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

TL;DR
This study measures how jet substructure and suppression vary in lead-lead collisions at 5.02 TeV, revealing that jets with larger substructure scales are more suppressed, supporting coherence-based jet quenching models.
Contribution
It provides the first differential measurement of jet suppression as a function of substructure scale $r_g$ in heavy-ion collisions, offering direct evidence for coherence effects in jet quenching.
Findings
Jets with larger $r_g$ are twice as suppressed as smaller $r_g$ jets.
Jet suppression $R_{AA}$ shows little dependence on jet $p_T$ across $r_g$ intervals.
Results support a coherence-based picture of jet quenching.
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 in comparison with collisions at . The Pb+Pb data, collected in 2018, have an integrated luminosity of , while the data, collected in 2017, have an integrated luminosity of . Jets used in this analysis are clustered using the anti- algorithm with a radius parameter . The jet constituents, defined by both tracking and calorimeter information, are used to determine the angular scale 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…
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