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Measurement of photonuclear jet production in ultraperipheral Pb+Pb collisions at sNN=5.02 TeV with the ATLAS detector

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http://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.111.052006
No data is associated with this publication.
Creative Commons 'BY-NC' version 4.0 license
Abstract

In ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions at the LHC, each nucleus acts a sources of high-energy real photons that can scatter off the opposing nucleus in ultraperipheral photonuclear ((Formula presented)) collisions. Hard scattering processes initiated by the photons in such collisions provide a novel method for probing nuclear parton distributions in a kinematic region not easily accessible to other measurements. ATLAS has measured production of dijet and multijet final states in ultraperipheral (Formula presented) collisions at (Formula presented) using a dataset recorded in 2018 with an integrated luminosity of (Formula presented). Photonuclear final states are selected by requiring a rapidity gap in the photon direction; this selects events where one of the outgoing nuclei remains intact. Jets are reconstructed using the anti-(Formula presented) algorithm with radius parameter, (Formula presented). Triple-differential cross sections, unfolded for detector response, are measured and presented using two sets of kinematic variables. The first set consists of the total transverse momentum ((Formula presented)), rapidity, and mass of the jet system. The second set uses (Formula presented) and particle-level nuclear and photon parton momentum fractions, (Formula presented) and (Formula presented), respectively. The results are compared with leading-order perturbative QCD calculations of photonuclear jet production cross sections, where all leading order predictions using existing fits fall below the data in the shadowing region. More detailed theoretical comparisons will allow these results to strongly constrain nuclear parton distributions, and these data provide results from the LHC directly comparable to early physics results at the planned Electron-Ion Collider.

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