decaying either into dileptons ($\ell^\pm = e^\pm$ and $\mu^\pm$, including those from $\tau^\pm$ decays) or into dijets ($jj$). Signal and background events are discriminated through a multiclass gradient boosted decision tree exploiting a comprehensive set of kinematic and topological variables across the four final-state categories. Assuming a monochromatized c.m. energy spread of 4.1 MeV, yielding a $\sigma_{e^+e^-\to H} = 280\,\mathrm{ab}$ resonant cross section, and an integrated luminosity of $10\,\mathrm{ab}^{-1}$, the analysis achieves a combined statistical significance of 2.0 standard deviations. This corresponds to an upper limit on the coupling modifier $\kappa_e = y_e/y_e^{\rm SM} \lesssim 1.35$ at 95\% confidence level, and provides the most stringent constraint on the electron Yukawa coupling achieved in simulation-based studies to date.
As the lightest isovector vector meson, the $\rho$ meson is an important object for investigating the structure of resonant states in strong interactions. Owing to its strong coupling to the $\pi\pi$ channel and its large decay width, the conventional constituent quark model treatment, in which it is simply regarded as a pure $q\bar q$ bound state while the hadronic-channel coupling effects are neglected, is insufficient to fully characterize its physical properties. To this end, in the present work we establish a unified framework for studying the structure and resonant properties of the $\rho$ meson by combining the quark-gluon and hadronic degrees of freedom. At the quark-gluon level, we first determine the parameters of the chiral quark model by refitting a set of narrow mesons for which open OZI-allowed strong-decay channels are absent or strongly suppressed. With these parameters fixed, the bare mass of the $\rho$ meson is obtained and used as the input for the subsequent hadronic-level analysis. At the hadronic level, based on inverse scattering theory, we construct a model including the coupling between the bare state and the $\pi\pi$ continuum, extract the $\rho_0-\pi\pi$ interaction using the $P$-wave $\pi\pi$ scattering phase-shift data, and further calculate the width of the $\rho$ meson as well as the bare-state component in the physical state. The present work also provides a generalizable analytical framework for further studies of other hadronic resonances with significant channel-coupling effects.
Naturally tiny neutrino masses can be explained by the low scale seesaw with heavy neutral lepton $N$ coupling to the neutrinophilic Higgs doublet $\Phi_\nu$, which obtains a much smaller vacuum expectation value than the standard Higgs doublet $\Phi$. Within this model, the neutrino masses originate from the new Yukawa interaction $y \overline{L}\tilde{\Phi}_\nu N$. In this paper, we propose the novel same-sign tetralepton signature at the 2 TeV same-sign muon mode $\mu^+\mu^+$ of $\mu$TRISTAN. We investigate two distinct channels of this signature, which are both generated by the Yukawa interaction $y \overline{L}\tilde{\Phi}_\nu N$. One is from the pair production of charged Higgs $\mu^+\mu^+\to H^+ H^+\to \mu^+N +\mu^+ N\to \mu^+ \mu^+ jj + \mu^+ \mu^+ jj\to 4\mu^+ + 4j$, and the other one is from the single production of charged Higgs $\mu^+\mu^+ \to \mu^+ N H^+ \to \mu^+N +\mu^+ N\to \mu^+ \mu^+ jj + \mu^+ \mu^+ jj\to 4\mu^+ + 4j$. We then perform a detailed simulation of this same-sign tetralepton signature, and obtain the promising region at $\mu$TRISTAN.
