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Novel tools and observables for jet physics in heavy-ion collisions

Studies of fully-reconstructed jets in heavy-ion collisions aim at extracting thermodynamical and transport properties of hot and dense QCD matter. Recently, a plethora of new jet substructure observables have been theoretically and experimentally developed that provide novel precise insights on the...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Andrews, Harry Arthur, d'Enterria, David, Apolinario, Liliana, Bertens, Redmer Alexander, Bierlich, Christian, Cacciari, Matteo, Chen, Yi, Chien, Yang-Ting, Mendez, Leticia Cunqueiro, Deak, Michal, Dominguez, Fabio, Harris, Philip Coleman, Kutak, Krzysztof, Lee, Yen-Jie, Mehtar-Tani, Yacine, Mulligan, James, Nguyen, Matthew, Ning-Bo, Chang, Perepelitsa, Dennis, Salam, Gavin, Spousta, Martin, Milhano, José Guilherme, Tywoniuk, Konrad, Van Leeuwen, Marco, Verweij, Marta, Vila, Victor, Wiedemann, Urs A., Zapp, Korinna C.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6471/ab7cbc
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2634233
Descripción
Sumario:Studies of fully-reconstructed jets in heavy-ion collisions aim at extracting thermodynamical and transport properties of hot and dense QCD matter. Recently, a plethora of new jet substructure observables have been theoretically and experimentally developed that provide novel precise insights on the modifications of the parton radiation pattern induced by a QCD medium. This report, summarizing the main lines of discussion at the 5th Heavy Ion Jet Workshop and CERN TH institute ‘Novel tools and observables for jet physics in heavy-ion collisions’ in 2017, presents a first attempt at outlining a strategy for isolating and identifying the relevant physical processes that are responsible for the observed medium-induced jet modifications. These studies combine theory insights, based on the Lund parton splitting map, with sophisticated jet reconstruction techniques, including grooming and background subtraction algorithms.