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1 claudioc 1.1 \section{Data Driven Background Estimation Methods}
2     \label{sec:datadriven}
3     We have developed two data-driven methods to
4     estimate the background in the signal region.
5     The first one explouts the fact that
6     \met and \met$/\sqrt{\rm SumJetPt}$ are nearly
7     uncorrelated for the $t\bar{t}$ background
8     (Section~\ref{sec:abcd}); the second one
9     is based on the fact that in $t\bar{t}$ the
10     $P_T$ of the dilepton pair is on average
11     nearly the same as the $P_T$ of the pair of neutrinos
12     from $W$-decays, which is reconstructed as \met in the
13     detector.
14    
15 claudioc 1.3 In 30 pb$^{-1}$ we expect $\approx$ 1 SM event in
16 claudioc 1.1 the signal region. The expectations from the LMO
17 claudioc 1.3 and LM1 SUSY benchmark points are 15.1 and
18     6.0 events respectively. {\color{red} I took these
19     numbers from the twiki, rescaling from 11.06 to 30/pb.
20     They seem too large...are they really right?}
21 claudioc 1.1
22    
23     \subsection{ABCD method}
24     \label{sec:abcd}
25    
26     We find that in $t\bar{t}$ events \met and
27     \met$/\sqrt{\rm SumJetPt}$ are nearly uncorrelated.
28     This is demonstrated in Figure~\ref{fig:uncor}.
29     Thus, we can use an ABCD method in the \met$/\sqrt{\rm SumJetPt}$ vs
30     sumJetPt plane to estimate the background in a data driven way.
31    
32 claudioc 1.2 \begin{figure}[tb]
33 claudioc 1.1 \begin{center}
34     \includegraphics[width=0.75\linewidth]{uncorrelated.pdf}
35     \caption{\label{fig:uncor}\protect Distributions of SumJetPt
36     in MC $t\bar{t}$ events for different intervals of
37     MET$/\sqrt{\rm SumJetPt}$.}
38     \end{center}
39     \end{figure}
40    
41 claudioc 1.2 \begin{figure}[bt]
42 claudioc 1.1 \begin{center}
43 claudioc 1.3 \includegraphics[width=0.5\linewidth, angle=90]{abcdMC.pdf}
44 claudioc 1.1 \caption{\label{fig:abcdMC}\protect Distributions of SumJetPt
45     vs. MET$/\sqrt{\rm SumJetPt}$ for SM Monte Carlo. Here we also
46 claudioc 1.3 show our choice of ABCD regions. {\color{red} Derek, I
47     do not know if this is SM or $t\bar{t}$ only.}}
48 claudioc 1.1 \end{center}
49     \end{figure}
50    
51    
52     Our choice of ABCD regions is shown in Figure~\ref{fig:abcdMC}.
53     The signal region is region D. The expected number of events
54     in the four regions for the SM Monte Carlo, as well as the BG
55 claudioc 1.2 prediction AC/B are given in Table~\ref{tab:abcdMC} for an integrated
56 claudioc 1.1 luminosity of 30 pb$^{-1}$. The ABCD method is accurate
57 claudioc 1.4 to about 10\%. {\color{red} Avi wants some statement about stability
58     wrt changes in regions. I am not sure that we have done it and
59     I am not sure it is necessary (Claudio).}
60 claudioc 1.1
61     \begin{table}[htb]
62     \begin{center}
63     \caption{\label{tab:abcdMC} Expected SM Monte Carlo yields for
64     30 pb$^{-1}$ in the ABCD regions.}
65     \begin{tabular}{|l|c|c|c|c||c|}
66     \hline
67     Sample & A & B & C & D & AC/D \\ \hline
68 claudioc 1.3 ttdil & 6.9 & 28.6 & 4.2 & 1.0 & 1.0 \\
69     Zjets & 0.0 & 1.3 & 0.1 & 0.1 & 0.0 \\
70     Other SM & 0.5 & 2.0 & 0.1 & 0.1 & 0.0 \\ \hline
71     total MC & 7.4 & 31.9 & 4.4 & 1.2 & 1.0 \\ \hline
72 claudioc 1.1 \end{tabular}
73     \end{center}
74     \end{table}
75    
76 claudioc 1.2 \subsection{Dilepton $P_T$ method}
77     \label{sec:victory}
78     This method is based on a suggestion by V. Pavlunin\cite{ref:victory},
79     and was investigated by our group in 2009\cite{ref:ourvictory}.
