Abstract
Azimuthal correlations in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production at large transverse momenta are computed by matching Parton-Branching (PB) TMD parton distributions and showers with NLO calculations via MCatNLO. The predictions are compared with those for dijet production in the same kinematic range. The azimuthal correlations \(\Delta \phi \) between the Z boson and the leading jet are steeper compared to those in dijet production at transverse momenta \(\mathcal{O}(100)\) GeV , while they become similar for very high transverse momenta \({{\mathcal {O}}}(1000)\) GeV . The different patterns of \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and dijet azimuthal correlations can be used to search for potential factorization-breaking effects in the back-to-back region, which depend on the different color and spin structure of the final states and their interferences with the initial states. In order to investigate these effects experimentally, we propose to measure the ratio of the distributions in \(\Delta \phi \) for \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet- and multijet production at low and at high transverse momenta, and compare the results to predictions obtained assuming factorization. We examine the role of theoretical uncertainties by performing variations of the factorization scale, renormalization scale and matching scale. In particular, we present a comparative study of matching scale uncertainties in the cases of PB-TMD and collinear parton showers.
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1 Introduction
The description of jet production in association with a Z boson in hadron–hadron collisions is an important test of predictions obtained in Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), and provides a relevant background to Higgs boson studies and to new physics searches. The associated Z boson plus jet production has been measured by CDF and D0 in proton-antiproton collisions at a center-of-mass energy \(\sqrt{s} = 1.96\) TeV [1, 2]. At the LHC, the ATLAS and CMS collaborations have published measurements in proton-proton (\(\mathrm {p} \mathrm {p} \)) collisions at a center-of-mass energy \(\sqrt{s} = 7\) TeV [3,4,5], 8 TeV [6] and 13 TeV [7, 8]. Azimuthal correlations between Z bosons and jets have been measured at 8 TeV [6] and 13 TeV [8].
The distribution in the azimuthal angle \(\Delta \phi \) between the Z boson and the jet is an especially sensitive observable, probing several aspects of QCD physics. At leading order in the strong coupling \(\alpha _\mathrm {s}\), one has \(\Delta \phi = \pi \). The smearing of this delta-like distribution is a measure of higher order QCD radiation. In the region near \(\Delta \phi = \pi \), this is primarily soft gluon radiation, while in the region of small \(\Delta \phi \) it is primarily hard QCD radiation. The large-\(\Delta \phi \) region of nearly back-to-back Z boson and jet is influenced by both perturbative and non-perturbative QCD contributions. The relative significance of these contributions depends on the scale of the transverse momentum imbalance between the boson and the jet. Importantly, the resummation of soft multi-gluon emissions in the nearly back-to-back region probes the transverse momenta of the initial state partons, which can be described by transverse momentum dependent (TMD) [9] parton distribution functions (PDFs). Theoretical predictions for Z boson + jet production including soft gluon resummation have recently been given in Refs. [10,11,12,13,14,15,16].
All the experimental measurements of boson–jet azimuthal correlations that have been performed so far are in the kinematical range of transverse momenta of the Z boson and the jets of the order \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\approx {{\mathcal {O}}}(100)\) GeV . In this kinematical range, fixed-order perturbative corrections beyond next-to-leading order (NLO) are sizeable, and at small \(\Delta \phi \) NLO calculations are usually not sufficient for reliable predictions. For the large-\(\Delta \phi \) region of nearly back-to-back Z boson and jet, the boson–jet \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) imbalance scale is of order a few GeV, which is significantly influenced by both perturbative resummation and non-perturbative effects. It is worth noting that all the experimental measurements performed up to now do not cover the large \(\Delta \phi \), nearly back-to-back, region with sufficiently fine binning to investigate detailed features of QCD.
With the increase in luminosity at the LHC, it becomes possible to measure \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production in the high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) range, with \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\approx {{\mathcal {O}}}(1000) \) GeV . In this work, we observe that in this kinematical range the resummation of soft gluons and TMD dynamics in the nearly back-to-back region can be explored in a new regime, characterized by boson–jet \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) imbalance scales on the order of a few ten GeV. The large-\(\Delta \phi \) region, involving deviations of the order of the experimental angular resolution of about 1 degree from \(\Delta \phi = \pi \), can be investigated by analyzing jets with measurable transverse momenta.
