scispace - formally typeset
E

Edward Scott

Researcher at Imperial College London

Publications -  1004
Citations -  35729

Edward Scott is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Large Hadron Collider & Chondrite. The author has an hindex of 87, co-authored 868 publications receiving 29444 citations. Previous affiliations of Edward Scott include Northeastern University & University of Hawaii.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Particle-flow reconstruction and global event description with the CMS detector

Albert M. Sirunyan, +2215 more
TL;DR: A fully-fledged particle-flow reconstruction algorithm tuned to the CMS detector was developed and has been consistently used in physics analyses for the first time at a hadron collider as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of heavy-flavour jets with the CMS detector in pp collisions at 13 TeV

Albert M. Sirunyan, +2241 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the discriminating variables and the algorithms used for heavy-flavour jet identification during the first years of operation of the CMS experiment in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV, are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Combined measurements of Higgs boson couplings in proton–proton collisions at √s=13Te

Albert M. Sirunyan, +2268 more
TL;DR: Combined measurements of the production and decay rates of the Higgs boson, as well as its couplings to vector bosons and fermions, are presented and constraints are placed on various two Higgs doublet models.
Journal ArticleDOI

CMS Collaboration : XXVIIth International Conference on Ultrarelativistic Nucleus–NucleusCollisions (Quark Matter 2018)

Albert M. Sirunyan, +2271 more
- 01 Jan 2019 - 
Book

Chondrules and the Protoplanetary Disk

TL;DR: Forster et al. as mentioned in this paper have identified a few rare pristine chondrites that largely escaped heating and alteration in asteroids, which have matrices composed of submicrometer-sized grains of enstatite and forsterite and amorphous silicates.