80     The idea is that in dilepton $t\bar{t}$ events the lepton and neutrinos
81     from $W$ decays have the same $P_T$ spectrum (modulo $W$ polarization
82     effects). One can then use the observed
83     $P_T(\ell\ell)$ distribution to model the sum of neutrino $P_T$'s which
84     is identified with the \met.
85    
86     Then, in order to predict the $t\bar{t} \to$ dilepton contribution to a
87     selection with \met$+$X, one applies a cut on $P_T(\ell\ell)+$X instead.
88     In practice one has to rescale the result of the $P_T(\ell\ell)+$X selection
89     to account for the fact that any dilepton selection must include a
90     moderate \met cut in order to reduce Drell Yan backgrounds. This
91     is discussed in Section 5.3 of Reference~\cite{ref:ourvictory}; for a \met
92     cut of 50 GeV, the rescaling factor is obtained from the data as
93    
94     \newcommand{\ptll} {\ensuremath{P_T(\ell\ell)}}
95     \begin{center}
96     $ K = \frac{\int_0^{\infty} {\cal N}(\ptll)~~d\ptll~}{\int_{50}^{\infty} {\cal N}(\ptll)~~d\ptll~}$
97     \end{center}
98    
99    
100     Monte Carlo studies give values of $K$ that are typically between 1.5 and 1.6,
101     depending on selection details.
102    
103     There are several effects that spoil the correspondance between \met and
104     $P_T(\ell\ell)$:
105     \begin{itemize}
106     \item $Ws$ in top events are polarized. Neutrinos are emitted preferentially
107     forward in the $W$ rest frame, thus the $P_T(\nu\nu)$ distribution is harder
108     than the $P_T(\ell\ell)$ distribution for top dilepton events.
109     \item The lepton selections results in $P_T$ and $\eta$ cuts on the individual
110     leptons that have no simple correspondance to the neutrino requirements.
111     \item Similarly, the \met$>$50 GeV cut introduces an asymmetry between leptons and
112     neutrinos which is only partially compensated by the $K$ factor above.
113     \item The \met resolution is much worse than the dilepton $P_T$ resolution.
114     When convoluted with a falling spectrum in the tails of \met, this result
115     in a harder spectrum for \met than the original $P_T(\nu\nu)$.
116     \item The \met response in CMS is not exactly 1. This causes a distortion
117     in the \met distribution that is not present in the $P_T(\ell\ell)$ distribution.
118     \item The $t\bar{t} \to$ dilepton signal includes contributions from
119     $W \to \tau \to \ell$. For these events the arguments about the equivalence
120     of $P_T(\ell\ell)$ and $P_T(\nu\nu)$ do not apply.
121     \item A dilepton selection will include SM events from non $t\bar{t}$
122     sources. These events can affect the background prediction. Particularly
123     dangerous are high $P_T$ Drell Yan events that barely pass the \met$>$ 50
124     GeV selection. They will tend to push the data-driven background prediction up.
125     \end{itemize}
126    
127     We have studied these effects in SM Monte Carlo, using a mixture of generator and
128     reconstruction level studies, putting the various effects in one at a time.
129     For each configuration, we apply the data-driven method and report as figure
130     of merit the ratio of observed and predicted events in the signal region.
131     The results are summarized in Table~\ref{tab:victorybad}.
132    
133     \begin{table}[htb]
134     \begin{center}
135     \caption{\label{tab:victorybad} Test of the data driven method in Monte Carlo
136     under different assumptions. See text for details.}
137     \begin{tabular}{|l|c|c|c|c|c|c|c|}
138     \hline
139     & True $t\bar{t}$ dilepton & $t\to W\to\tau$& other SM & GEN or & Lepton $P_T$ & \met $>$ 50& obs/pred \\
140     & included & included & included & RECOSIM & and $\eta$ cuts & & \\ \hline
141     1&Y & N & N & GEN & N & N & \\
142     2&Y & N & N & GEN & Y & N & \\
143     3&Y & N & N & GEN & Y & Y & \\
144     4&Y & N & N & RECOSIM & Y & Y & \\
145     5&Y & Y & N & RECOSIM & Y & Y & \\
146     6&Y & Y & Y & RECOSIM & Y & Y & \\
147     \hline
148     \end{tabular}
149     \end{center}
150     \end{table}
151    
152    
153     The largest discrepancy between prediction and observation occurs on the first
154     line of Table~\ref{tab:victorybad}, {\em i.e.}, at the generator level with no
155     cuts. We have verified that this effect is due to the polarization of
156     the $W$ (we remove the polarization by reweighting the events and we get
157     good agreement between prediction and observation). The kinematical
158     requirements (lines 2 and 3) do not have a significant additional effect.
