Highly energetic jets and photons are complementary probes for the kinematics
and the topology of nuclear collisions. Jets are collimated sprays of charged
and neutral particles, which are produced in the fragmentation of hard
scattered partons in an early stage of the collision. While traversing the
medium formed in nuclear collisions, they lose energy and therefore carry
information about the interaction of partons with the medium. The jet
substructure is particularly interesting to learn about in-medium modification
of the jets and several observables exists to probe it. In contrast to jets,
photons are created in all collision stages. There are prompt photons from the
initial collision, thermal photons produced in the medium, and decay- and
fragmentation photons from later collision stages. Photons escape the medium
essentially unaffected after their creation. This article presents recent ALICE
results on jet substructure and direct photon measurements in pp, p-Pb and
Pb-Pb collisions.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, Rencontres de Moriond proceeding