50,593 research outputs found

    Quark-Antiquark-Gluon Jets in DIS Diffractive Dissociation

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    We study the diffractive production of qqˉgq\bar{q}g jets with large transverse momenta in the region of large diffractive masses (small β\beta). Cross sections for transverse and longitudinal photons are obtained in the leading log 1/x_{\fP} and log 1/β1/\beta approximation, keeping all powers in log kt2/Q2k_t^2/Q^2. We perform a numerical study and illustrate the angular distribution of the three jets. We also estimate the integrated diffractive three jet cross section and compare with the dijet cross section obtained before.Comment: 28 pages (Latex), 20 figures (Postscript

    A kT-dependent sea-quark density for the CASCADE Monte Carlo event generator

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    Parton-shower event generators that go beyond the collinear-ordering approximation at small x have so far included only gluon and valence quark channels at transverse momentum dependent level. We describe results of recent work to include effects of the sea-quark distribution with explicit dependence on the transverse quark-momentum.This sea-quark density is then applied to the description of forward Z -production. The qq*->Z matrix element (with one off-shell quark) is calculated in an explicit gauge invariant way, making use of high energy factorization. The kT-factorized result has been implemented into the CCFM Monte-Carlo CASCADE and a numerical comparison with the qg*->Zq matrix element has been carried out.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, based on a talk given at the XXI Workshop on Deep-Inelastic Scattering and Related Subjects, 11-15 April, Newport News, Virginia (2011

    Canonically Transformed Detectors Applied to the Classical Inverse Scattering Problem

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    The concept of measurement in classical scattering is interpreted as an overlap of a particle packet with some area in phase space that describes the detector. Considering that usually we record the passage of particles at some point in space, a common detector is described e.g. for one-dimensional systems as a narrow strip in phase space. We generalize this concept allowing this strip to be transformed by some, possibly non-linear, canonical transformation, introducing thus a canonically transformed detector. We show such detectors to be useful in the context of the inverse scattering problem in situations where recently discovered scattering echoes could not be seen without their help. More relevant applications in quantum systems are suggested.Comment: 8 pages, 15 figures. Better figures can be found in the original article, wich can be found in http://www.sm.luth.se/~norbert/home_journal/electronic/v12s1.html Related movies can be found in www.cicc.unam.mx/~mau

    Parton shower contributions to jets from high rapidities at the LHC

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    We discuss current issues associated with the dependence of jet distributions at the LHC on the behavior of QCD parton showers for high rapidities.Comment: Contribution at DIS2012, Univ. of Bonn, March 201

    Light Quark Mass Reweighting

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    We present a systematic study of the effectiveness of light quark mass reweighting. This method allows a single lattice QCD ensemble, generated with a specific value of the dynamical light quark mass, to be used to determine results for other, nearby light dynamical quark masses. We study two gauge field ensembles generated with 2+1 flavors of dynamical domain wall fermions with light quark masses m_l=0.02 (m_\pi=620 MeV) and m_l=0.01 (m_\pi=420 MeV). We reweight each ensemble to determine results which could be computed directly from the other and check the consistency of the reweighted results with the direct results. The large difference between the 0.02 and 0.01 light quark masses suggests that this is an aggressive application of reweighting as can be seen from fluctuations in the magnitude of the reweighting factor by four orders of magnitude. Never-the-less, a comparison of the reweighed topological charge, average plaquette, residual mass, pion mass, pion decay constant, and scalar correlator between these two ensembles shows agreement well described by the statistical errors. The issues of the effective number of configurations and finite sample size bias are discussed. An examination of the topological charge distribution implies that it is more favorable to reweight from heavier mass to lighter quark mass.Comment: 24 pages and 10 figure
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