Medium-induced gluon radiation is usually identified as the dominant dynamical mechanism underling the jet quenching phenomenon observed in heavy-ion collisions. In its actual implementation, multiple medium-induced gluon emissions are assumed to be independent, leading, in the eikonal approximation, to a Poisson distribution. Here, we introduce a medium term in the splitting probabilities so that both medium and vacuum contributions are included on the same footing in a DGLAP approach. The improvements include energy-momentum conservation at each individual splitting, medium-modified virtuality evolution and a coherent implementation of vacuum and medium splitting probabilities. Noticeably, the usual formalism is recovered when the virtuality and the energy of the parton are very large. This leads to a similar description of the suppression observed in heavy-ion collisions with values of the transport coefficient of the same order as those obtained using the quenching weights.
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CITATION STYLE
Armesto, N., Cunqueiro, L., Salgado, C. A., & Xiang, W. C. (2008). Medium-evolved fragmentation functions. Journal of High Energy Physics, 2008(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/1126-6708/2008/02/048