Measurement of substructure-dependent jet suppression in Pb-Pb collisions at 5.02 TeV with the ATLAS detector

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 05-2023
Journal Physical Review C
Article number 054909
Volume | Issue number 107 | 5
Number of pages 32
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP) - Institute for High Energy Physics (IHEF)
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP)
Abstract
The ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider has been used to measure jet substructure modification and suppression in Pb+Pb collisions at a nucleon–nucleon center-of-mass energy βˆšπ‘ π‘β’π‘ = 5.02TeV in comparison with proton–proton (𝑝⁒𝑝) collisions at βˆšπ‘  = 5.02TeV. The Pb+Pb data, collected in 2018, have an integrated luminosity of 1.72nbβˆ’1, while the 𝑝⁒𝑝 data, collected in 2017, have an integrated luminosity of 260pbβˆ’1. Jets used in this analysis are clustered using the anti-π‘˜π‘‘ algorithm with a radius parameter 𝑅=0.4. The jet constituents, defined by both tracking and calorimeter information, are used to determine the angular scale π‘Ÿg of the first hard splitting inside the jet by reclustering them using the Cambridge–Aachen algorithm and employing the soft-drop grooming technique. The nuclear modification factor, 𝑅𝐴⁒𝐴, used to characterize jet suppression in Pb+Pb collisions, is presented differentially in π‘Ÿg, jet transverse momentum, and in intervals of collision centrality. The 𝑅𝐴⁒𝐴 value is observed to depend significantly on jet π‘Ÿg. Jets produced with the largest measured π‘Ÿg are found to be twice as suppressed as those with the smallest π‘Ÿg in central Pb+Pb collisions. The 𝑅𝐴⁒𝐴 values do not exhibit a strong variation with jet 𝑝T in any of the π‘Ÿg intervals. The π‘Ÿg and 𝑝T dependence of jet 𝑅𝐴⁒𝐴 is qualitatively consistent with a picture of jet quenching arising from coherence and provides the most direct evidence in support of this approach.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.107.054909
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