3 research outputs found

    Resolving Boosted Jets with XCone

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    We show how the recently proposed XCone jet algorithm smoothly interpolates between resolved and boosted kinematics. When using standard jet algorithms to reconstruct the decays of hadronic resonances like top quarks and Higgs bosons, one typically needs separate analysis strategies to handle the resolved regime of well-separated jets and the boosted regime of fat jets with substructure. XCone, by contrast, is an exclusive cone jet algorithm that always returns a fixed number of jets, so jet regions remain resolved even when (sub)jets are overlapping in the boosted regime. In this paper, we perform three LHC case studies---dijet resonances, Higgs decays to bottom quarks, and all-hadronic top pairs---that demonstrate the physics applications of XCone over a wide kinematic range.Comment: 36 pages, 25 figures, 1 table; v2: references added; v3: discussion added and new appendix B to match JHEP versio

    XCone: N-jettiness as an exclusive cone jet algorithm

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    We introduce a new jet algorithm called XCone, for eXclusive Cone, which is based on minimizing the event shape N -jettiness. Because N -jettiness partitions every event into N jet regions and a beam region, XCone is an exclusive jet algorithm that always returns a fixed number of jets. We use a new “conical geometric” measure for which well-separated jets are bounded by circles of radius R in the rapidity-azimuth plane, while overlapping jet regions automatically form nearest-neighbor “clover jets”. This avoids the split/merge criteria needed in inclusive cone algorithms. A key feature of XCone is that it smoothly transitions between the resolved regime where the N signal jets of interest are well separated and the boosted regime where they overlap. The returned value of N -jettiness also provides a quality criterion of how N -jet-like the event looks. We also discuss the N -jettiness factorization theorems that occur for various jet measures, which can be used to compute the associated exclusive N -jet cross sections. In a companion paper [1], the physics potential of XCone is demonstrated using the examples of dijet resonances, Higgs decays to bottom quarks, and all-hadronic top pairs.United States. Department of Energy (Offices of Nuclear and Particle Physics Contracts DE-SC00012567 and DE-SC0011090)Simons Foundation (Investigator grant 327942)United States. Department of Energy (Early Career research program DE-SC0006389)Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (Sloan Research Fellowship)Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (Paul E. Gray Endowed Fund
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