24 research outputs found
Measurements of second-harmonic Fourier coefficients from azimuthal anisotropies in p+p, p+Au, d+Au, and He 3 +Au collisions at sNN =200 GeV
Recently, the PHENIX Collaboration has published second- and third-harmonic Fourier coefficients v2 and v3 for midrapidity (|η
Measurement of φ -meson production in Cu+Au collisions at sNN =200 GeV and U+ U collisions at sNN =193 GeV
The PHENIX experiment reports systematic measurements at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider of φ-meson production in asymmetric Cu+Au collisions at sNN=200GeV and in U+U collisions at sNN=193GeV. Measurements were performed via the φ→K+K- decay channel at midrapidity |η
Disentangling centrality bias and final-state effects in the production of high- using direct in Au collisions at GeV
International audiencePHENIX presents a simultaneous measurement of the production of direct and in Au collisions at GeV over a range of 7.5 to 18 GeV/ for different event samples selected by event activity, i.e. charged-particle multiplicity detected at forward rapidity. Direct-photon yields are used to empirically estimate the contribution of hard-scattering processes in the different event samples. Using this estimate, the average nuclear-modification factor is , consistent with unity for minimum-bias (MB) Au events. For event classes with moderate event activity, is consistent with the MB value within 5% uncertainty. These results confirm that the previously observed enhancement of high- production found in small-system collisions with low event activity is a result of a bias in interpreting event activity within the Glauber framework. In contrast, for the top 5% of events with the highest event activity, is suppressed by 20% relative to the MB value with a significance of , which may be due to final-state effects
Transverse single-spin asymmetry of midrapidity and mesons in +Au and +Al collisions at 200 GeV
International audiencePresented are the first measurements of the transverse single-spin asymmetries () for neutral pions and eta mesons in +Au and +Al collisions at GeV in the pseudorapidity range 0.35 with the PHENIX detector at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. The asymmetries are consistent with zero, similar to those for midrapidity neutral pions and eta mesons produced in + collisions. These measurements show no evidence of additional effects that could potentially arise from the more complex partonic environment present in proton-nucleus collisions
Transverse single-spin asymmetry of charged hadrons at forward and backward rapidity in polarized +, +Al, and +Au collisions at GeV
International audienceReported here are transverse single-spin asymmetries () in the production of charged hadrons as a function of transverse momentum () and Feynman- () in polarized +, +Al, and +Au collisions at GeV. The measurements have been performed at forward and backward rapidity () in + collisions, whereas the +Al and +Au results show smaller asymmetries. This finding provides new opportunities to investigate the origin of transverse single-spin asymmetries and a tool to study nuclear effects in + collisions
Multiplicity dependent and production at forward and backward rapidity in collisions at GeV
International audienceThe and charmonium states, composed of quark pairs and known since the 1970s, are widely believed to serve as ideal probes to test quantum chromodynamics in high-energy hadronic interactions. However, there is not yet a complete understanding of the charmonium-production mechanism. Recent measurements of production as a function of event charged-particle multiplicity at the collision energies of both the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) show enhanced production yields with increasing multiplicity. One potential explanation for this type of dependence is multiparton interactions (MPI). We carry out the first measurements of self-normalized yields and the to ratio at both forward and backward rapidities as a function of self-normalized charged-particle multiplicity in collisions at GeV. In addition, detailed {\sc pythia} studies tuned to RHIC energies were performed to investigate the MPI impacts. We find that the PHENIX data at RHIC are consistent with recent LHC measurements and can only be described by {\sc pythia} calculations that include MPI effects. The forward and backward to ratio, which serves as a unique and powerful approach to study final-state effects on charmonium production, is found to be less dependent on the charged-particle multiplicity
Measurement of elliptic flow of J in GeV AuAu collisions at forward rapidity
International audienceWe report the first measurement of the azimuthal anisotropy of J at forward rapidity () in AuAu collisions at GeV at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. The data were collected by the PHENIX experiment in 2014 and 2016 with integrated luminosity of 14.5~nb. The second Fourier coefficient () of the azimuthal distribution of is determined as a function of the transverse momentum () using the event-plane method. The measurements were performed for several selections of collision centrality: 0%--50%, 10%--60%, and 10%-40%. We find that in all cases the values of , which quantify the elliptic flow of J, are consistent with zero. The results are consistent with measurements at midrapidity, indicating no significant elliptic flow of the J within the quark-gluon-plasma medium at collision energies of GeV
Measurements at forward rapidity of elliptic flow of charged hadrons and open-heavy-flavor muons in AuAu collisions at GeV
International audienceWe present the first forward-rapidity measurements of elliptic anisotropy of open-heavy-flavor muons at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. The measurements are based on data samples of AuAu collisions at GeV collected by the PHENIX experiment in 2014 and 2016 with integrated luminosity of 14.5~nb. The measurements are performed in the pseudorapidity range and cover transverse momenta ~GeV/. The elliptic flow of charged hadrons as a function of transverse momentum is also measured in the same kinematic range. We observe significant elliptic flow for both charged hadrons and heavy-flavor muons. The results show clear mass ordering of elliptic flow of light- and heavy-flavor particles. The magnitude of the measured is comparable to that in the midrapidity region. This indicates that there is no strong longitudinal dependence in the quark-gluon-plasma evolution between midrapidity and the rapidity range of this measurement at ~GeV
Centrality dependence of Lévy-stable two-pion Bose-Einstein correlations in GeV AuAu collisions
International audienceThe PHENIX experiment measured the centrality dependence of two-pion Bose-Einstein correlation functions in ~GeV AuAu collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The data are well represented by Lévy-stable source distributions. The extracted source parameters are the correlation-strength parameter , the Lévy index of stability , and the Lévy-scale parameter as a function of transverse mass and centrality. The parameter is constant at larger values of , but decreases as decreases. The Lévy scale parameter decreases with and exhibits proportionality to the length scale of the nuclear overlap region. The Lévy exponent is independent of within uncertainties in each investigated centrality bin, but shows a clear centrality dependence. At all centralities, the Lévy exponent is significantly different from that of Gaussian () or Cauchy () source distributions. Comparisons to the predictions of Monte-Carlo simulations of resonance-decay chains show that in all but the most peripheral centrality class (50%-60%), the obtained results are inconsistent with the measurements, unless a significant reduction of the in-medium mass of the meson is included. In each centrality class, the best value of the in-medium mass is compared to the mass of the meson, as well as to several theoretical predictions that consider restoration of symmetry in hot hadronic matter
Centrality dependence of Lévy-stable two-pion Bose-Einstein correlations in GeV AuAu collisions
International audienceThe PHENIX experiment measured the centrality dependence of two-pion Bose-Einstein correlation functions in ~GeV AuAu collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The data are well represented by Lévy-stable source distributions. The extracted source parameters are the correlation-strength parameter , the Lévy index of stability , and the Lévy-scale parameter as a function of transverse mass and centrality. The parameter is constant at larger values of , but decreases as decreases. The Lévy scale parameter decreases with and exhibits proportionality to the length scale of the nuclear overlap region. The Lévy exponent is independent of within uncertainties in each investigated centrality bin, but shows a clear centrality dependence. At all centralities, the Lévy exponent is significantly different from that of Gaussian () or Cauchy () source distributions. Comparisons to the predictions of Monte-Carlo simulations of resonance-decay chains show that in all but the most peripheral centrality class (50%-60%), the obtained results are inconsistent with the measurements, unless a significant reduction of the in-medium mass of the meson is included. In each centrality class, the best value of the in-medium mass is compared to the mass of the meson, as well as to several theoretical predictions that consider restoration of symmetry in hot hadronic matter