This program belongs to the program package VBFNLO and can calculate
input parameters needed for anomalous gauge boson coupling studies
with VBFNLO.
As especially the pure operators for anomalous quartic gauge boson
couplings lead to a violation of tree-level unitarity within the energy
range of the LHC, special care has to be taken to avoid this unphysical
behaviour. Within VBFNLO we have opted for the use of a dipole form factor and
this tool can calculate the maximal form factor scale Lambda_FF which is allowed
for a given input of coupling parameters, assuming the form factor shape
$$FF = \frac{1}{( 1 + \frac{s}{\Lambda_{FF}^2} )^{FFexp}}$$
The form factor is determined by calculating on-shell VV scattering and computing the zeroth partial wave of the amplitude. As unitarity criterion the absolute value of the real part of the zeroth partial wave has to be below 0.5 [1].
Each channel in VV → VV scattering (with V = W / Z / gamma) is checked individually, additionally channels with the same electrical charge Q of the VV system are combined [4] (their definition of the partial wave expansion differs from ours by a factor of 2).
For more details please refer to
at http://www.itp.kit.edu/diplomatheses.de.shtml .
The full list of operators with anomalous gauge boson couplings which is implemented in VBFNLO and probed here can be found in the manual of VBFNLO version 2.7 located here .
Further reading on tree-level unitarity with anomalous couplings:
The current release v1.4.0:
Older versions:
The following compilers have been tested and compile this tool properly: gfortran (default), g77, ifort. If you want to switch the compiler, uncomment the appropriate lines in the makefile.
By running “./batchrun” all operators can be checked sequentially with a given coupling strength. Issuing the command without arguments displays a short manual.
In the file “run/input.dat” the following parameters can be set:
The program calculates the energy at which tree-level unitarity would be violated without a form factor and the form factor scale that ensures tree-level unitarity up to the given energy. The form factor scales are also written out to the file “run/ff_output.dat”.
The form factor scales are determined in three ways:
Version 1.4.0:
Version 1.3.0:
Version 1.2.1:
Version 1.2.0:
Version 1.1.0 beta:
Version 1.0.0: