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High Energy Physics Seminar

Monday, February 25, 2019
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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Lauritsen 469
The Entropy of QCD scattering processes
Duff Neill, LANL,

Scattering in QCD presents a conundrum: at the hard scattering region,
we can have unitary quantum mechanical evolution of a pure state.
However, the distribution of radiation observed in the final state
often obeys a semi-classical probability distribution. Typically, such
collapse of unitary evolution is explained in terms of decoherence by
an environment coupled to the observed system. However, in a system
like e^+e^- --> hadrons, there is no clear candidate for an external
bath. I will explain how soft radiation induced in the scattering
creates the bath that decoheres the hard scattering degrees of
freedom, and how to calculate the (entanglement)-entropy between the
hard and soft degrees of freedom as a function of the boundary in
hilbert space between the two regions. We will see that the KLN
theorem is flipped on its head, instead of being a requirement for a
well-defined measurement, the KLN theorem should be thought of as a
dynamical process which precisely projects out the final states that
can be observed after decoherence. Time permitting, I will comment on
implications for jet substructure observables and machine learning, as
well as applications to the structure of the initial state in DIS.

For more information, please or visit http://theory.caltech.edu/people/carol/seminar.html.