159     Going from GEN to RECOSIM there is a significant change in observed/predicted.
160     We have tracked this down to the fact that tcMET underestimates the true \met
161     by $\approx 4\%$\footnote{We find that observed/predicted changes by roughly 0.1
162     for each 1.5\% change in \met response.}. Finally, contamination from non $t\bar{t}$
163     events can have a significant impact on the BG prediction. The changes between
164     lines 5 and 6 of Table~\ref{tab:victorybad} is driven by only {\color{red} 3}
165     Drell Yan events that pass the \met selection.
166    
167     An additional source of concern is that the CMS Madgraph $t\bar{t}$ MC does
168     not include effects of spin correlations between the two top quarks.
169     We have studied this effect at the generator level using Alpgen. We find
170     that the bias is a the few percent level.
171    
172     Based on the results of Table~\ref{tab:victorybad}, we conclude that the
173     naive data driven background estimate based on $P_T{\ell\ell)}$ needs to
174     be corrected by a factor of {\color{red} $1.4 \pm 0.3$ (We need to
175     decide what this number should be)}. The quoted
176     uncertainty is based on the stability of the Monte Carlo tests under
177     variations of event selections, choices of \met algorithm, etc.
178    
179    
180     \subsection{Signal Contamination}
181     \label{sec:sigcont}
182    
183     All data-driven methods are principle subject to signal contaminations
184     in the control regions, and the methods described in
185     Sections~\ref{sec:abcd} and~\ref{sec:victory} are not exceptions.
186     Signal contamination tends to dilute the significance of a signal
187     present in the data by inflating the background prediction.
188    
189     It is hard to quantify how important these effects are because we
190     do not know what signal may be hiding in the data. Having two
191     independent methods (in addition to Monte Carlo ``dead-reckoning'')
192     adds redundancy because signal contamination can have different effects
193     in the different control regions for the two methods.
194     For example, in the extreme case of a
195     new physics signal
196     with $P_T(\ell \ell) = \met$, an excess of ev ents would be seen
197     in the ABCD method but not in the $P_T(\ell \ell)$ method.
198    
199 claudioc 1.4
200 claudioc 1.2 The LM points are benchmarks for SUSY analyses at CMS. The effects
201     of signal contaminations for a couple such points are summarized
202     in Table~\ref{tab:sigcontABCD} and~\ref{tab:sigcontPT}.
203     Signal contamination is definitely an important
204     effect for these two LM points, but it does not totally hide the
205     presence of the signal.
206 claudioc 1.1
207    
208 claudioc 1.2 \begin{table}[htb]
209     \begin{center}
210     \caption{\label{tab:sigcontABCD} Effects of signal contamination
211     for the background predictions of the ABCD method including LM0 or
212     LM1. Results
213     are normalized to 30 pb$^{-1}$.}
214     \begin{tabular}{|c||c|c||c|c|}
215     \hline
216     SM & LM0 & BG Prediction & LM1 & BG Prediction \\
217     Background & Contribution& Including LM0 & Contribution & Including LM1 \\ \hline
218     x & x & x & x & x \\
219     \hline
220     \end{tabular}
221     \end{center}
222     \end{table}
223    
224     \begin{table}[htb]
225     \begin{center}
226     \caption{\label{tab:sigcontPT} Effects of signal contamination
227     for the background predictions of the $P_T(\ell\ell)$ method including LM0 or
228     LM1. Results
229     are normalized to 30 pb$^{-1}$.}
230     \begin{tabular}{|c||c|c||c|c|}
231     \hline
232     SM & LM0 & BG Prediction & LM1 & BG Prediction \\
233     Background & Contribution& Including LM0 & Contribution & Including LM1 \\ \hline
234     x & x & x & x & x \\
235     \hline
236     \end{tabular}
237     \end{center}
238     \end{table}
239 claudioc 1.1