The Coherent Neutrino-Nucleus Interaction Experiment (CONNIE) aims to detect the coherent scattering (CE$\nu$NS) of reactor antineutrinos off silicon nuclei using thick fully-depleted high-resistivity silicon CCDs. Two Skipper-CCD sensors with sub-electron readout noise capability were installed at the experiment next to the Angra-2 reactor in 2021, making CONNIE the first experiment to employ Skipper-CCDs for reactor neutrino detection. We report on the performance of the Skipper-CCDs, the new data processing and data quality selection techniques and the event selection for CE$\nu$NS interactions, which enable CONNIE to reach a record low detection threshold of 15 eV. The data were collected over 300 days in 2021-2022 and correspond to exposures of 14.9 g-days with the reactor-on and 3.5 g-days with the reactor-off. The difference between the reactor-on and off event rates shows no excess and yields upper limits at 95% confidence level for the neutrino interaction rates comparable with previous CONNIE limits from standard CCDs and higher exposures. Searches for new neutrino interactions beyond the Standard Model were performed, yielding an improvement on the previous CONNIE limit on a simplified model with light vector mediators. A first dark matter (DM) search by diurnal modulation was performed by CONNIE and the results represent the best limits on the DM-electron scattering cross-section, obtained by a surface-level experiment. These promising results, obtained using a very small-mass sensor, illustrate the potential of Skipper-CCDs to probe rare neutrino interactions and motivate the plans to increase the detector mass in the near future.
A search for a pair of light pseudoscalar bosons (a$_1$) produced in the decay of the 125 GeV Higgs boson is presented. The analysis examines decay modes where one a$_1$ decays into a pair of tau leptons and the other decays into either another pair of tau leptons or a pair of muons. The a$_1$ boson mass probed in this study ranges from 4 to 15 GeV. The data sample was recorded by the CMS experiment in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV and corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb$^{-1}$. No excess above standard model (SM) expectations is observed. The study combines the 4$\tau$ and 2$\mu$2$\tau$ channels to set upper limits at 95% confidence level (CL) on the product of the Higgs boson production cross section and the branching fraction to the 4$\tau$ final state, relative to the Higgs boson production cross section predicted by the SM. In this interpretation, the a$_1$ boson is assumed to have Yukawa-like couplings to fermions, with coupling strengths proportional to the respective fermion masses. The observed (expected) upper limits range between 0.007 (0.011) and 0.079 (0.066) across the mass range considered. The results are also interpreted in the context of models with two Higgs doublets and an additional complex singlet field (2HD+S). The tightest constraints are obtained for the Type III 2HD+S model. In this case, assuming the Higgs boson production cross section equals the SM prediction, values of the branching ratio for the Higgs boson decay into a pair of a$_1$ bosons exceeding 16% are excluded at 95% CL for a$_1$ boson masses between 5 and 15 GeV and $\tan\beta$ $\gt$ 2, with the exception of scenarios in which the a$_1$ boson mixes with charm or bottom quark-antiquark bound states.
Using a data sample of $(10087 \pm 44) \times 10^6$ $J/\psi$ events collected with the BESIII detector at a centre-of-mass energy of $\sqrt{s}=3.097\ \textrm{GeV}$, a dedicated search for the charmonium semileptonic weak decay $J/\psi\rightarrow D_s^-e^+\nu_e + \text{c.c.}$ is performed. No significant signal is observed. An upper limit on the branching fraction is set at $\mathcal{B}(J/\psi\rightarrow D_s^- e^+ \nu_e + \text{c.c.}) < 1.0 \times 10^{-7}$ at the 90\% confidence level. This result improves upon previous constraints by an order of magnitude, representing the most stringent experimental limit to date. It thus provides a critical test of Standard Model predictions and new physics scenarios in heavy-quark dynamics.
A measurement of the substructure of bottom quark jets (b jets) in proton-proton (pp) collisions is presented. The measurement uses data collected in pp collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 5.02 TeV, with a low number of simultaneous interactions per bunch crossing, recorded by the CMS experiment in 2017, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 301 pb$^{-1}$. An algorithm to identify and cluster the charged decay daughters of b hadrons is developed for this analysis, which facilitates the exposure of the gluon radiation pattern of b jets using iterative Cambridge$-$Aachen declustering. The soft-drop-groomed jet radius, $R_\mathrm{g}$, and momentum balance, $z_\mathrm{g}$, of b quark jets are presented. These observables can be used to test perturbative quantum chromodynamics predictions that account for mass effects. Because the b hadron is partially reconstructed from its charged decay daughters, only charged particles are used for the jet substructure studies. In addition, a jet fragmentation function, $z_\text{b,ch}$, is measured, which is defined as the distribution of the ratio of the transverse momentum ($p_\mathrm{T}$) of the partially reconstructed b hadron with respect to the charged-particle component of the jet $p_\mathrm{T}$. The substructure variable distributions are unfolded to the charged-particle level. The b jet substructure is compared to the substructure of jets in an inclusive jet sample that is dominated by light-quark and gluon jets in order to assess the role of the b quark mass. A strong suppression of emissions at small $R_\mathrm{g}$ values is observed for b jets when compared to inclusive jets, consistent with the dead-cone effect. The measurement is also compared with theoretical predictions from Monte Carlo event generators. This is the first substructure measurement of b jets that clusters together the b hadron decay daughters.
