4.7 Article

Finding an upper limit in the presence of an unknown background

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 66, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.66.032005

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Experimenters report an upper limit if the signal they are trying to detect is nonexistent or below their experiment's sensitivity. Such experiments may be contaminated with a background too poorly understood to subtract. If the background is distributed differently in some parameter from the expected signal, it is possible to take advantage of this difference to get a stronger limit than would be possible if the difference in distribution were ignored. We discuss the maximum gap method, which finds the best gap between events for setting an upper limit, and generalize to the optimum interval method, which uses intervals with especially few events. These methods, which apply to the case of relatively small backgrounds, do not use binning, are relatively insensitive to cuts on the range of the parameter, are parameter independent (i.e., do not change when a one-one change of variables is made), and provide true, though possibly conservative, classical one-sided confidence intervals.

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