Difference between revisions of "Jet"

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A '''jet''' is a collimated spray of [[Particle|particles]] (mainly [[Hadron|hadrons]]) produced in a [[High energy physics|high-energy]] particle [[collision]]. Jets form around the direction of a [[hard|high-energy]] quark or gluon, as these [[Fragmentation|fragment]] and [[Hadronization|hadronize]] almost immediately after being produced. Defining what constitutes a jet is nontrivial. [[Analysis|Analyses]] choose the definition with the most suitable properties for the given situation.
 
A '''jet''' is a collimated spray of [[Particle|particles]] (mainly [[Hadron|hadrons]]) produced in a [[High energy physics|high-energy]] particle [[collision]]. Jets form around the direction of a [[hard|high-energy]] quark or gluon, as these [[Fragmentation|fragment]] and [[Hadronization|hadronize]] almost immediately after being produced. Defining what constitutes a jet is nontrivial. [[Analysis|Analyses]] choose the definition with the most suitable properties for the given situation.
  
An adequate jet definition provides a common language for theory and experimental measurement, and allows a meaningful comparison of the two.
+
An adequate jet definition provides a common language for theory and experimental measurement, and allows meaningful comparison of the two.
  
 
At [[Hadron collider|hadron colliders]], jets are produced at very high [[rates]]. This is due to the presence of quarks and gluons in the [[initial state]] of the [[Collision|collisions]] and the high strength of the [[strong interaction]] at modern [[Center-of-mass energy|collision energies]].
 
At [[Hadron collider|hadron colliders]], jets are produced at very high [[rates]]. This is due to the presence of quarks and gluons in the [[initial state]] of the [[Collision|collisions]] and the high strength of the [[strong interaction]] at modern [[Center-of-mass energy|collision energies]].

Revision as of 19:34, 19 April 2016

A jet is a collimated spray of particles (mainly hadrons) produced in a high-energy particle collision. Jets form around the direction of a high-energy quark or gluon, as these fragment and hadronize almost immediately after being produced. Defining what constitutes a jet is nontrivial. Analyses choose the definition with the most suitable properties for the given situation.

An adequate jet definition provides a common language for theory and experimental measurement, and allows meaningful comparison of the two.

At hadron colliders, jets are produced at very high rates. This is due to the presence of quarks and gluons in the initial state of the collisions and the high strength of the strong interaction at modern collision energies.

Jet definitions

Mass

Charge

Substructure

Reconstruction

Calibration

See also

Learn more

References