The observation of large azimuthal anisotropy or v2 for hadrons above
pT>5 GeV/c in Au+Au collisions at snn=200 GeV has been a
longstanding challenge for jet quenching models based on perturbative QCD
(pQCD). Using a simple jet absorption model, we seek to clarify the situation
by exploring in detail how the calculated v2 varies with choices of the
collision geometry as well as choices of the path length dependence and
thermalization time τ0 in the energy loss formula. Besides the change of
eccentricity due to distortion from gluon saturation or event-by-event
fluctuation, we find that the v2 is also sensitive to the centrality
dependence of multiplicity and the relative size between the matter profile and
the jet profile. We find that the v2 calculated for the naive quadratic path
length dependence of energy loss, even including eccentricity fluctuation and
the gluon saturation, is not enough to describe the experimental data at high
pT (∼ 6 GeV/c) in Au+Au collisions. However, it can match the full
centrality dependence of v2 data if higher power path length dependence of
energy loss is allowed. We also find that the calculated v2 is sensitive to
the assumption of the early time dynamics but generally increases with
τ0, opposite to what one expects for elliptic flow. This study attests to
the importance of confining the initial geometry, possibly by combining jet
quenching v2 with elliptic flow and other jet quenching observables, for
proper interpretation of the experimental data.Comment: 20 pages, 28 figure