Jet evolution in vacuum and in medium: a unified approach

POSTER

Abstract

Jets are collimated bursts of energetic hadrons produced in high-energy collisions, which serve as tools for testing quantum chromodynamics, the theory of strong interactions. The observed suppression of jet spectra in heavy-ion collisions, compared to proton-proton collisions, implies the existence of a dense medium called quark-gluon plasma (QGP). Energy loss is caused by jet constituents traversing the QGP. The Baier-Dokshitzer-Mueller-Peigné-Schiff (BDMPS) formalism can be used to calculate the nuclear modification factor (RAA), the magnitude of jet quenching, but is limited to describing radiative loss of a single parton. In this work, we unify the BDMPS formalism with two additional phenomena: color decoherence – the medium's ability to resolve two spatially-separated color charges – and vacuum energy loss, governed by the nonlinear Banfi-Marchesini-Smye (BMS) equation. Numerically solving the BMS equation with new initial conditions, we find that the RAA exhibits a strong sensitivity to the decoherence angle. Specifically, decoherence effects can further reduce the RAA by 10-50%. We also find a new universal scaling governed by the decoherence angle. These results offer a promising new basis for jet quenching phenomenology.

*This project was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) under the Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internships Program (SULI).

Presenters

  • Kevin Eisenberg

    • Michigan State University

Authors

  • Kevin Eisenberg

    • Michigan State University
  • Yacine Mehtar-Tani

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)