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This Ph.D. thesis is a search for physics beyond the standard model
(SM) of particle physics, which successfully describes the
interactions and properties of all known elementary particles.
However, no particle exists in the SM that can account for the dark
matter, which makes up about one quarter of the energy-mass content
of the universe. Understanding the nature of dark matter is one
goal of the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The extension of the
SM with supersymmetry (SUSY) is considered a promising
possibilities to explain dark matter. The nominated thesis
describes a search for SUSY using data collected by the CMS
experiment at the LHC. It utilizes a final state consisting of a
photon, a lepton, and a large momentum imbalance probing a class of
SUSY models that has not yet been studied extensively. The thesis
stands out not only due to its content that is explained with
clarity but also because the author performed more or less all
aspects of the thesis analysis by himself, from data skimming to
limit calculations, which is extremely rare, especially nowadays in
the large LHC collaborations.
This Ph.D. thesis is a search for physics beyond the standard model
(SM) of particle physics, which successfully describes the
interactions and properties of all known elementary particles.
However, no particle exists in the SM that can account for the dark
matter, which makes up about one quarter of the energy-mass content
of the universe. Understanding the nature of dark matter is one
goal of the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The extension of the
SM with supersymmetry (SUSY) is considered a promising
possibilities to explain dark matter. The nominated thesis
describes a search for SUSY using data collected by the CMS
experiment at the LHC. It utilizes a final state consisting of a
photon, a lepton, and a large momentum imbalance probing a class of
SUSY models that has not yet been studied extensively. The thesis
stands out not only due to its content that is explained with
clarity but also because the author performed more or less all
aspects of the thesis analysis by himself, from data skimming to
limit calculations, which is extremely rare, especially nowadays in
the large LHC collaborations.
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