3,212 research outputs found

    Aspects of power corrections in hadron-hadron collisions

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    The program of understanding inverse-power law corrections to event shapes and energy flow observables in e+ e- annihilation to two jets and DIS (1+1) jets has been a significant success of QCD phenomenology over the last decade. The important extension of this program to similar observables in hadron collisions is not straightforward, being obscured by both conceptual and technical issues. In this paper we shed light on some of these issues by providing an estimate of power corrections to the inter-jet E_t flow distribution in hadron collisions using the techniques that were employed in the e+ e- annihilation and DIS cases.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, uses JHEP3.cl

    Angular ordering and parton showers for non-global QCD observables

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    We study the mismatch between a full calculation of non-global single-logarithms in the large-N_c limit and an approximation based on free azimuthal averaging, and the consequent angular-ordered pattern of soft gluon radiation in QCD. We compare the results obtained in either case to those obtained from the parton showers in the Monte Carlo event generators HERWIG and PYTHIA, with the aim of assessing the accuracy of the parton showers with regard to such observables where angular ordering is merely an approximation even at leading-logarithmic accuracy and which are commonly employed for the tuning of event generators to data.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure

    Dijet rates with symmetric E_t cuts

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    We consider dijet production in the region where symmetric cuts on the transverse energy, EtE_t, are applied to the jets. In this region next-to--leading order calculations are unreliable and an all-order resummation of soft gluon effects is needed, which we carry out. Although, for illustrative purposes, we choose dijets produced in deep inelastic scattering, our general ideas apply additionally to dijets produced in photoproduction or γγ\gamma \gamma processes and should be relevant also to the study of prompt di-photon EtE_t spectra in association with a recoiling jet, in hadron-hadron processesComment: 28 pages, 4 figure

    The aT distribution of the Z boson at hadron colliders

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    We provide the first theoretical study of a novel variable, aTa_T, proposed in Ref.[1] as a more accurate probe of the region of low transverse momentum pTp_T, for the ZZ boson pTp_T distribution at hadron colliders. The aTa_T is the component of pTp_T transverse to a suitably defined axis. Our study involves resummation of large logarithms in aTa_T up to the next-to--leading logarithmic accuracy and we compare the results to those for the well-known pTp_T distribution, identifying important physical differences between the two cases. We also test our resummed result at the two-loop level by comparing its expansion to order αs2\alpha_s^2 with the corresponding fixed-order results and find agreement with our expectations.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figures, JHEP class included. Final version published in JHE

    Azimuthal correlation in DIS

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    We introduce the azimuthal correlation for the deep inelastic scattering process. We present the QCD prediction to the level of next-to-leading log resummation, matching to the fixed order prediction. We also estimate the leading non-perturbative power correction. The observable is compared with the energy-energy correlation in e+e- annihilation, on which it is modelled. The effects of the resummation and of the leading power correction are both quite large. It would therefore be particularly instructive to study this observable experimentally.Comment: 33 pages, 4 figures, JHEP class included. One figure and some clarifications adde

    Resummation of non-global QCD observables

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    We discuss issues related to the resummation of non-global observables in QCD, those that are sensitive to radiation in only a part of phase space. Examples of such observables are certain single-hemisphere event shapes in e+e- and DIS. Compared to global observables (those sensitive to all emissions, e.g. the e+e- thrust) a new class of single-logarithmic terms arises. These have been neglected in recent calculations in the literature. For a whole set of single hemisphere e+e- and DIS event shapes, we analytically evaluate the first such term, at order alpha_s^2, and give numerical results for the resummation of these terms in the large-Nc limit.Comment: 10 page

    Composite Higgs at high transverse momentum

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    In this paper we explore composite Higgs scenarios through the effects of light top-partners in Higgs+Jet production at the LHC. The pseudo-Goldstone boson nature of the Higgs field means that single-Higgs production via gluon fusion is insensitive to the mass spectrum of the top-partners. However in associated production this is not the case, and new physics scales may be probed. In the course of the work we consider scenarios with both one and two light top-partner multiplets in the spectrum of composite states. In compliance with perturbativity and experimental constraints, we study corrections to the Higgs couplings and the effects that the light top-partner multiplets have on the transverse momentum spectrum of the Higgs. Interestingly, we find that the corrections to the Standard Model expectation depend strongly on the representation of the top-partners in the global symmetry

    Semi-numerical resummation of event shapes

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    For many event-shape observables, the most difficult part of a resummation in the Born limit is the analytical treatment of the observable's dependence on multiple emissions, which is required at single logarithmic accuracy. We present a general numerical method, suitable for a large class of event shapes, which allows the resummation specifically of these single logarithms. It is applied to the case of the thrust major and the oblateness, which have so far defied analytical resummation and to the two-jet rate in the Durham algorithm, for which only a subset of the single logs had up to now been calculated.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figures. Version 2 adds some clarifications, a reference, as well as corrections to the subleading fixed-order coefficients and to figures 4 and

    Non-global logarithms and jet algorithms in high-pT jet shapes

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    We consider jet-shape observables of the type proposed recently, where the shapes of one or more high-pT jets, produced in a multi-jet event with definite jet multiplicity, may be measured leaving other jets in the event unmeasured. We point out the structure of the full next-to-leading logarithmic resummation specifically including resummation of non-global logarithms in the leading-Nc limit and emphasising their properties. We also point out differences between jet algorithms in the context of soft gluon resummation for such observables.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures. Title and a few words changed. Several typos corrected. Version accepted by JHE

    Problems in resumming interjet energy flows with k_t clustering

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    We consider the energy flow into gaps between hard jets. It was previously believed that the accuracy of resummed predictions for such observables can be improved by employing the ktk_t clustering procedure to define the gap energy in terms of a sum of energies of soft jets (rather than individual hadrons) in the gap. This significantly reduces the sensitivity to correlated soft large-angle radiation (non-global leading logs), numerically calculable only in the large NcN_c limit. While this is the case, as we demonstrate here, the use of ktk_t clustering spoils the straightforward single-gluon Sudakov exponentiation that multiplies the non-global resummation. We carry out an O(αs2){\mathcal{O}}(\alpha_s^2) calculation of the leading single-logarithmic terms and identify the piece that is omitted by straightforward exponentiation. We compare our results with the full O(αs2){\mathcal{O}} (\alpha_s^2) result from the program EVENT2 to confirm our conclusions. For e+e2e^{+}e^{-} \to 2 jets and DIS (1+1) jets one can numerically resum these additional contributions as we show, but for dijet photoproduction and hadron-hadron processes further studies are needed.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
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