This paper presents a fast approach to simulating muons produced in interactions of the SPS proton beams with the target of the SHiP experiment. The SHiP experiment will be able to search for new long-lived particles produced in a 400 GeV/c SPS proton beam dump and which travel distances between fifty metres and tens of kilometers. The SHiP detector needs to operate under ultra-low background conditions and requires large simulated samples of muon induced background processes. Through the use of Generative Adversarial Networks it is possible to emulate the simulation of the interaction of 400GeV/c proton beams with the SHiP target, an otherwise computationally intensive process. For the simulation requirements of the SHiP experiment, genera...
Greater luminosities of future Large Hadron Collider runs will demand an unprecedented number of eve...
The SHiP experiment is proposed to search for very weakly interacting particles beyond the Standard ...
The SHiP experiment will search for very weakly interacting particles beyond the Standard Model whic...
This paper presents a fast approach to simulating muons produced in interactions of the SPS proton b...
The SHiP experiment is a proposed fixed target experiment at the CERN SPS to search for new particle...
Greater luminosities of future Large Hadron Collider runs will demand an unprecedented number of eve...
The SHiP experiment is proposed to search for very weakly interacting particles beyond the Standard ...
The SHiP experiment will search for very weakly interacting particles beyond the Standard Model whic...
This paper presents a fast approach to simulating muons produced in interactions of the SPS proton b...
The SHiP experiment is a proposed fixed target experiment at the CERN SPS to search for new particle...
Greater luminosities of future Large Hadron Collider runs will demand an unprecedented number of eve...
The SHiP experiment is proposed to search for very weakly interacting particles beyond the Standard ...
The SHiP experiment will search for very weakly interacting particles beyond the Standard Model whic...