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We here present an extension of the CKKW-L multi-jet merging technique to so-called sector showers as implemented in the Vincia antenna shower. The bijective nature of sector showers allows for efficient multi-jet merging at high multiplicities, as any given configuration possesses only a single history, while retaining the accuracy of the CKKW-L technique. Our method reduces the factorial scaling of the number of parton shower histories to a constant of a single history per colour-ordered final state. We show that the complexity of constructing shower histories is reduced to an effective linear scaling with the number of final-state particles. Moreover, we demonstrate that the overall event generation time and the memory footprint of our implementation remain approximately constant when including additional jets. We compare both to the conventional CKKW-L implementation in Pythia and gain a first estimate of renormalisation scale uncertainties at high merged multiplicities. As a proof of concept, we show parton-level predictions for vector boson production in proton-proton collisions with up to nine hard jets using the new implementation. Despite its much simpler nature, we dub the new technique MESS, in analogy to the conventional MEPS nomenclature.
We summarise the main features of VINCIAs antenna-based treatment of QCD initial- and final-state showers, which includes iterated tree-level matrix-element corrections and automated evaluations of perturbative shower uncertainties. The latter are co
We present algorithms that interleave photon radiation from the final state and the initial state with the QCD evolution in the antenna-based Vincia parton shower. One of the algorithms incorporates the complete soft and collinear structure associate
The theoretical description of the physics of multi-jets in hadronic collisions at high energies is based on merging methods, which combine short-timescale production of jets with long-timescale evolution of partonic showers. We point out potential i
We examine the robustness of collider phenomenology predictions for a dark sector scenario with QCD-like properties. Pair production of dark quarks at the LHC can result in a wide variety of signatures, depending on the details of the new physics mod
Hadrons have finite interaction size with dense material, a basic feature common to known forms of hadronic calorimeters (HCAL). We argue that substructure variables cannot use HCAL information to access the microscopic nature of jets much narrower t