Measurement of the jet width in gamma gamma collisions and in e+ e- annihilation process at TRISTAN

The TOPAZ collaboration Adachi, K. ; Hayashii, H. ; Miyabayashi, K. ; et al.
Phys.Lett.B 451 (1999) 256-266, 1999.
Inspire Record 494502 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.43768

The shape of jets produced in (quasi-) real photon-photon collisions as well as in e^+e^- annihilation process has been studied with a cone jet finding algorithm, using the data taken with the TOPAZ detector at the TRISTAN e^+e^- collider at an average center-of-mass energy of 58 GeV. The results are presented in terms of the jet width as a function of the jet transverse energy(E^{jet}_T) as well as a scaled transverse jet energy, x_T(=2E^{jet}_T/root(s)). The jet width narrows as E^{jet}_T increases; however, at the same value of E^{jet}_T the jet width in gamma-gamma collisions at TRISTAN is significantly narrower than that in gamma p collisions at HERA. By comparing our results with the data in other reactions, it has been shown that the jet width in gamma-gamma, gamma p, p\bar{p} collisions as well as the e^+e^- annihilation process has an approximate scaling behavior as a function of x_T.

2 data tables

The jet width is defined as the full width at the half maximum of the distribution of the transverse energy flow.

The jet width is defined as the full width at the half maximum of the distribution of the transverse energy flow.