High Energy Gluons in Events Containing a Quark-Antiquark Pair


Gluons are the particles responsible for holding the quarks together inside the proton, neutron and other hadrons.

Remember the diagram we used to represent qqg events:

A high energy gluon can be radiated from either the quark or the antiquark as shown in the following diagram:


Notice this diagram looks quite similar to that for the radiation of a photon from a quark, which we looked at in the previous section. Unlike a photon we do not observe the gluon directly in our detector. Instead the gluon produces a shower (or "jet") of particles, just like a quark, and it is this jet of particles we observe in our detector.

The presence of a gluon in addition to a quark-antiquark pair produces an event containing three jets: Here is an example event:


Example qqg Event No. 1

End-On View of Event

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Side View of Event

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If two high energy gluons are radiated then we may see events with four jets: qqg.

Notice that such events can start to look very much like the WW (four quark) events we looked at in an earlier section! Sometimes it is impossible to say if a particular event belongs to one type or the other.


(next event) "four fermion" event examples

(challenge) Identifying Slightly More Complicated Types of Event


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