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  <titleInfo>
    <title>Minimum-bias angular and trigger-associated correlations from 200 GeV p-p collisions: jets, flows, centrality, and the underlying event</title>
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    <title>Proceedings of the XLIII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics</title>
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    <namePart>Prindle, D.</namePart>
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  <name>
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    <namePart>Chekanov, Sergei</namePart>
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  <name>
    <role>
      <roleTerm type="text" authority="marcrelator" authorityURI="http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators" valueURI="http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edt">editor</roleTerm>
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    <namePart>Sullivan, Zack</namePart>
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  <abstract>The mechanisms leading to the hadronic final state of high-energy proton-proton collisions remain an unresolved issue at the RHIC and LHC. A substantial contribution to the hadronic final state from minimum-bias (MB) jets is dominated by non-perturbative processes and may provide the common base for any high-energy dijet. Observation of a same-side (on azimuth)“ridge” in LHC p-p collisions suggests to some that hydrodynamic flows may play a role in that small system at higher energies. The issue of p-p centrality vs triggered jets has emerged in the context of gluon trans- verse distributions in the proton inferred from DIS data. Attempts have been made to isolate and study the underlying event (UE) complementary to triggered dijets, and it is suggested that multiple parton interactions may contribute to the UE. Reference [1] considered theoretical and experimental results for UE systematics and p-p centrality in the context of a two-component (soft+hard) model derived from single-particle pt spectrum nch systematics. The study concluded that there may be a substantial contribution to the UE from the triggered dijet and that p-p centrality is not controlled significantly by a jet trigger condition (if p-p centrality is relevant at all). Further study of two-particle correlations in p-p collisions was called for, particularly the nch dependence of MB correlations. We report a comprehensive study of MB (no pt cuts) angular correlations and trigger-associated (TA) yt correlations (transverse rapidity yt = ln[(mt + pt)/mπ]) from 200 GeV p-p collisions. Angular correlations are characterized by 2D model fits that accurately distinguish among proton dissociation structure (soft), jet-related structure (hard) and a nonjet azimuth quadrupole. All angular correlations are simply represented by a (2+1)-component model. The hard and quadrupole component scale simply with the soft-component multiplicity ns, clarifying the role of centrality and the eikonal model in p-p collisions. 2D TA correlations project to a marginal 1D trigger spectrum that can be simply predicted from pt spec- trum nch dependence. 2D TA distributions can then be processed to reveal MB jet fragment (hard component) systematics comparable to measured fragmentation functions. Hard-component azimuth dependence relative to the trigger relates to UE studies. From TA analysis we can establish the kinematic limits of jet fragment production in p-p collisions.</abstract>
  <note type="provenance">Submitted by Alicia Esquivel (aesquivel@iit.edu) on 2018-06-28T20:54:41Z No. of bitstreams: 1 28_Prindle.pdf: 1337414 bytes, checksum: 2d96662a186096680822539eddfa9b6f (MD5)</note>
  <note type="provenance">Made available in DSpace on 2018-06-28T20:54:41Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 28_Prindle.pdf: 1337414 bytes, checksum: 2d96662a186096680822539eddfa9b6f (MD5) Previous issue date: 2013-09-15</note>
  <note type="funding">IIT College of Science, High Energy Physics Division of Argonne National Laboratory</note>
  <originInfo>
    <dateCreated keyDate="yes">2013-09-15</dateCreated>
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    <copyrightDate encoding="iso8601">2013</copyrightDate>
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    <dateIssued>2013-09-15</dateIssued>
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    <publisher>IIT Press</publisher>
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<relatedItem type="host"><titleInfo><title>http://hdl.handle.net/10560/4114</title></titleInfo>
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  <accessCondition type="useAndReproduction" displayLabel="rightsstatements.orgURI">http://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/</accessCondition>
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  <name type="corporate">
    <namePart>PHYS / Physics</namePart>
    <affiliation>Illinois Institute of Technology</affiliation>
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