Transverse mass

The transverse mass is a useful quantity to define for use in particle physics as it is invariant under Lorentz boost along the z direction. In natural units it is:

m_{T}^2 = m^2 + p_{x}^2 + p_{y}^2 \,
where the z-direction is along the beam pipe and so
p_x and p_y are the momentum perpendicular to the beam pipe and
m is the (invariant) mass.

Hadron collider physicists use another definition of transverse mass, in the case of a decay into two particles. This is often used when one particle cannot be detected directly but is only indicated by missing transverse energy. In that case, the total energy is unknown and the above definition cannot be used.

M_{T}^2 = (E_{T, 1} + E_{T, 2})^2 - (\overrightarrow{p}_{T, 1} + \overrightarrow{p}_{T, 2})^2
where E_{T} is the transverse energy of each daughter, a positive quantity defined using its true invariant mass m as:
E_{T}^2 = m^2 + (\overrightarrow{p}_{T})^2

So equivalently,

M_{T}^2 = m_1^2 + m_2^2 + 2 \left(E_{T, 1}  E_{T, 2}  - \overrightarrow{p}_{T, 1} \cdot \overrightarrow{p}_{T, 2} \right)

For massless daughters, where m_1 = m_2 = 0, the transverse energy simplifies to E_{T} = | \overrightarrow{p}_T |, and the transverse mass becomes

M_{T}^2 \rightarrow 2 E_{T, 1}  E_{T, 2} \left( 1 - \cos \phi \right)
where \phi is the angle between the daughters in the transverse plane:

A distribution of M_T has an end-point at the true mother mass: M_T \leq M. This has been used to determine the W mass at the Tevatron.

References