Uncertainties
Statistics
5. Proportion of quarks and leptons
When studying a small number of events, the statistical uncertainty
can be very large. The statistical uncertainty in Ni observations is
squareroot(Ni). The relative uncertainty is
squareroot(Ni)/Ni that is
1/squareroot(Ni). The relative
uncertainty decreases with increasing number of events one
observes. That is why it is interesting to study a large number of
events. Use this relation to determine the uncertainty of the
determined quantities. Regard the total number of events as fixed,
that is having no uncertainty.
6. In the case that the total number of events is fixed and there are
only two possible outcomes (like either lepton event or quark event),
then the uncertainty is estimated somewhat differently. If:
- The total number of events is N,
- the number of events of type i is Ni ,
- the proportion of type i is pi = Ni/N,
then the uncertainty (standard deviation) in number of events Ni
becomes squareroot(Ni(1-pi)).
7. Ratio R = N3jets/N2 jets
Both N3jets and N2jets have uncertainties. These have to be combined
to get the uncertainty of the ratio. The relative uncertainty in the
jet ratio is the square root of 1/N3jets plus 1/N2 jets, or more
mathematically: squareroot(R)/R = squareroot( 1/N3jets + 1/N2 jets ).