A practical seedless infrared-safe cone jet algorithm

Current cone jet algorithms, widely used at hadron colliders, take event particles as seeds in an iterative search for stable cones. A longstanding infrared (IR) unsafety issue in such algorithms is often assumed to be solvable by adding extra `midpoint' seeds, but actually is just postponed to...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe journal of high energy physics Vol. 2007; no. 5; p. 086
Main Authors Salam, Gavin P, Soyez, Grégory
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published IOP Publishing 01.05.2007
Springer
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ISSN1126-6708
1029-8479
1127-2236
1029-8479
DOI10.1088/1126-6708/2007/05/086

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Summary:Current cone jet algorithms, widely used at hadron colliders, take event particles as seeds in an iterative search for stable cones. A longstanding infrared (IR) unsafety issue in such algorithms is often assumed to be solvable by adding extra `midpoint' seeds, but actually is just postponed to one order higher in the coupling. A proper solution is to switch to an exact seedless cone algorithm, one that provably identifies all stable cones. The only existing approach takes N 2^N time to find jets among N particles, making it unusable at hadron level. This can be reduced to N^2 ln(N) time, leading to code (SISCone) whose speed is similar to that of public midpoint implementations. Monte Carlo tests provide a strong cross-check of an analytical proof of the IR safety of the new algorithm, and the absence of any 'R_{sep}' issue implies a good practical correspondence between parton and hadron levels. Relative to a midpoint cone, the use of an IR safe seedless algorithm leads to modest changes for inclusive jet spectra, mostly through reduced sensitivity to the underlying event, and significant changes for some multi-jet observables.
ISSN:1126-6708
1029-8479
1127-2236
1029-8479
DOI:10.1088/1126-6708/2007/05/086