Difference between revisions of "Rivet"

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(Add link to ATLAS-internal Rivet instructions)
 
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The '''Rivet''' software<ref>Andy Buckley, Jonathan Butterworth, David Grellscheid, Hendrik Hoeth, Leif Lönnblad, James Monk, Holger Schulz, Frank Siegert: ''Rivet user manual'', [https://arxiv.org/abs/1003.0694 arXiv:1003.0694], ([https://inspirehep.net/record/847552 inSPIRE:847552])</ref> (''Robust Independent Validation of Experiment and Theory'') is a system for validation of Monte Carlo (MC) [[Event generator|event generators]] and comparing theoretical predictions to each other and to experimental data. It provides a set of experimental analyses useful for MC generator development, validation, and [[tuning]], as well as infrastructure for users to write their own analyses. The analyses apply [[fiducial]] requirements to the input events.
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[[Category:Theory software]]
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[[Category:Experiment software]]
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The '''Rivet''' software<ref>Andy Buckley, Jonathan Butterworth, David Grellscheid, Hendrik Hoeth, Leif Lönnblad, James Monk, Holger Schulz, Frank Siegert: ''Rivet user manual'', [https://arxiv.org/abs/1003.0694 arXiv:1003.0694], ([https://inspirehep.net/record/847552 inSPIRE:847552])</ref> (''Robust Independent Validation of Experiment and Theory'') is a system for validation of Monte Carlo (MC) [[Event generator|event generators]] and comparing theoretical predictions to each other and to experimental data. It provides a set of experimental analyses useful for MC generator development, validation, and [[tuning]], as well as infrastructure for users to write their own analyses. The analyses apply [[fiducial]] requirements (typically at [[particle level]]) to the input events.
  
 
Rivet is a widespread way by which analysis code from the [[LHC]] and other high-energy collider experiments is preserved for comparison to and development of theory models. It is used by phenomenologists, MC generator developers, and experimentalists on the LHC and other facilities.
 
Rivet is a widespread way by which analysis code from the [[LHC]] and other high-energy collider experiments is preserved for comparison to and development of theory models. It is used by phenomenologists, MC generator developers, and experimentalists on the LHC and other facilities.
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== Learn more ==
 
== Learn more ==
  
[http://rivet.hepforge.org Rivet homepage]
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* [http://rivet.hepforge.org Rivet homepage]
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* [https://twiki.cern.ch/twiki/bin/view/AtlasProtected/RivetForAtlas Rivet instructions for ATLAS], using the ATLAS software framework ([[ATLAS]]-internal)

Latest revision as of 13:21, 1 August 2017

The Rivet software[1] (Robust Independent Validation of Experiment and Theory) is a system for validation of Monte Carlo (MC) event generators and comparing theoretical predictions to each other and to experimental data. It provides a set of experimental analyses useful for MC generator development, validation, and tuning, as well as infrastructure for users to write their own analyses. The analyses apply fiducial requirements (typically at particle level) to the input events.

Rivet is a widespread way by which analysis code from the LHC and other high-energy collider experiments is preserved for comparison to and development of theory models. It is used by phenomenologists, MC generator developers, and experimentalists on the LHC and other facilities.

References

  1. Andy Buckley, Jonathan Butterworth, David Grellscheid, Hendrik Hoeth, Leif Lönnblad, James Monk, Holger Schulz, Frank Siegert: Rivet user manual, arXiv:1003.0694, (inSPIRE:847552)

Learn more