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Calculating the primary Lund Jet Plane density
The Lund-jet plane has recently been proposed as a powerful jet substructure tool with a broad range of applications. In this paper, we provide an all-order single logarithmic calculation of the primary Lund-plane density in Quantum Chromodynamics, including contributions from the running of the cou...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/JHEP10(2020)170 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2800195 |
_version_ | 1780972615955906560 |
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author | Lifson, Andrew Salam, Gavin P. Soyez, Gregory |
author_facet | Lifson, Andrew Salam, Gavin P. Soyez, Gregory |
author_sort | Lifson, Andrew |
collection | CERN |
description | The Lund-jet plane has recently been proposed as a powerful jet substructure tool with a broad range of applications. In this paper, we provide an all-order single logarithmic calculation of the primary Lund-plane density in Quantum Chromodynamics, including contributions from the running of the coupling, collinear effects for the leading parton, and soft logarithms that account for large-angle and clustering effects. We also identify a new source of clustering logarithms close to the boundary of the jet, deferring their resummation to future work. We then match our all-order results to exact next-to-leading order predictions. For phenomenological applications, we supplement our perturbative calculation with a Monte Carlo estimate of non-perturbative corrections. The precision of our final predictions for the Lund-plane density is 5−7% at high transverse momenta, worsening to about 20% at the lower edge of the perturbative region, corresponding to transverse momenta of about 5 GeV. We compare our results to a recent measurement by the ATLAS collaboration at the Large-Hadron Collider, revealing good agreement across the perturbative domain, i.e. down to about 5 GeV. |
id | cern-2800195 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2020 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-28001952023-10-04T08:14:47Zdoi:10.1007/JHEP10(2020)170http://cds.cern.ch/record/2800195engLifson, AndrewSalam, Gavin P.Soyez, GregoryCalculating the primary Lund Jet Plane densityhep-phhep-exParticle Physics - PhenomenologyParticle Physics - ExperimentParticle Physics - PhenomenologyParticle Physics - ExperimentThe Lund-jet plane has recently been proposed as a powerful jet substructure tool with a broad range of applications. In this paper, we provide an all-order single logarithmic calculation of the primary Lund-plane density in Quantum Chromodynamics, including contributions from the running of the coupling, collinear effects for the leading parton, and soft logarithms that account for large-angle and clustering effects. We also identify a new source of clustering logarithms close to the boundary of the jet, deferring their resummation to future work. We then match our all-order results to exact next-to-leading order predictions. For phenomenological applications, we supplement our perturbative calculation with a Monte Carlo estimate of non-perturbative corrections. The precision of our final predictions for the Lund-plane density is 5−7% at high transverse momenta, worsening to about 20% at the lower edge of the perturbative region, corresponding to transverse momenta of about 5 GeV. We compare our results to a recent measurement by the ATLAS collaboration at the Large-Hadron Collider, revealing good agreement across the perturbative domain, i.e. down to about 5 GeV.The Lund-jet plane has recently been proposed as a powerful jet substructure tool with a broad range of applications. In this paper, we provide an all-order single logarithmic calculation of the primary Lund-plane density in Quantum Chromodynamics, including contributions from the running of the coupling, collinear effects for the leading parton, and soft logarithms that account for large-angle and clustering effects. We also identify a new source of clustering logarithms close to the boundary of the jet, deferring their resummation to future work. We then match our all-order results to exact next-to-leading order predictions. For phenomenological applications, we supplement our perturbative calculation with a Monte Carlo estimate of non-perturbative corrections. The precision of our final predictions for the Lund-plane density is 5-7% at high transverse momenta, worsening to about 20% at the lower edge of the perturbative region, corresponding to transverse momenta of about 5 GeV. We compare our results to a recent measurement by the ATLAS collaboration at the Large-Hadron Collider, revealing good agreement across the perturbative domain, i.e. down to about 5 GeV.arXiv:2007.06578oai:cds.cern.ch:28001952020-07-13 |
spellingShingle | hep-ph hep-ex Particle Physics - Phenomenology Particle Physics - Experiment Particle Physics - Phenomenology Particle Physics - Experiment Lifson, Andrew Salam, Gavin P. Soyez, Gregory Calculating the primary Lund Jet Plane density |
title | Calculating the primary Lund Jet Plane density |
title_full | Calculating the primary Lund Jet Plane density |
title_fullStr | Calculating the primary Lund Jet Plane density |
title_full_unstemmed | Calculating the primary Lund Jet Plane density |
title_short | Calculating the primary Lund Jet Plane density |
title_sort | calculating the primary lund jet plane density |
topic | hep-ph hep-ex Particle Physics - Phenomenology Particle Physics - Experiment Particle Physics - Phenomenology Particle Physics - Experiment |
url | https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/JHEP10(2020)170 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2800195 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT lifsonandrew calculatingtheprimarylundjetplanedensity AT salamgavinp calculatingtheprimarylundjetplanedensity AT soyezgregory calculatingtheprimarylundjetplanedensity |