Low-virtuality photon transitions γ* f f and the photon-to-jet conversion function
Abstract
The calculation of electroweak corrections to processes with jets in the final state involves contributions of low-virtuality photons leading to jets in the final state via the singular splitting γ* q q. These singularities can be absorbed into a photon-to-jet "fragmentation function", better called "conversion function", since the physical final state is any hadronic activity rather than an identified hadron. Using unitarity and a dispersion relation, we relate this γ* q q conversion contribution to an integral over the imaginary part of the hadronic vacuum polarization and thus to the experimentally known quantity α(5)had(M2 Z). Therefore no unknown non-perturbative contribution remains that has to be taken from experiment. We also describe practical procedures following subtraction and phase-space-slicing approaches for isolating and cancelling the γ* q q singularities against the photon-to-jet conversion function. The production of Z+jet at the LHC is considered as an example, where the photon-to-jet conversion is part of a correction of the order α2/α s relative to the leading-order cross section.
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