Using a 10.9 fb$^{-1}$ data sample collected by the BESIII detector at center-of-mass energies from 4.16 to 4.34 GeV, we search for the charmless decays $X(3872) \to K_{S}^{0}K^{\pm}\pi^{\mp}$ and $K^*(892)\bar{K}$, where the $X(3872)$ is produced via the radiative process $e^+e^- \to \gamma X(3872)$. No significant signal is observed. We set upper limits on the relative branching fractions $\mathcal{B}[X(3872)\to K_S K^{\pm} \pi^{\mp}]/\mathcal{B}[X(3872)\to\pi^+\pi^- J/\psi] <0.07$ and $\mathcal{B}[X(3872)\to K^* (892)\bar{K}]/\mathcal{B}[X(3872)\to \pi^+\pi^- J/\psi] <0.10$ at the 90$\%$ confidence level. Additionally, upper limits on the product of the cross section $\sigma[e^+e^-\to\gamma X(3872)]$ and the branching fractions $\mathcal{B}[X(3872)\to K_{S}^{0}K^{\pm}\pi^{\mp}]$ and $\mathcal{B}[X(3872)\to K^*(892)\bar{K}]$ are reported at each energy point. In all cases, $K^*(892)\bar{K}$ refers to the sum of the modes $K^*(892)^+K^{-}+\text{c.c.}$ and $K^*(892)^0\bar{K}^0+\text{c.c.}$, where c.c. denotes the corresponding charge-conjugate modes.
Located at the BEPCII $e^{+}e^{-}$ collider, the BESIII experiment provides a robust platform for investigating (anti)hyperon-nucleon ($YN$) and antineutron-nucleon ($\bar{n}N$) interactions. This is made possible by the high production cross-sections of $J/\psi$ and $\psi(3686)$ resonances and their substantial decay branches into these baryons. Although previous studies using the beam pipe as a target demonstrated feasibility, statistical precision remains constrained by the limited material budget. To address this, we propose installing a dedicated liquid hydrogen or liquid deuterium target between the beam pipe and the Cylindrical Gas Electron Multiplier Inner Tracker. Monte Carlo simulations confirm that the added material has a negligible effect on charged particle tracking. This upgrade is expected to enhance the effective luminosity for scattering on free protons by a factor of 10--30 for $\Lambda$, $\Sigma^{+}$, $\Xi$, and $\bar{n}$ beams, enabling high-precision measurements of $YN$ and $\bar{n}N$ interactions that will significantly advance our knowledge of non-perturbative strong interactions.
Low-Gain Avalanche Diodes (LGADs) provide moderate internal gain and time resolutions of a few tens of picoseconds, making them a key technology for ultrafast timing in high-energy physics and beyond. However, both their gain and timing characteristics vary strongly with reverse-bias voltage and temperature. This work establishes a compact analytical framework that describes multi-temperature LGAD gain and timing behavior through an equivalent representation of the gain layer. The non-uniform multiplication region is replaced by an equivalent rectangular gain layer, from which a first-order bias-compensation relation for constant gain is derived and validated. Using multi-temperature measurements of LGADs designed by IHEP and fabricated by IME, together with an independent HPK dataset, we show that the gain-voltage curve family can be reconstructed from a reference-temperature main curve, substantially reducing characterization effort. The same idea is then extended to timing by decomposing the total time resolution into jitter and intrinsic components and representing their temperature dependences as component-wise equivalent bias offsets. The resulting framework provides a function-level description of multi-temperature LGAD time-resolution curves and offers a practical tool for calibration, operation, and reduced-density characterization of LGAD-based ultrafast timing systems.
