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Dive into the research topics where Ian Moult is active.

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Featured researches published by Ian Moult.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2014

Power counting to better jet observables

Andrew J. Larkoski; Ian Moult; Duff Neill

A bstractOptimized jet substructure observables for identifying boosted topologies will play an essential role in maximizing the physics reach of the Large Hadron Collider. Ideally, the design of discriminating variables would be informed by analytic calculations in perturbative QCD. Unfortunately, explicit calculations are often not feasible due to the complexity of the observables used for discrimination, and so many validation studies rely heavily, and solely, on Monte Carlo. In this paper we show how methods based on the parametric power counting of the dynamics of QCD, familiar from effective theory analyses, can be used to design, understand, and make robust predictions for the behavior of jet substructure variables. As a concrete example, we apply power counting for discriminating boosted Z bosons from massive QCD jets using observables formed from the n-point energy correlation functions. We show that power counting alone gives a definite prediction for the observable that optimally separates the background-rich from the signal-rich regions of phase space. Power counting can also be used to understand effects of phase space cuts and the effect of contamination from pile-up, which we discuss. As these arguments rely only on the parametric scaling of QCD, the predictions from power counting must be reproduced by any Monte Carlo, which we verify using Pythia 8 and Herwig++. We also use the example of quark versus gluon discrimination to demonstrate the limits of the power counting technique.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2016

Analytic Boosted Boson Discrimination

Andrew J. Larkoski; Ian Moult; Duff Neill

A bstractObservables which discriminate boosted topologies from massive QCD jets are of great importance for the success of the jet substructure program at the Large Hadron Collider. Such observables, while both widely and successfully used, have been studied almost exclusively with Monte Carlo simulations. In this paper we present the first all-orders factorization theorem for a two-prong discriminant based on a jet shape variable, D2, valid for both signal and background jets. Our factorization theorem simultaneously describes the production of both collinear and soft subjets, and we introduce a novel zero-bin procedure to correctly describe the transition region between these limits. By proving an all orders factorization theorem, we enable a systematically improvable description, and allow for precision comparisons between data, Monte Carlo, and first principles QCD calculations for jet substructure observables. Using our factorization theorem, we present numerical results for the discrimination of a boosted Z boson from massive QCD background jets. We compare our results with Monte Carlo predictions which allows for a detailed understanding of the extent to which these generators accurately describe the formation of two-prong QCD jets, and informs their usage in substructure analyses. Our calculation also provides considerable insight into the discrimination power and calculability of jet substructure observables in general.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2015

Non-global logarithms, factorization, and the soft substructure of jets

Andrew J. Larkoski; Ian Moult; Duff Neill

A bstractAn outstanding problem in QCD and jet physics is the factorization and resummation of logarithms that arise due to phase space constraints, so-called non-global logarithms (NGLs). In this paper, we show that NGLs can be factorized and resummed down to an unresolved infrared scale by making sufficiently many measurements on a jet or other restricted phase space region. Resummation is accomplished by renormalization group evolution of the objects in the factorization theorem and anomalous dimensions can be calculated to any perturbative accuracy and with any number of colors. To connect with the NGLs of more inclusive measurements, we present a novel perturbative expansion which is controlled by the volume of the allowed phase space for unresolved emissions. Arbitrary accuracy can be obtained by making more and more measurements so to resolve lower and lower scales. We find that even a minimal number of measurements produces agreement with Monte Carlo methods for leading-logarithmic resummation of NGLs at the sub-percent level over the full dynamical range relevant for the Large Hadron Collider. We also discuss other applications of our factorization theorem to soft jet dynamics and how to extend to higher-order accuracy.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2016

New angles on energy correlation functions

Ian Moult; Lina Necib; Jesse Thaler

A bstractJet substructure observables, designed to identify specific features within jets, play an essential role at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), both for searching for signals beyond the Standard Model and for testing QCD in extreme phase space regions. In this paper, we systematically study the structure of infrared and collinear safe substructure observables, defining a generalization of the energy correlation functions to probe n-particle correlations within a jet. These generalized correlators provide a flexible basis for constructing new substructure observables optimized for specific purposes. Focusing on three major targets of the jet substructure community — boosted top tagging, boosted W/Z/H tagging, and quark/gluon discrimination — we use power-counting techniques to identify three new series of powerful discriminants: Mi, Ni, and Ui. The Mi series is designed for use on groomed jets, providing a novel example of observables with improved discrimination power after the removal of soft radiation. The Ni series behave parametrically like the N -subjettiness ratio observables, but are defined without respect to subjet axes, exhibiting improved behavior in the unresolved limit. Finally, the Ui series improves quark/gluon discrimination by using higher-point correlators to simultaneously probe multiple emissions within a jet. Taken together, these observables broaden the scope for jet substructure studies at the LHC.


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2014

Toward Multi-Differential Cross Sections: Measuring Two Angularities on a Single Jet

Andrew J. Larkoski; Ian Moult; Duff Neill

A bstractThe analytic study of differential cross sections in QCD has typically focused on individual observables, such as mass or thrust, to great success. Here, we present a first study of double differential jet cross sections considering two recoil-free angularities measured on a single jet. By analyzing the phase space defined by the two angularities and using methods from soft-collinear effective theory, we prove that the double differential cross section factorizes at the boundaries of the phase space. We also show that the cross section in the bulk of the phase space cannot be factorized using only soft and collinear modes, excluding the possibility of a global factorization theorem in soft-collinear effective theory. Nevertheless, we are able to define a simple interpolation procedure that smoothly connects the factorization theorem at one boundary to the other. We present an explicit example of this at next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy and show that the interpolation is unique up to αs4 order in the exponent of the cross section, under reasonable assumptions. This is evidence that the interpolation is sufficiently robust to account for all logarithms in the bulk of phase space to the accuracy of the boundary factorization theorem. We compare our analytic calculation of the double differential cross section to Monte Carlo simulation and find qualitative agreement. Because our arguments rely on general structures of the phase space, we expect that much of our analysis would be relevant for the study of phenomenologically well-motivated observables, such as N -subjettiness, energy correlation functions, and planar flow.


Physical Review D | 2017

Subleading Power Corrections for N-Jettiness Subtractions

Ian Moult; Hua Xing Zhu; Lorena Rothen; Iain W. Stewart; Frank J. Tackmann

The


Physical Review D | 2015

Building a better boosted top tagger

Andrew J. Larkoski; Ian Moult; Duff Neill

N


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2014

Jet Vetoes interfering with H → WW

Ian Moult; Iain W. Stewart

-jettiness observable


Journal of High Energy Physics | 2016

Building blocks for subleading helicity operators

Daniel W. Kolodrubetz; Ian Moult; Iain W. Stewart

\mathcal{T}_N


Journal of Instrumentation | 2012

Environmental effects on TPB wavelength-shifting coatings

C. S. Chiu; C. Ignarra; L. Bugel; H. Chen; J. M. Conrad; B.J.P. Jones; T. Katori; Ian Moult

provides a way of describing the leading singular behavior of the

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Andrew J. Larkoski

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Iain W. Stewart

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Duff Neill

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Frank J. Tackmann

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Benjamin Philip Nachman

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Marat Freytsis

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Tracy R. Slatyer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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