Based on the above observation, in this paper we propose experimental investigations of back-to-back azimuthal correlations in the \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\approx {{\mathcal {O}}}(1000) \) GeV region, with a systematic scan of the large-\(\Delta \phi \) regime from this high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) region down to \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\approx {{\mathcal {O}}}(100)\) GeV – a regime which is completely unexplored experimentally up to now. We present dedicated phenomenological studies of this \(\Delta \phi \) region as a function of \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\), enabling one to explore boson–jet transverse momentum imbalances from a jet scale of several ten GeV down to the few GeV scale. To perform these studies, we use the Parton Branching (PB) approach [17, 18] to TMD evolution, matched to NLO calculations of \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production with MadGraph5_aMC@NLO [19]. This approach has already been successfully applied, across a wide energy and mass range, to the Z boson \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) spectrum at the LHC [20] and the Drell–Yan (DY) \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) spectrum at lower fixed-target energies [21], so that the investigation of the same method in the \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet case is compelling. The \(\Delta \phi \) correlation in the kinematical range proposed in this paper allows one to study the interplay of perturbative and non-perturbative contributions to TMD dynamics (see e.g. [22] for the DY case) as a function of both the boson–jet \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) imbalance and the evolution scale of the TMD distribution itself, of the order of the hard scale of the process, given by the transverse momenta of the Z boson or the jet.
In a previous publication [23] we have investigated the \(\Delta \phi _{12}\) correlation in high-\(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) dijet events by applying TMD PDFs and parton shower together with NLO calculations of the hard scattering process. In multijet events the azimuthal correlation between two jets has been measured at the LHC by ATLAS and CMS [24,25,26,27,28]. The region of \({\Delta \phi _{12}}\rightarrow \pi \) is of special interest, since so-called factorization-breaking [29,30,31] effects could become important in the case of colored final states. Multijet production is believed to be sensitive to such effects, as well as vector boson + jet production [32]. In order to investigate factorization-breaking effects, we propose to compare the theoretical description of the azimuthal correlation \(\Delta \phi _{12}\) in multijet production with the one in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production. A thorough investigation of azimuthal correlations in the back-to-back region in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet events has been also performed in Ref. [11], addressing the issue of factorization-breaking.
In this report we compare in detail high-\(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) dijet and \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production by applying the PB TMD method [17, 18] matched with NLO. In Ref. [23] the NLO PB TMD predictions have been found to describe well the measurements of dijet azimuthal correlations [27, 28]. In the present paper we apply the same method to the calculation of \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production, and present the corresponding predictions. We propose to use the same kinematic region for the high-\(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) dijet and \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production to allow a direct comparison of the angular observables in the two cases.
We will see that, in the region of leading transverse momenta of the order \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\approx {{\mathcal {O}}}\)(100 GeV), the boson–jet final state is more strongly correlated azimuthally than the jet–jet final state. As the transverse momenta increase above the electroweak symmetry breaking scale, \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\approx {{\mathcal {O}}}\)(1000 GeV), this difference is reduced, and the boson–jet and jet–jet become more similarly correlated. We connect this behavior to features of the partonic initial state and final state radiation in the boson–jet and jet–jet cases. Since potential factorization-breaking effects arise from color interferences of initial-state and final-state radiation, different breaking patterns can be expected for strong and weak azimuthal correlations, influencing differently the boson–jet and jet–jet cases. We therefore propose to systematically compare measurements of dijet and \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet distributions, scanning the phase space from low transverse momenta \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\approx {{\mathcal {O}}}\)(100 GeV) to high transverse momenta \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\approx {{\mathcal {O}}}\)(1000 GeV).
In the following, we start by describing the basic elements of the PB TMD method and the \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet calculation in Sect. 2. In Sect. 3 we present results for the \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet azimuthal correlations and compare them with the multijet case. We summarize in Sect. 4. In an Appendix we discuss technical details on the use of MCatNLO+Cascade3.
2 Basic elements of the calculation
In this section we first recall the salient features of the PB TMD approach, summarizing the main concepts of the approach and its applications; then we describe the calculation of \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production by the PB TMD method matched with NLO matrix elements in MadGraph5_aMC@NLO.
