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Sangeun Lee

Researcher at ETH Zurich

Publications -  204
Citations -  14798

Sangeun Lee is an academic researcher from ETH Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Large Hadron Collider & Higgs boson. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 192 publications receiving 13253 citations. Previous affiliations of Sangeun Lee include CERN & Gangneung–Wonju National University.

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The ATLAS Simulation Infrastructure

Georges Aad, +2585 more
TL;DR: The simulation software for the ATLAS Experiment at the Large Hadron Collider is being used for large-scale production of events on the LHC Computing Grid, including supporting the detector description, interfacing the event generation, and combining the GEANT4 simulation of the response of the individual detectors.
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The ALICE experiment at the CERN LHC

K. Aamodt, +1154 more
TL;DR: The Large Ion Collider Experiment (ALICE) as discussed by the authors is a general-purpose, heavy-ion detector at the CERN LHC which focuses on QCD, the strong-interaction sector of the Standard Model.
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Observation of the diphoton decay of the Higgs boson and measurement of its properties

Vardan Khachatryan, +2126 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the diphoton decay mode of the recently discovered Higgs boson and measurement of some of its properties are reported using the entire dataset collected by the CMS experiment in proton-proton collisions during the 2011 and 2012 LHC running periods.
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Performance of the ATLAS Trigger System in 2010

Georges Aad, +5595 more
TL;DR: The ATLAS trigger system as discussed by the authors selects events by rapidly identifying signatures of muon, electron, photon, tau lepton, jet, and B meson candidates, as well as using global event signatures, such as missing transverse energy.
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Measurement of the muon reconstruction performance of the ATLAS detector using 2011 and 2012 LHC proton-proton collision data

Georges Aad, +2873 more
TL;DR: The performance of the ATLAS muon reconstruction during the LHC run withpp collisions at s=7–8 TeV in 2011–2012 is presented, focusing mainly on data collected in 2012.