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P. Sutcliffe

Researcher at University of Liverpool

Publications -  58
Citations -  13354

P. Sutcliffe is an academic researcher from University of Liverpool. The author has contributed to research in topics: Large Hadron Collider & Detector. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 56 publications receiving 12486 citations. Previous affiliations of P. Sutcliffe include University of Bergen.

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The ATLAS Experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider

Georges Aad, +3032 more
TL;DR: The ATLAS detector as installed in its experimental cavern at point 1 at CERN is described in this paper, where a brief overview of the expected performance of the detector when the Large Hadron Collider begins operation is also presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

The LHCb detector at the LHC

A. A. Alves, +889 more
TL;DR: The LHCb experiment is dedicated to precision measurements of CP violation and rare decays of B hadrons at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN (Geneva).
Journal ArticleDOI

Indication of Electron Neutrino Appearance from an Accelerator-produced Off-axis Muon Neutrino Beam

K. Abe, +416 more
TL;DR: The T2K experiment observes indications of ν (μ) → ν(e) appearance in data accumulated with 1.43×10(20) protons on target, and under this hypothesis, the probability to observe six or more candidate events is 7×10(-3), equivalent to 2.5σ significance.
ReportDOI

ATLAS detector and physics performance : Technical Design Report, 1

A. Airapetian, +1809 more
Journal ArticleDOI

Design concepts for the Cherenkov Telescope Array CTA: An advanced facility for ground-based high-energy gamma-ray astronomy

Marcos Daniel Actis, +685 more
TL;DR: The ground-based gamma-ray astronomy has had a major breakthrough with the impressive results obtained using systems of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes as mentioned in this paper, which is an international initiative to build the next generation instrument, with a factor of 5-10 improvement in sensitivity in the 100 GeV-10 TeV range and the extension to energies well below 100GeV and above 100 TeV.