pith. machine review for the scientific record. sign in

arxiv: 0802.1188 · v2 · submitted 2008-02-08 · ✦ hep-ph

Recognition: unknown

The Catchment Area of Jets

Matteo Cacciari , Gavin P. Salam , Gregory Soyez

Authors on Pith no claims yet
classification ✦ hep-ph
keywords areasjetspileupactivealgorithmsarealikemain
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

The area of a jet is a measure of its susceptibility to radiation, like pileup or underlying event (UE), that on average, in the jet's neighbourhood, is uniform in rapidity and azimuth. In this article we establish a theoretical grounding for the discussion of jet areas, introducing two main definitions, passive and active areas, which respectively characterise the sensitivity to pointlike or diffuse pileup and UE radiation. We investigate the properties of jet areas for three standard jet algorithms, k_t, Cambridge/Aachen and SISCone. Passive areas for single-particle jets are equal to the naive geometrical expectation \pi R^2, but acquire an anomalous dimension at higher orders in the coupling, calculated here at leading order. The more physically relevant active areas differ from \pi R^2 even for single-particle jets, substantially so in the case of the cone algorithms like SISCone with a Tevatron Run-II split--merge procedure. We compare our results with direct measures of areas in parton-shower Monte Carlo simulations and find good agreement with the main features of the analytical predictions. We furthermore justify the use of jet areas to subtract the contamination from pileup.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Forward citations

Cited by 4 Pith papers

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. The anti-k_t jet clustering algorithm

    hep-ph 2008-02 accept novelty 8.0

    The anti-k_t algorithm yields conical jets with equal active and passive areas, zero area anomalous dimensions, rigid-boundary non-global logarithms, and a universal Milan factor, serving as an IRC-safe substitute for...

  2. DELPHES 3, A modular framework for fast simulation of a generic collider experiment

    hep-ex 2013-07 accept novelty 5.0

    DELPHES 3 delivers a modular fast-simulation framework with particle-flow and pile-up features for reconstructing physics objects in collider detector studies.

  3. FastJet user manual

    hep-ph 2011-11 unverdicted novelty 2.0

    FastJet is a C++ package providing implementations of sequential recombination jet algorithms, cone algorithms via plugins, jet substructure tools, and pileup estimation for pp and e+e- collisions.

  4. Looking inside jets: an introduction to jet substructure and boosted-object phenomenology

    hep-ph 2019-01