2.1 PB-TMD method
The PB approach [18] provides a formulation for the evolution of TMD parton distributions in terms of perturbatively calculable Sudakov form factors and real-emission splitting kernels, with angular ordering phase space constraints and with non-perturbative distributions at the initial scale of the evolution to be determined from fits to experiment. This formulation uses a soft-gluon resolution scale \(z_M\) [17] to separate resolvable and non-resolvable branchings. An important feature of the PB TMD evolution equation [18] concerns its collinear limits: upon integration over all transverse momenta, the PB TMD evolution equation returns the DGLAP [33,34,35,36] equation for resolution scale \(z_M \rightarrow 1\), while it coincides with the CMW [37, 38] coherent branching equation for angular-ordered \(z_M\) [39]. The PB TMD method is based on the “unitarity” picture [40] of parton evolution usually employed in parton showering Monte Carlo (MC) algorithms [41, 42]. The PB evolution equation for the TMD distributions is matched by a corresponding TMD parton shower for the spacelike parton cascade, generated by “backward evolution” [43]. A significant difference with respect to ordinary parton showers is that in the PB TMD method TMD distributions are defined and determined from fits to experimental data, which places constraints on fixed-scale inputs to evolution, while in ordinary parton showers instead nonperturbative physics parameters and showering parameters are tuned. No MC tuning is performed in the PB TMD case.
The NLO PB collinear and TMD parton distributions were obtained in Ref. [44] from QCD fits to precision DIS data from HERA [45] using the xFitter analysis framework [46, 47]. Two different sets, PB-NLO-2018-Set 1 and PB-NLO-2018-Set 2, were obtained, with PB-NLO-2018-Set 1 corresponding at collinear level to HERAPDF 2.0 NLO [45]. In PB-NLO-2018-Set 2 the transverse momentum (instead of the evolution scale in Set 1) is used as the scale in the running coupling \(\alpha _\mathrm {s}\) which corresponds to the angular ordering of soft gluon emissions in the initial-state parton evolution [38, 39, 48, 49]. It has been shown in [20, 21] that Set 2 provides a better description of experimental measurements for the Z-boson spectrum at low-\(p_{\mathrm{T}}\). Also, it has been shown in [23] that the transverse momentum scale in the running coupling \(\alpha _\mathrm {s}\) is important for a good description of data on di-jet angular correlations. In this paper we will concentrate on Set 2 only.
In Fig. 1 we show the TMD PDF distributions for up quarks and gluons at \(x=0.01\) and \(\mu =100\) and 1000 GeV for PB-NLO-2018-Set 2. The transverse momentum distribution of gluons is broader than that of quarks, due to gluon self-coupling and the different color factors. In Fig. 1 also the uncertainties of the distributions, as obtained from the fit [44], are shown. The differences in the transverse momentum spectra of quarks and gluons will show up in differences in azimuthal correlation distributions.
The PB TMD evolution equation resums Sudakov logarithms. Current calculations in the PB TMD approach are performed with leading-logarithm (LL) and next-to-leading-logarithm (NLL) accuracy. The accuracy can be systematically improved, and the extension to next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic (NNLL) accuracy is being studied. In this respect, the approach can be compared [50] with analytic resummation methods [51, 52]. The extraction of TMD distributions from the PB TMD fits described above could be compared with extractions, such as [53, 54], based on [51, 52]. The TMDlib tool [55, 56] is designed as an aid for such studies. On the other hand, while analytic resummation approaches apply to the inclusive transverse momentum spectrum, the PB TMD approach works at exclusive level and can be applied to make predictions not only for the inclusive spectrum but also for the structure of the final states.
A framework to compute theoretical predictions combining the PB TMD resummation with fixed-order NLO matrix elements in MadGraph5_aMC@NLO has been developed in [20, 21]. The predictions [20] have been successfully compared with LHC measurements of Z boson \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) and \(\phi ^*\) distributions [57,58,59]. Predictions by this method have also been successful in describing [21] DY \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) spectra at lower masses and energies [60,61,62,63]. The significance of this result is enhanced by the recent observation [64] that fixed-order NNLO corrections are not extremely large in the kinematic region of the data. This framework has also been applied to di-jet production [23], and predictions for di-jet correlations have been found in good agreement with LHC measurements [27, 28]. We will employ this framework for \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production in the next subsection.
As a method which is applicable at the level of exclusive final states, the PB TMD approach can be used in the context of multi-jet merging algorithms. A TMD multi-jet merging method has been developed in [65]. Its application to Z boson + multi-jets production [65,66,67] illustrates that transverse momentum recoils in the initial-state showers [68,69,70] influence significantly the theoretical systematics associated with the merging parameters. In the present paper, we will concentrate on the \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet back-to-back region, rather than the multi-jet production region, and we will therefore not use the TMD merging procedure.
