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CMS-SMP-16-018 ; CERN-EP-2017-328
Electroweak production of two jets in association with a Z boson in proton-proton collisions at $\sqrt{s}= $ 13 TeV
Eur. Phys. J. C 78 (2018) 589
Abstract: A measurement of the electroweak (EW) production of two jets in association with a Z boson in proton-proton collisions at $\sqrt{s} = $ 13 TeV is presented, based on data recorded in 2016 by the CMS experiment at the LHC corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 35.9 fb$^{-1}$. The measurement is performed in the $\ell\ell\mathrm{jj}$ final state with $\ell$ including electrons and muons, and the jets j corresponding to the quarks produced in the hard interaction. The measured cross section in a kinematic region defined by invariant masses $m_{\ell\ell} > $ 50 GeV, $m_{\mathrm{jj}} > $ 120 GeV, and transverse momenta $p_{\mathrm{T j}} > $ 25 GeV is $\sigma_\mathrm{EW}(\ell\ell\mathrm{jj})= $ 552 $\pm$ 19 (stat) $\pm$ 55 (syst) fb, in agreement with leading-order standard model predictions. The final state is also used to perform a search for anomalous trilinear gauge couplings. No evidence is found and limits on anomalous trilinear gauge couplings associated with dimension-six operators are given in the framework of an effective field theory. The corresponding 95% confidence level intervals are $-2.6 < c_{WWW}/\Lambda^2 < 2.6 $ TeV$^{-2}$ and $-8.4 < c_{W}/\Lambda^2 < 10.1 $ TeV$^{-2}$. The additional jet activity of events in a signal-enriched region is also studied, and the measurements are in agreement with predictions.
Figures & Tables Summary References CMS Publications
Figures

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Figure 1:
Representative Feynman diagrams for purely electroweak amplitudes for dilepton production in association with two jets: vector boson fusion (left), bremsstrahlung-like (center), and multiperipheral production (right).

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Figure 1-a:
Representative Feynman diagram for purely electroweak dilepton production in association with two jets: vector boson fusion.

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Figure 1-b:
Representative Feynman diagram for purely electroweak dilepton production in association with two jets: bremsstrahlung-like production.

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Figure 1-c:
Representative Feynman diagram for purely electroweak dilepton production in association with two jets: multiperipheral production.

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Figure 2:
Representative Feynman diagrams for order $\alpha _\mathrm {S}^2$ corrections to DY production that constitute the main background for the measurement.

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Figure 2-a:
Representative Feynman diagram for order $\alpha _\mathrm {S}^2$ correction to DY production that constitute the main background for the measurement.

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Figure 2-b:
Representative Feynman diagram for order $\alpha _\mathrm {S}^2$ correction to DY production that constitute the main background for the measurement.

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Figure 3:
Data and simulated event distributions for the dielectron event selection: $m_{\mathrm {jj}}$ (top left), $R({p_{\mathrm {T}}} ^{\,\text {hard}})$ (top right), and $z^*$ (bottom). The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panels show the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 3-a:
Data and simulated event $m_{\mathrm {jj}}$ distributions for the dielectron event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 3-b:
Data and simulated event $R({p_{\mathrm {T}}} ^{\,\text {hard}})$ distributions for the dielectron event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 3-c:
Data and simulated event $z^*$ distribution for the dielectrons event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 4:
Data and simulated event distributions for the dimuon event selection: $m_{\mathrm {jj}}$ (top left), $R({p_{\mathrm {T}}} ^{\,\text {hard}})$ (top right), and $z^*$ (bottom). The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panels show the relative difference between the data and expectations as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 4-a:
Data and simulated event $m_{\mathrm {jj}}$ distributions for the dimuon event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 4-b:
Data and simulated event $R({p_{\mathrm {T}}} ^{\,\text {hard}})$ distributions for the dimuon event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 4-c:
Data and simulated event $z^*$ distributions for the dimuon event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 5:
Data and simulated event distributions for the dielectron event selection: dijet system transverse momentum (top left), dijet pseudorapidity opening (top right), ${p_{\mathrm {T}}} $-leading jet QGL (bottom left), and ${p_{\mathrm {T}}} $-subleading jet QGL (bottom right). The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panels show the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 5-a:
Data and simulated event dijet system transverse momentum distributions for the dielectron event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 5-b:
Data and simulated event dijet pseudorapidity opening distributions for the dielectron event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 5-c:
Data and simulated event ${p_{\mathrm {T}}} $-leading jet QGL distributions for the dielectron event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 5-d:
Data and simulated event ${p_{\mathrm {T}}} $-subleading jet QGL distributions for the dielectron event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 6:
Data and simulated event distributions for the dimuon event selection: dijet system transverse momentum (top left), dijet pseudorapidity opening (top right), ${p_{\mathrm {T}}} $-leading jet QGL (bottom left), and ${p_{\mathrm {T}}} $-subleading jet QGL (bottom right). The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panels show the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 6-a:
Data and simulated event dijet system transverse momentum distributions for the dimuon event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 6-b:
Data and simulated event dijet system transverse momentum distributions for the dimuon event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 6-c:
Data and simulated event ${p_{\mathrm {T}}} $-leading jet QGL distributions for the dimuon event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 6-d:
Data and simulated event ${p_{\mathrm {T}}} $-subleading jet QGL distributions for the dimuon event selection. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 7:
Distributions for transformed BDT discriminants in dielectron (left) and dimuon (right) events. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panels show the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 7-a:
Distributions for transformed BDT discriminants in dielectron events. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 7-b:
Distributions for transformed BDT discriminants in dimuon events. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 8:
Distributions of $p_{\mathrm {T} {\mathrm {Z}}}$ in data and SM backgrounds, and various ATGC scenarios in the dielectron (left) and dimuon (right) channels.

