Jets and Jet Substructure at Future Colliders
Abstract
Even though jet substructure was not an original design consideration for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiments, it has emerged as an essential tool for the current physics program. We examine the role of jet substructure on the motivation for and design of future energy frontier colliders. In particular, we discuss the need for a vibrant theory and experimental research and development program to extend jet substructure physics into the new regimes probed by future colliders. Jet substructure has organically evolved with a close connection between theorists and experimentalists and has catalyzed exciting innovations in both communities. We expect such developments will play an important role in the future energy frontier physics program.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2203.07462,
title = {Jets and Jet Substructure at Future Colliders},
author = {Ben Nachman and Salvatore Rappoccio and Nhan Tran and Johan Bonilla and Grigorios Chachamis and Barry M. Dillon and Sergei V. Chekanov and Robin Erbacher and Loukas Gouskos and Andreas Hinzmann and Stefan Höche and B. Todd Huffman and Ashutosh. V. Kotwal and Deepak Kar and Roman Kogler and Clemens Lange and Matt LeBlanc and Roy Lemmon and Christine McLean and Mark S. Neubauer and Tilman Plehn and Debarati Roy and Giordan Stark and Jennifer Roloff and Marcel Vos and Chih-Hsiang Yeh and Shin-Shan Yu},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2203.07462},
year = {2022}
}