Recently, the PB TMD evolution equation has been generalized to include TMD splitting functions [71, 72], defined through high-energy factorization [73]. This generalization is important particularly for processes sensitive to TMD distributions at small values of longitudinal momentum fractions x. In this paper we focus on processes at mid to large x, and thus we do not consider this in the following.
2.2 Calculation of Z+jet distributions
The process \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet at NLO is calculated with MadGraph5_aMC@NLO using the collinear PB-NLO-2018-Set 2, as obtained in Ref. [44] applying \(\alpha _\mathrm {s}(M_\mathrm{{Z}} )= 0.118\). The matching of NLO matrix elements with PB TMD parton distributions is described in Refs. [20, 21, 43]. The extension to multijet production is illustrated in Ref. [23]. Predictions are obtained by processing the MadGraph5_aMC@NLO event files in LHE format [74] through Cascade3 [43] for an inclusion of TMD effects in the initial state and for simulation of the corresponding parton shower (labeled MCatNLO+CAS3 in the following).
Fixed order NLO \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production is calculated with MadGraph5_aMC@NLO in a procedure similar to the one applied for dijet production described in [23] (labeled MCatNLO(fNLO)). For the MCatNLO mode, the Herwig6 [75, 76] subtraction terms are calculated, as they are best suited for the use with PB-parton densities, because both apply the same angular ordering condition. The use of Herwig6 subtraction terms together with Cascade3 is justified in the Appendix for final state parton shower as well as initial and final state showers by a comparison of the predictions obtained with Cascade3 and with Herwig6. The matching scale \(\mu _{m}={\texttt {SCALUP}}\) limits the contribution from PB-TMDs and TMD showers.
In the calculations, the factorization and renormalization scales are set to \(\mu =\frac{1}{2} \sum _i p_{\mathrm{T},i} \), where the index i runs over all particles in the matrix element final state. This scale is also used in the PB-TMD parton distribution \({{\mathcal {A}}}(x,k_{\mathrm{T}},\mu )\). The scale uncertainties of the predictions are obtained from variations of the scales around the central value in the 7-point scheme avoiding extreme cases of variation.
In Fig. 2 we show the distributions of the transverse momentum of the \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet system, \(p_{\mathrm{T},Zj}\), and the azimuthal correlation in the \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet system, \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\), for a fixed NLO calculation, for the full simulation including PB-TMD PDFs and parton showers as well as for the MCatNLO calculation at the level where subtraction terms are included without addition from parton shower (LHE-level). We require a transverse momentum \(p_{\mathrm{T}}> 200 \) GeV for the Z boson and define jets with the anti-\(k_{\mathrm{T}}\) jet-algorithm [77], as implemented in the FASTJET package [78], with a distance parameter of R = 0.4. The effect of including PB-TMD PDFs and parton showers can be clearly seen from the difference to the fixed NLO and LHE-level calculations.
In the low \(p_{\mathrm{T},Zj}\) region one can clearly see the expected steeply rising behavior of the fixed NLO prediction. In the \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\) distribution one can observe the limited region for fixed NLO at \( {\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}}< 2/3 \pi \), since at most two jets in addition to the Z boson appear in the calculation. At large \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\), the fixed NLO prediction rises faster than the full calculation including resummation via PB-TMDs and parton showers. In the following we concentrate on the large \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\) region.
3 Back-to-back azimuthal correlations in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and multijet production
We now present predictions, obtained in the framework described above, for \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and multijet production.Footnote 1 The selection of events follows the one of azimuthal correlations \(\Delta \phi _{12}\) in the back-to-back region (\({\Delta \phi _{12}}\rightarrow \pi \)) in multijet production at \(\sqrt{s}=13\) TeV as obtained by CMS [28]: jets are reconstructed with the anti-\(k_{\mathrm{T}}\) algorithm [77] with a distance parameter of 0.4 in the rapidity range of \(|y|< 2.4\). We require either two jets with \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}} > 200\) GeV or a Z boson and a jet as leading or subleading objects with a transverse momentum \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}} >200\) GeV .
We consider distributions of the azimuthal correlation between the Z boson and the leading jet, \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\), for \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}} > 200\) GeV as well as for the very high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) region of \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}} > 1000\) GeV .
