3,074 research outputs found
High-pT pi0 Production with Respect to the Reaction Plane Using the PHENIX Detector at RHIC
The origin of the azimuthal anisotropy in particle yields at high pT (pT > 5
GeV/c) in RHIC collisions remains an intriguing puzzle. Traditional flow and
parton energy loss models have failed to completely explain the large v2
observed at high pT. Measurement of this parameter at high pT will help to gain
an understanding of the interplay between flow, recombination and energy loss,
and the role they play in the transition from soft to hard physics. Neutral
mesons measured in the PHENIX experiment provide an ideal observable for such
studies. We present recent measurements of \piz yields with respect to the
reaction plane, and discuss the impact current models have on our understanding
of these mechanisms.Comment: Contribnution to the proceedings of Hot Quarks 2006, 15-20 May 2006,
Villasimius, Sardini
Direct photons measured by the PHENIX experiment at RHIC
Results from the PHENIX experiment at RHIC on direct photon production in
p+p, d+Au, and Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 200 GeV are presented. In p+p
collisions, direct photon production at high p_T behaves as expected from
perturbative QCD calculations. The p+p measurement serves as a baseline for
direct photon production in Au+Au collisions. In d+Au collisions, no effects of
cold nuclear matter are found within the large uncertainty of the measurement.
In Au+Au collisions, the production of high p_T direct photons scales as
expected for particle production in hard scatterings. This supports jet
quenching models, which attribute the suppression of high p_T hadrons to the
energy loss of fast partons in the medium produced in the collision. Low p_T
direct photons, measured via e+e- pairs with small invariant mass, are possibly
related to the production of thermal direct photons.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the Hot Quarks 2006 Workshop for
young scientists on the physics of ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus
collisions, Villasimius, Sardinia, Italy, May 15--20, 200
Neutral Pions with Large Transverse Momentum in d+Au and Au+Au Collisions
Measurements of transverse-momentum p_T spectra of neutral pions in Au+Au and
d+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV and 62.4 GeV by the PHENIX experiment at
RHIC in comparison to p+p reference spectra at the same sqrt{s_NN} are
presented. In central Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV a factor 4-5
suppression for neutral pions and charged hadrons with p_T > 5 GeV/c is found
relative to the p+p reference scaled by the nuclear overlap function .
In contrast, such a suppression of high-p_T particles is absent in d+Au
collisions independent of the centrality of the collision. To study the
sqrt{s_NN} dependence of the suppression Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV
and 62.4 GeV are compared.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, presented at Hot Quarks 2004, Taos, N
Hard photon and neutral pion production in cold nuclear matter
The production of hard photons and neutral pions in 190 MeV proton induced
reactions on C, Ca, Ni, and W targets has been for the first time concurrently
studied. Angular distributions and energy spectra up to the kinematical limit
are discussed and the production cross-sections are presented. From the target
mass dependence of the cross-sections the propagation of pions through nuclear
matter is analyzed and the production mechanisms of hard photons and primordial
pions are derived. It is found that the production of subthreshold particles
proceeds mainly through first chance nucleon-nucleon collisions. For the most
energetic particles the mass scaling evidences the effect of multiple
collisions.Comment: submitted to Phys. Lett.
Thermal bremsstrahlung probing the thermodynamical state of multifragmenting systems
Inclusive and exclusive hard-photon (E 30 MeV) production in five
different heavy-ion reactions (Ar+Au, Ag, Ni,
C at 60{\it A} MeV and Xe+Sn at 50{\it A} MeV) has been
studied coupling the TAPS photon spectrometer with several charged-particle
multidetectors covering more than 80% of 4. The measured spectra, slope
parameters and source velocities as well as their target-dependence, confirm
the existence of thermal bremsstrahlung emission from secondary nucleon-nucleon
collisions that accounts for roughly 20% of the total hard-photon yield. The
thermal slopes are a direct measure of the temperature of the excited nuclear
systems produced during the reaction.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings CRIS 2000, 3rd Catania Relativistic
Ion Studies, "Phase Transitions in Strong Interactions: Status and
Perspectives", Acicastello, Italy, May 22-26, 2000 (to be published in Nuc.
Phys. A
Thermal Bremsstrahlung photons probing the nuclear caloric curve
Hard-photon (E 30 MeV) emission from second-chance
nucleon-nucleon Bremsstrahlung collisions in intermediate energy heavy-ion
reactions is studied employing a realistic thermal model. Photon spectra and
yields measured in several nucleus-nucleus reactions are consistent with an
emission from hot nuclear systems with temperatures 4 - 7 MeV. The
corresponding caloric curve in the region of excitation energies
3{\it A} - 8{\it A} MeV shows lower values of than
those expected for a Fermi fluid.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. To appear in Physics Letters
Transverse Spin at PHENIX: Results and Prospects
The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), as the world's first and only
polarized proton collider, offers a unique environment in which to study the
spin structure of the proton. In order to study the proton's transverse spin
structure, the PHENIX experiment at RHIC took data with transversely polarized
beams in 2001-02 and 2005, and it has plans for further running with transverse
polarization in 2006 and beyond. Results from early running as well as
prospective measurements for the future will be discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, presented at Transversity 2005, Como, Ital
Suppression of soft nuclear bremsstrahlung in proton-nucleus collisions
Photon energy spectra up to the kinematic limit have been measured in 190 MeV
proton reactions with light and heavy nuclei to investigate the influence of
the multiple-scattering process on the photon production. Relative to the
predictions of models based on a quasi-free production mechanism a strong
suppression of bremsstrahlung is observed in the low-energy region of the
photon spectrum. We attribute this effect to the interference of photon
amplitudes due to multiple scattering of nucleons in the nuclear medium.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
First results from RHIC-PHENIX
The PHENIX experiment consists of a large detector system located at the newly commissioned relativistic heavy ion collider (RHIC) at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. The primary goal of the PHENIX experiment is to look for signatures of the QCD prediction of a deconfined high-energy-density phase of nuclear matter quark gluon plasma. PHENIX started data taking for Au+Au collisions at √sNN=130 GeV in June 2000. The signals from the beam-beam counter (BBC) and zero degree calorimeter (ZDC) are used to determine the centrality of the collision. A Glauber model reproduces the ZDC spectrum reasonably well to determine the participants in a collision. Charged particle multiplicity distribution from the first PHENIX paper is compared with the other RHIC experiment and the CERN, SPS results. Transverse momentum of photons are measured in the electro-magnetic calorimeter (EMCal) and preliminary results are presented. Particle identification is made by a time of flight (TOF) detector and the results show clear separation of the charged hadrons from each other
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