The QCD (Quantum Chromodynamics) of the hadronization process are not yet fully understood, but are modeled and parameterized in a number of phenomenological studies, including the
Lund string model and in various long-range
QCD approximation schemes. The tight cone of particles created by the hadronization of a single
quark is called a
jet. In
particle detectors, jets are observed rather than quarks, whose existence must be inferred. The models and approximation schemes and their predicted jet hadronization, or
fragmentation, have been extensively compared with measurement in a number of high energy
particle physics experiments, e.g.
TASSO,
OPAL and
H1. Hadronization can be explored using
Monte Carlo simulation. After the
particle shower has terminated,
partons with virtualities (how far
off shell the
virtual particles are) on the order of the cut-off scale remain. From this point on, the parton is in the low
momentum transfer, long-distance regime in which
non-perturbative effects become important. The most dominant of these effects is hadronization, which converts partons into observable hadrons. No exact theory for hadronization is known but there are two successful models for parameterization. These models are used within
event generators which simulate particle physics events. The scale at which
partons are given to the hadronization is fixed by the shower Monte Carlo component of the event generator. Hadronization models typically start at some predefined scale of their own. This can cause significant issue if not set up properly within the Shower Monte Carlo. Common choices of shower Monte Carlo are
PYTHIA and HERWIG. Each of these correspond to one of the two parameterization models. ==The top quark does not hadronize==