The calculations are performed with MCatNLO+CAS3 using PB-NLO-2018-Set 2 as the collinear and TMD parton densities with running coupling satisfying \(\alpha _\mathrm {s}(m_\mathrm{{Z}}) = 0.118\) and PB-TMD parton shower.
In Fig. 3, the prediction for the azimuthal correlations \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\) for \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production in the back-to-back region is shown.Footnote 2 We also show, for comparison, the prediction of azimuthal correlations \(\Delta \phi _{12}\) for multijet production in the same kinematic region, compared to the measurement of dijet production obtained by CMS [28]. We observe that the distribution of azimuthal angle \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\) in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet-production for \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}} >200\) GeV is more strongly correlated towards \(\pi \) than the distribution of angle \(\Delta \phi _{12}\) in multijet production. This difference is reduced for \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}} > 1000\) GeV .
Differences in \(\Delta \phi \) between \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and multijet production can result from the different flavor composition of the initial state and therefore different initial state transverse momenta and initial state parton shower, as well as from differences in final state showering since both processes have a different number of colored final state partons. Effects coming from factorization-breaking, interference between initial and final state partons, will depend on the final state structure and the number of colored final state partons.
We first investigate the role of initial state radiation and the dependence on the transverse momentum distributions coming from the TMD PDFs, which gives a large contribution to the decorrelation in \(\Delta \phi \). The \(k_{\mathrm{T}}\)-distribution obtained from a gluon TMD PDF is different from the one of a quark TMD PDF as shown in Fig. 1 for \(x=0.01\) and scales of \(\mu =200 (1000) \) GeV . In Fig. 4 we show the probability of gg, qg and qq initial states (q stands for quark and antiquark) as a function of \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\) for \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and multijet production obtained with MCatNLO+CAS3. At high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}} > 1000\) GeV the qq channel becomes important for both \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and multijet final states, while at lower \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}} > 200\) GeV the gg channel is dominant in multijet production, leading to larger decorrelation effects, since gluons radiate more compared to quarks.
The role of final state radiation in the correlation in \(\Delta \phi _{12}\) distributions is more difficult to estimate, since the subtraction terms for the NLO matrix element calculation also depend on the structure of the final state parton shower. In order to estimate the effect of final state shower we compare a calculation of the azimuthal correlations in the back-to-back region obtained with MCatNLO+CAS3 with the one obtained with MCatNLO+Pythia8 (Fig. 5). For the calculation MCatNLO+Pythia8 we apply the Pythia8 subtraction terms in the MadGraph5_aMC@NLO calculation, use the NNPDF3.0 [82] parton density and tune CUETP8M1 [83].
As shown in Fig. 5, the distributions are different because of the different parton shower in Cascade3 and Pythia8, but the ratio of the distributions for \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and multijet production are similar: \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet-production gives a steeper (more strongly correlated) distribution at low \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\), while at high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\) the distributions become similar in shape. We conclude, that the main effect of the \(\Delta \phi \) decorrelation comes from initial state radiation, and the shape of the \(\Delta \phi \) decorrelation in the back-to-back region becomes similar between \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and dijet processes at high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\) where similar initial partonic states are important.
The matching scale \(\mu _{m}\) limits the hardness of parton-shower emissions, and is thus typically a non-negligible source of variation in matched calculations (see e.g. [84] for a detailed discussion). It is thus interesting to assess the robustness of the previous findings under variations of the matching scale. Assessing matching scale variations in both an angular-ordered shower – such as Cascade3 – and a transverse-momentum-ordered shower – such as Pythia8 – additionally tests the interpretation (role) of the matching scale. In transverse-momentum ordered showers, the matching scale sets the maximal transverse momentum of the first shower branchings, while branchings beyond the first emission are not explicitly affected by the matching scale. In an angular-ordered shower, however, the matching scale is applied as “veto scale” to avoid larger transverse momenta for any branching, i.e. the matching scale directly affects all branchings. The result of changing the matching scale to half or twice the central value is shown in Fig. 6. As expected, the value of the matching scale has an impact on the prediction (\(\sim 5\%\)). This is particularly apparent when \(\mu _m\) is used to set the maximal transverse momentum of the first emission in Pythia8. Overall, we find that interpreting the matching scale as veto scale in Cascade3 leads to apparently more robust predictions. Interestingly, the matching scale uncertainty becomes smaller for higher-\(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\) jet configurations in Cascade3. The size of the matching scale variation is comparable to scale variations, and should thus be carefully studied when designing uncertainty estimates.
