The Max Planck Institute for Physics in Munich is one of the world’s leading research institutions for particle physics. Here, scientists study the smallest building blocks of matter and how they interact. Theory and experiment work hand in hand. The physicists at the Institute develop and test theoretical models as the basis for experiments with the aim of solving the mysteries of the universe: for example, what dark matter consists of and why antimatter no longer exists.
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MPP-2022-152Measurement of the polarisation of $W$ bosons produced in top-quark decays using di-lepton events at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV with the ATLAS experiment, The ATLAS collaboration, ATLAS-CONF-2022-063, (External full text link).
[ATLAS], [Article] MPP-2022-151Search for dark photons from Higgs boson decays via $ZH$ production with a photon plus missing transverse momentum signature from $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}=13$ TeV with the ATLAS detector, The ATLAS collaboration, ATLAS-CONF-2022-064, (External full text link).
[ATLAS], [Article] MPP-2022-150Inclusive-photon production and its dependence on photon isolation in $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt s=13$ TeV} using 139 fb$^{-1}$ of ATLAS data, The ATLAS collaboration, ATLAS-CONF-2022-065, (External full text link).
[ATLAS], [Article]