4,286 research outputs found
Measurement of the nuclear modification factor of electrons from heavy-flavour decays at mid-rapidity in Pb-Pb collisions at = 2.76 TeV with ALICE
We present results on inclusive electrons for 1.5 6 GeV/
in {Pb-Pb} collisions at = 2.76 TeV measured with ALICE at
the LHC and compare these to a cocktail of background electron sources. The
excess of electrons beyond the cocktail at high momenta ({ 3.5
GeV/}) is attributed to electrons from heavy-flavour decays. The
corresponding nuclear modification factor indicates heavy-flavour suppression
by a factor of 1.5-4.Comment: 4 pages; 4 figures; QM 2011 proceeding
Measurement of heavy-flavor production in Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC with ALICE
A Large Ion Collider Experiment (ALICE) at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
has been built in order to study the Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) created in
high-energy nuclear collisions. As heavy-flavor quarks are produced at the
early stage of the collision, they serve as sensitive probes for the QGP. The
ALICE detector with its capabilities such as particle identification, secondary
vertexing and tracking in a high multiplicity environment can address, among
other measurements, the heavy-flavor sector in heavy-ion collisions. We present
latest results on the measurement of the nuclear modification factor of open
heavy-flavors as well as on the measurement of open heavy-flavor azimuthal
anisotropy v2 in Pb-Pb collisions at sqrt(s) = 2.76 TeV. Open charmed hadrons
are reconstructed in the hadronic decay channels D0->Kpi, D+->Kpipi, and
D*+->D0pi applying a secondary decay-vertex topology. Complementary
measurements are performed by detecting electrons (muons) from semi-leptonic
decays of open heavy-flavor hadrons in the central (forward) rapidity region.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. Talk given by Robert Grajcarek at the 11th
International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (NN2012), San Antonio,
Texas, USA, May 27-June 1, 2012. To appear in the NN2012 Proceedings in
Journal of Physics: Conference Series (JPCS
The histone H2AX does not inhibit resection of DNA double strand breaks induced by heavy ions
Heavy-flavour production in Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC, measured with the ALICE detector
We present the first results from the ALICE experiment on the nuclear
modification factors for heavy-flavour hadron production in Pb-Pb collisions at
sqrt{s_NN}=2.76 TeV. Using proton-proton and lead-lead collision samples at
sqrt{s}=7 TeV and sqrt{s_NN}=2.76 TeV, respectively, nuclear modification
factors R_AA(pt) were measured for D mesons at central rapidity (via displaced
decay vertex reconstruction), and for electrons and muons, at central and
forward rapidity, respectively.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, plenary talk at Quark Matter 2011, Annecy, Franc
Neutral Pions and Eta Mesons as Probes of the Hadronic Fireball in Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions around 1A GeV
Chemical and thermal freeze-out of the hadronic fireball formed in symmetric
collisions of light, intermediate-mass, and heavy nuclei at beam energies
between 0.8A GeV and 2.0A GeV are discussed in terms of an equilibrated,
isospin-symmetric ideal hadron gas with grand-canonical baryon-number
conservation. For each collision system the baryochemical potential mu_B and
the chemical freeze-out temperature T_c are deduced from the inclusive neutral
pion and eta yields which are augmented by interpolated data on deuteron
production. With increasing beam energy mu_B drops from 800 MeV to 650 MeV,
while T_c rises from 55 MeV to 90 MeV. For given beam energy mu_B grows with
system size, whereas T_c remains constant. The centrality dependence of the
freeze-out parameters is weak as exemplified by the system Au+Au at 0.8A GeV.
For the highest beam energies the fraction of nucleons excited to resonance
states reaches freeze-out values of nearly 15 %, suggesting resonance densities
close to normal nuclear density at maximum compression. In contrast to the
particle yields, which convey the status at chemical freeze-out, the shapes of
the related transverse-mass spectra do reflect thermal freeze-out. The observed
thermal freeze-out temperatures T_th are equal to or slightly lower than T_c,
indicative of nearly simultaneous chemical and thermal freeze-out.Comment: 42 pages, 12 figure
The statistical neuroanatomy of frontal networks in the macaque
We were interested in gaining insight into the functional properties of frontal networks based upon their anatomical inputs. We took a neuroinformatics approach, carrying out maximum likelihood hierarchical cluster analysis on 25 frontal cortical areas based upon their anatomical connections, with 68 input areas representing exterosensory, chemosensory, motor, limbic, and other frontal inputs. The analysis revealed a set of statistically robust clusters. We used these clusters to divide the frontal areas into 5 groups, including ventral-lateral, ventral-medial, dorsal-medial, dorsal-lateral, and caudal-orbital groups. Each of these groups was defined by a unique set of inputs. This organization provides insight into the differential roles of each group of areas and suggests a gradient by which orbital and ventral-medial areas may be responsible for decision-making processes based on emotion and primary reinforcers, and lateral frontal areas are more involved in integrating affective and rational information into a common framework
Medium Effects on Binary Collisions with the Delta Resonance
To facilitate the relativistic heavy-ion calculations based on transport
equations, the binary collisions involving a resonance in either the
entrance channel or the exit channel are investigated within a Hamiltonian
formulation of interactions. An averaging procedure is developed to
define a quasi-particle and to express the experimentally measured
cross section in terms of an effective cross section. In contrast to previous works, the main feature of
the present approach is that the mass and the momentum of the produced
's are calculated dynamically from the bare vertex interaction of the model Hamiltonian and are constrained by the
unitarity condition. The procedure is then extended to define the effective
cross sections for the experimentally inaccessible and reactions. The predicted cross
sections are significantly different from what are commonly assumed in
relativistic heavy-ion calculations. The potential in nuclear matter
has been calculated by using a Bruckner-Hartree-Fock approximation. By
including the mean-field effects on the propagation, the effective
cross sections of the , and reactions in nuclear matter are
predicted. It is demonstrated that the density dependence is most dramatic in
the energy region close to the pion production threshold.Comment: 20 pages, RevTe
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