In dijet production the measurements are rather well described with predictions obtained with MCatNLO+CAS3, as shown in Fig. 3 and discussed in detail in Ref. [23]. Only in the very high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\) region, a deviation from the measurement is observed, which could be perhaps interpreted as coming from a violation of factorization. It is therefore very important to measure \(\Delta \phi \) distributions in other processes, where factorization is expected to hold.
In order to experimentally probe effects which could originate from factorization-breaking in the back-to-back region we propose to measure the ratio of distributions in \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\) for \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and \(\Delta \phi _{12}\) for multijet production at low and very high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\), and compare the measurement with predictions assuming that factorization holds. The number of colored partons involved in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet and multijet events is different, and deviations from factorization will depend on the structure of the colored initial and final state. In order to minimize the effect of different initial state configurations, a measurement at high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\), hint more clearly at possible factorization-breaking effects.
In Ref. [11] a detailed study on \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet azimuthal correlations is reported, applying TMD-factorization and the “winner-takes-all” jet recombination scheme, with the aim to reduce potential factorization breaking contributions. We have checked that our main results remain largely unchanged when the “winner-takes-all” jet recombination scheme [85, 86] is applied and only in the last bin of the \({\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}}\) distributions the cross section is reduced. We find that multijet events are more affected by the “winner-takes-all” jet recombination scheme in the back-to-back region at high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) than \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet events.
4 Summary and conclusions
We have investigated azimuthal correlations in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production and compared predictions with those for multijet production in the same kinematic range. The predictions are based on PB-TMD distributions with NLO calculations via MCatNLO supplemented by PB-TMD parton showers via Cascade3. The azimuthal correlations \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\), obtained in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production are steeper compared to those in multijet production (\(\Delta \phi _{12}\)) at transverse momenta \({{\mathcal {O}}}(100)\) GeV , while they become similar for very high transverse momenta, \({{\mathcal {O}}}(1000)\) GeV , which is a result of similar initial parton configuration of both processes.
In \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet production the color and spin structure of the partonic final state is different compared to the one in multijet production, and differences in the azimuthal correlation patterns can be used to search for potential factorization - breaking effects, involving initial and final state interferences. In order to experimentally investigate those effects, we propose to measure the ratio of the distributions in \(\Delta \phi _\mathrm{{Z} \text {j}}\) for \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet- and \(\Delta \phi _{12}\) for multijet production at low and at very high \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\), and compare the measurements to predictions obtained assuming that factorization holds.
We have studied the matching scale dependence in the PB-TMD predictions and compared it with the case of NLO-matched calculations based on the Pythia8 collinear shower. We find that variations of the matching scale lead to more stable predictions in the PB-TMD case, with the relative reduction of the matching scale theoretical uncertainty becoming more pronounced for increasing \(p_{\mathrm{T}}^{\text {leading}}\) transverse momenta.
Data Availability
This manuscript has no associated data or the data will not be deposited. [Authors’ comment: This is a phenomenological study without producing experimental data. The results of the Monte Carlo simulations are presented in the figures.]
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Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Olivier Mattelaer from the MadGraph5_aMC@NLO team for discussions, help and support with the LHE option for fixed NLO calculations in MCatNLO.
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Appendix: Comparison of Cascade3 and Herwig6
Appendix: Comparison of Cascade3 and Herwig6
The calculations presented here apply the MCatNLO method using Herwig6 (H6) subtraction terms, as implemented in MadGraph5_aMC@NLO. The NLO accuracy of the calculations is preserved by construction, since the use of PB-TMD distributions and TMD shower, as well as the ordinary parton shower, does not change the inclusive cross section.
Since Herwig6 (H6) subtraction terms are used in the MCatNLO+CAS3 calculations, we investigate here in detail the contribution of the parton shower used in Cascade3. We compare predictions obtained with MCatNLO+CAS3 with the corresponding ones obtained with MCatNLO+H6, using LHE files produced with MadGraph5_aMC@NLO for Z production. The Z boson is reconstructed from two oppositely charged leptons with \(p_{\mathrm{T}}> 20 \) GeV in \(|\eta |<2.4\). We also study jet distributions obtained with the anti-\(k_{\mathrm{T}}\) algorithm with distance parameter 0.4 with \(p_{\mathrm{T}}> 30\) GeV and \(|\eta | < 5 \).
