Looking inside jets: an introduction to jet substructure and boosted-object phenomenology
Simone Marzani, Gregory Soyez, Michael Spannowsky

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive, pedagogical introduction to jet substructure techniques, their theoretical foundations, and recent developments, aimed at newcomers in particle physics research.
Contribution
It offers an integrated overview combining experimental, theoretical, and computational aspects of jet substructure, filling a gap in accessible educational resources.
Findings
Enhanced understanding of jet substructure algorithms
Insights into the application of all-order QCD calculations
Discussion of deep-learning techniques in jet analysis
Abstract
The study of the internal structure of hadronic jets has become in recent years a very active area of research in particle physics. Jet substructure techniques are increasingly used in experimental analyses by the LHC collaborations, both in the context of searching for new physics and for Standard Model measurements. On the theory side, the quest for a deeper understanding of jet substructure algorithms has contributed to a renewed interest in all-order calculations in QCD. This has resulted in new ideas about how to design better observables and how to provide a solid theoretical description for them. In the last years, jet substructure has seen its scope extended, for example, with an increasing impact in the study of heavy-ion collisions, or with the exploration of deep-learning techniques. Furthermore, jet physics is an area in which experimental and theoretical approaches meet…
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