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Figure 8-a:
Distributions of $p_{\mathrm {T} {\mathrm {Z}}}$ in data and SM backgrounds, and various ATGC scenarios in the dielectron channel.

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Figure 8-b:
Distributions of $p_{\mathrm {T} {\mathrm {Z}}}$ in data and SM backgrounds, and various ATGC scenarios in the dimuon channel.

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Figure 9:
Two-dimensional observed 95% CL limits (continuous black line) and expected 68%, 95%, and 99% CL limits on anomalous coupling parameters.

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Figure 9-a:
Two-dimensional observed 95% CL limits (continuous black line) and expected 68%, 95%, and 99% CL limits on anomalous coupling parameters.

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Figure 9-b:
Two-dimensional observed 95% CL limits (continuous black line) and expected 68%, 95%, and 99% CL limits on anomalous coupling parameters.

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Figure 10:
Transverse momentum of the third highest ${p_{\mathrm {T}}}$ jet (top row), and $ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ of all additional jets (bottom row) within the pseudorapidity interval of the two tagging jets in dielectron (left) and dimuon (right) events with BDT $>$ 0.92. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panels show the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties. In all distributions the first bin contains events where no additional jet with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 15 GeV is present.

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Figure 10-a:
Transverse momentum of the third highest ${p_{\mathrm {T}}}$ jet within the pseudorapidity interval of the two tagging jets in dielectron events with BDT $>$ 0.92. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties. In all distributions the first bin contains events where no additional jet with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 15 GeV is present.

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Figure 10-b:
Transverse momentum of the third highest ${p_{\mathrm {T}}}$ jet within the pseudorapidity interval of the two tagging jets in dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties. In all distributions the first bin contains events where no additional jet with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 15 GeV is present.

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Figure 10-c:
$ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ of all additional jets within the pseudorapidity interval of the two tagging jets in dielectron events with BDT $>$ 0.92. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties. In all distributions the first bin contains events where no additional jet with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 15 GeV is present.

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Figure 10-d:
$ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ of all additional jets within the pseudorapidity interval of the two tagging jets in dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties. In all distributions the first bin contains events where no additional jet with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 15 GeV is present.

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Figure 11:
$ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ of additional soft track-jets with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 1 GeV in dielectron (left) and dimuon (right) events with BDT $>$ 0.92. Data are compared to MC expectations with the PYTHIA PS model (top row), or the HERWIG++ PS model (bottom row). The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panels show the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 11-a:
$ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ of additional soft track-jets with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 1 GeV in dielectron events with BDT $>$ 0.92. Data are compared to MC expectations with the PYTHIA PS model. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 11-b:
$ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ of additional soft track-jets with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 1 GeV in dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92. Data are compared to MC expectations with the PYTHIA PS model. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 11-c:
$ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ of additional soft track-jets with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 1 GeV in dielectron events with BDT $>$ 0.92. Data are compared to MC expectations with the HERWIG++ PS model. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 11-d:
$ {H_{\mathrm {T}}} $ of additional soft track-jets with $ {p_{\mathrm {T}}} > $ 1 GeV in dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92. Data are compared to MC expectations with the HERWIG++ PS model. The contributions from the different background sources and the signal are shown stacked, with data points superimposed. The expected signal-only contribution is also shown as an unfilled histogram. The lower panel shows the relative difference between the data and expectations, as well as the uncertainty envelopes for JES and $\mu _{\rm F,R}$ scale uncertainties.