This Letter reports the first measurement of photonuclear D$^0$ meson production in ultraperipheral heavy ion collisions. The study is performed using lead-lead collision data, with an integrated luminosity of 1.34 nb$^{-1}$, collected by the CMS experiment at a nucleon-nucleon center-of-mass energy of 5.36 TeV. Photonuclear events, where one of the colliding nuclei breaks up and the other remains intact, are selected based on breakup neutron emissions and by requiring no particle activity in a large rapidity interval in the direction of the photon-emitting nucleus. The D$^0$ mesons are reconstructed via the D$^0$ $\to$ K$^-$$\pi^+$ decay channel, with the cross section measured as a function of D$^0$ meson transverse momentum and rapidity. The results are compared with next-to-leading-order perturbative QCD calculations that employ recent parametrizations of the lead nuclear parton distribution functions, as well as with predictions based on the color glass condensate framework. This measurement is the first photonuclear collision study characterizing parton distribution functions of lead nuclei for parton fractional momenta $x$ (relative to the nucleon) ranging approximately from a few 10$^{-4}$ to 10$^{-2}$ for different hard energy scale $Q^2$ selections.
Motivated by the discrepancies noted recently between the theoretical predictions of the electromagnetic $J/\psi \to \pi^0 \gamma^*$ transition form factor and the BESIII data, we reanalyze this transition form factor using the dispersive Khuri-Treiman equations, with final-state interactions in both the direct channel and the crossed channels properly considered. This improved framework incorporates $\rho$-$\omega$ mixing effects. The effect of four-pion states is evaluated through a dispersively improved vector-meson-dominance model. From this information, we propose a two-parameter fit that provides an excellent description of the BESIII data over the broad energy range from 0 to 2.8GeV. We demonstrate that the $\rho\pi^0$ decay mode of the $J/\psi$ is dominated by strong interaction, while the $\omega\pi^0$ mode is dominated by one-photon exchange. From this, we extract the relative phase between the strong and the one-virtual-photon (electromagnetic) modes in hadronic decays of $J/\psi$ as $(62 \pm 21)^{\circ}$. This could provide useful information in understanding the long-standing $\rho \pi$ puzzle in $J/\psi$ decays.
We present XRISM/Resolve high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy of the prototypical magnetic cataclysmic variable AM Herculis. All satellite lines of highly ionized Fe are fully resolved. Lighter element lines (Si, S, Ca) show 2 - 3 eV widths consistent with purely thermal broadening, while the broader 6 - 7 eV Fe lines require additional bulk Doppler broadening. Spin-phase-resolved modulations are clearly detected in the Fe XXV and Fe XXVI lines, with semi-amplitudes of $81.8\pm6$ km s$^{-1}$ and $132.5\pm9$ km s$^{-1}$, and mean velocities of $143.6\pm6$ km s$^{-1}$ and $225.6\pm8$ km s$^{-1}$, respectively. After removing these bulk Doppler shifts, we obtain intrinsic Doppler widths of $5.23_{-0.15}^{+0.16}$ eV for Fe XXV and $6.23_{-0.18}^{+0.19}$ eV for Fe XXVI, directly revealing gradients of bulk velocity and temperature in the cooling-flow plasma. We additionally examined the resonance anisotropy predicted by Terada et al. (1999, 2001): the equivalent widths of the Fe XXV and Fe XXVI resonance lines increase at the pole-on phase by factors of 1.30 - 1.35, in positive correlation with their oscillator strengths. Combining XRISM with simultaneous NuSTAR data and PSAC/MCVSPEC plasma models, we derive a self-consistent shock temperature of $24.0\pm0.1$ keV and shock velocity of $1,116\pm2$ km s$^{-1}$. Radiative transfer simulations of the resonance lines further constrain the shock density to about $(5 - 6)\times10^{15}$ cm$^{-3}$, providing a new density diagnostic for accretion columns. The resulting accretion column geometry has a height of 200 - 300 km and a radius of 200 - 400 km.