In H6 the allowed region of z for a branching \(q \rightarrow qg\) in the final state shower is \(Q_q/Q< z < 1-Q_g/Q \) (e.g. A.2.2 in Ref. [87]), with \(Q_q = m_q + \mathtt{VQCUT}\) and \(Q_g = m_g + \mathtt{VGCUT}\), and \(m_q, m_g\) being the quark and gluon effective masses, and VQCUT,VGCUT the minimum virtuality parameters. Similar cuts are applied for initial state shower.
First we investigate final state parton showers. We compare distributions of the first and second jet in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet events: the first (highest \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\)) jet is part of the lowest order process, while the second (highest \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\)) jet is the real correction and therefore subject to subtraction terms (keeping in mind that the highest \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) jet in the NLO calculation can also come from the \(\alpha _s^2\) real emission diagram). In Cascade3, the Pythia6 final state shower is used (since the PB-method has not yet been applied for final state radiation), with the angular ordering veto condition. Since final state radiation is independent of parton densities, a direct comparison of MCatNLO+CAS3 and MCatNLO+H6, using the same LHE files, while only simulating final state radiation, is possible. In Fig. 7 we show a comparison of predictions for the transverse momentum of the first two highest \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) jets in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet events (using identical LHE files).
The uncertainty coming from different parameter settings in the H6 final state parton shower is estimated by changing the light quark masses from the default to 0.32 GeV (Rmas = 0.32, labelled as \(m_l\)) and VQCUT,VGCUT from the default to 0.1(1.5), labelled as \(Vc_l(Vc_h)\), respectively (the lowest values chosen are those for which H6 is still working).
In Fig. 8 a comparison is shown for the pseudorapidity \(\eta \) of the first two highest \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) jets. Within the variation of the parameters, the prediction of MCatNLO+CAS3 agrees well with the one of MCatNLO+H6, justifying the application of the Pythia6 final state parton shower algorithm.
Next we investigate the contribution of PB-TMD PDFs and the PB-TMD parton shower in the initial state and compare the predictions with the ones from H6. We study Z production generated by MadGraph5_aMC@NLO which is essentially driven by initial state radiation. In Fig. 9 we show the transverse momentum of the Z boson, its rapidity distribution and the transverse momentum of the first reconstructed jet with \(p_{\mathrm{T}}> 30\) GeV and \(|\eta | < 5 \). Here the rapidity y of the Z boson is used, since it is related to the momentum fractions of the initial partons (instead of the pseudorapidity \(\eta \) which is used for jets as it is related to the scattering angle \(\theta \)). We show a comparison of MCatNLO+CAS3 and MCatNLO+H6 predictions (including the same parameter variations for H6 as for the final state shower). In the region of low transverse momentum of the Z boson one can clearly see the sensitivity to the parameter choice in H6.
While at low \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) the parton shower matters, and the CAS3 prediction lies in between the ones from H6 with parameter variation, we observe good matching of the parton shower to the real emission at higher transverse momentum. The rapidity distribution obtained from CAS3 also lies within the one predicted by H6 with parameter variation. The \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) distribution of the first jet also agrees well within the band given by the uncertainties.
Finally we investigate \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet events, when both initial and final state radiation is important. In Fig. 10 we show a comparison of MCatNLO+CAS3 and MCatNLO+H6 predictions (including the same parameter variations for H6 as for the final state shower) for the transverse momentum of the first two highest \(p_{\mathrm{T}}\) jets. In Fig. 11 the corresponding comparison is shown for the pseudorapidity distributions. The transverse momentum distributions agree well within the uncertainties coming from parameter variations, while for the \(\eta \)-distributions some differences in the very forward/backward regions are seen. However, one can see, that a variation of VQCUT,VGCUT has a significant effect especially in the forward/backward region.
In conclusion, we observe agreement between predictions obtained by MCatNLO+CAS3 and MCatNLO+H6 within the band of parton shower parameter variation in H6, confirming the use of H6 subtraction terms in MCatNLO together with PB - TMD PDFs, and PB - TMD initial state parton shower, as applied in MCatNLO+CAS3.
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Yang, H., Bermudez Martinez, A., Estevez Banos, L.I. et al. Back-to-back azimuthal correlations in \(\mathrm {Z} +\)jet events at high transverse momentum in the TMD parton branching method at next-to-leading order. Eur. Phys. J. C 82, 755 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-022-10715-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-022-10715-0