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Figure 12:
Efficiency of a gap activity veto in dielectron and dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92, as a function of the additional jet ${p_{\mathrm {T}}}$ (left), and of the total ${H_{\mathrm {T}}}$ of additional jets (right). Data points are compared to MC expectations with only DY events, including signal with the PYTHIA PS model, or the HERWIG++ PS model. The bands represent the MC statistical uncertainty.

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Figure 12-a:
Efficiency of a gap activity veto in dielectron and dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92, as a function of the additional jet ${p_{\mathrm {T}}}$. Data points are compared to MC expectations with only DY events, including signal with the PYTHIA PS model, or the HERWIG++ PS model. The bands represent the MC statistical uncertainty.

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Figure 12-b:
Efficiency of a gap activity veto in dielectron and dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92, as a function of the total ${H_{\mathrm {T}}}$ of additional jets. Data points are compared to MC expectations with only DY events, including signal with the PYTHIA PS model, or the HERWIG++ PS model. The bands represent the MC statistical uncertainty.

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Figure 13:
Efficiency of a gap activity veto in dielectron and dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92, as a function of the leading soft track-jet ${p_{\mathrm {T}}}$ (left), and of the total soft ${H_{\mathrm {T}}}$ (right). Data points are compared to MC expectations with only DY events, including signal with the PYTHIA PS model, or the HERWIG++ PS model. The bands represent the MC statistical uncertainty.

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Figure 13-a:
Efficiency of a gap activity veto in dielectron and dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92, as a function of the leading soft track-jet ${p_{\mathrm {T}}}$. Data points are compared to MC expectations with only DY events, including signal with the PYTHIA PS model, or the HERWIG++ PS model. The bands represent the MC statistical uncertainty.

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Figure 13-b:
Efficiency of a gap activity veto in dielectron and dimuon events with BDT $>$ 0.92, as a function of the total soft ${H_{\mathrm {T}}}$. Data points are compared to MC expectations with only DY events, including signal with the PYTHIA PS model, or the HERWIG++ PS model. The bands represent the MC statistical uncertainty.
Tables

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Table 1:
Event yields expected for background and signal processes using the initial selections and with a cut on the multivariate analysis output (BDT) that provides signal $\approx $ background. The yields are compared to the data observed in the different channels and categories. The total uncertainties quoted for signal, DY Zjj, dibosons, and processes with top quarks (${\mathrm {t}\overline {\mathrm {t}}}$ and single top quarks) include relevant systematic uncertainties.

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Table 2:
One-dimensional limits on the ATGC EFT parameters at 95% CL.

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Table 3:
One-dimensional limits on the ATGC effective Lagrangian (LEP parametrization) parameters at 95% CL.
Summary
The cross section for the electroweak (EW) production of a Z boson in association with two jets in the ${\ell\ell\mathrm{jj}} $ final state is measured in proton-proton collisions at $\sqrt{s} = $ 13 TeV in the kinematic region defined by $m_{\ell\ell} > $ 50 GeV, $m_{\mathrm{jj}} > $ 120 GeV, and transverse momenta $p_\mathrm{T j} > $ 25 GeV. The result
$ \sigma({\mathrm{EW}~\ell\ell\mathrm{jj}})= $ 552 $\pm$ 19 (stat) $\pm$ 55 (syst) fb,

agrees with the standard model prediction. This is the first observation of the EW Zjj production in proton-proton collisions at $\sqrt{s}= $ 13 TeV.

The increased cross section and integrated luminosity recorded at 13 TeV, as well as the more precise NLO modelling of background processes, have led to a more precise measurement of the EW Zjj process, relative to earlier results, where the relative precision was approximately 20% [11].

No evidence for anomalous trilinear gauge couplings is found. The following one-dimensional limits at 95% CL are obtained: $-2.6 < c_{WWW}/\Lambda^2 < 2.6 $ TeV$^{-2}$ and $-8.4 < c_{W}/\Lambda^2 < 10.1 $ TeV$^{-2}$. These results provide the most stringent constraints on $c_{WWW}$ to date.

In events from a signal-enriched region, the additional hadron activity is also studied, as well as the efficiencies for a gap-activity veto, and generally good agreement is found between data and quantum chromodynamics predictions with either the PYTHIA or HERWIG++ parton shower and hadronization model.
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Compact Muon Solenoid
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