7,940 research outputs found
Medium information from anisotropic flow and jet quenching in relativistic heavy ion collisions
Within a multiphase transport (AMPT) model, where the initial conditions are
obtained from the recently updated HIJING 2.0 model, the recent anisotropic
flow and suppression data for charged hadrons in Pb+Pb collisions at the LHC
center of mass energy of 2.76 TeV are explored to constrain the properties of
the partonic medium formed. In contrast to RHIC, the measured centrality
dependence of charged hadron multiplicity dN_ch/deta at LHC provides severe
constraint to the largely uncertain gluon shadowing parameter s_g. We find
final-state parton scatterings reduce considerably hadron yield at midrapidity
and enforces a smaller s_g to be consistent with dN_ch/deta data at LHC. With
the parton shadowing so constrained, hadron production and flow over a wide
transverse momenta range are investigated in AMPT. The model calculations for
the elliptic and triangular flow are found to be in excellent agreement with
the RHIC data, and predictions for the flow coefficients v_n(p_T, cent) at LHC
are given. The magnitude and pattern of suppression of the hadrons in AMPT are
found consistent with the measurements at RHIC. However, the suppression is
distinctly overpredicted in Pb+Pb collisions at the LHC energy. Reduction of
the QCD coupling constant alpha_s by ~30% in the higher temperature plasma
formed at LHC reproduces the measured hadron suppression.Comment: Talk given by Subrata Pal 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
Silicon Pad Detectors for the PHOBOS Experiment at RHIC
The PHOBOS experiment is well positioned to obtain crucial information about
relativistic heavy ion collisions at RHIC, combining a multiplicity counter
with a multi-particle spectrometer. The multiplicity arrays will measure the
charged particle multiplicity over the full solid angle. The spectrometer will
be able to identify particles at mid-rapidity. The experiment is constructed
almost exclusively of silicon pad detectors. Detectors of nine different types
are configured in the multiplicity and vertex detector (22,000 channels) and
two multi-particle spectrometers (120,000 channels). The overall layout of the
experiment, testing of the silicon sensors and the performance of the detectors
during the engineering run at RHIC in 1999 are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, Late
Is Strangeness still interesting at RHIC ?
With the advent of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven
National Laboratory (BNL), Heavy Ion Physics will enter a new energy regime.
The question is whether the signatures proposed for the discovery of a phase
transition from hadronic matter to a Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP), that were
established on the basis of collisions at the BEVALAC, the AGS, and the SPS,
respectively, are still useful and detectable at these high incident energies.
In the past two decades, measurements related to strangeness formation in the
collision were advocated as potential signatures and were tested in numerous
fixed target experiments at the AGS and the SPS. In this article I will review
the capabilities of the RHIC detectors to measure various aspects of
strangeness, and I will try to answer the question whether the information
content of those measurements is comparable to the one at lower energies.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, Invited Talk at the IV International Conference
on Strangeness in Quark Matter, Padova (Italy), July 20-24, 199
Run 2 Upgrades to the CMS Level-1 Calorimeter Trigger
The CMS Level-1 calorimeter trigger is being upgraded in two stages to
maintain performance as the LHC increases pile-up and instantaneous luminosity
in its second run. In the first stage, improved algorithms including
event-by-event pile-up corrections are used. New algorithms for heavy ion
running have also been developed. In the second stage, higher granularity
inputs and a time-multiplexed approach allow for improved position and energy
resolution. Data processing in both stages of the upgrade is performed with
new, Xilinx Virtex-7 based AMC cards.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Report of the LHC Computing Grid Project. RTAG 12: Collaborative Tools
This document is the final report of the LHC Computing Grid (LCG) Project's Requirements and Technical Assessment Group (RTAG 12) on Collaborative Tools. It presents a summary of the requirements of the LHC collaborations for Collaborative Tools, assesses the current status of those tools in common use, discusses likely relevant future development, and provides recommendations for action by the LCG, the collaborations, and CERN for the immediate and long-term future. The requirements and assessments were assembled from formal and informal interactions between members of the RTAG, representatives of the LHC collaborations, CERN IT, and experts in the field of Collaborative Tools
Latest Results from PHOBOS
This manuscript contains a summary of the latest physics results from PHOBOS,
as reported at Quark Matter 2006. Highlights include the first measurement from
PHOBOS of dynamical elliptic flow fluctuations as well as an explanation of
their possible origin, two-particle correlations, identified particle ratios,
identified particle spectra and the latest results in global charged particle
production.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, PHOBOS plenary proceedings for Quark Matter 200
Quenching and Tomography from RHIC to LHC
We compare fully perturbative and fully nonperturbative pictures of high-pT
energy loss calculations to the first results from LHC. While over-suppressed
compared to published ALICE data, parameter-free pQCD predictions based on the
WHDG energy loss model constrained to RHIC data simultaneously describe well
the preliminary CMS hadron suppression, ATLAS charged hadron v2, and ALICE D
meson suppression; we also provide for future reference WHDG predictions for B
meson RAA. However, energy loss calculations based on AdS/CFT also
qualitatively describe well the RHIC pion and non-photonic electron suppression
and LHC charged hadron suppression. We propose the double ratio of charm to
bottom quark RAA will qualitatively distinguish between these two energy loss
pictures.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Proceedings for Quark Matter 201
Signatures of Quark-Gluon-Plasma formation in high energy heavy-ion collisions: A critical review
A critical review on signatures of Quark-Gluon-Plasma formation is given and
the current (1998) experimental status is discussed. After giving an
introduction to the properties of QCD matter in both, equilibrium- and
non-equilibrium theories, we focus on observables which may yield experimental
evidence for QGP formation. For each individual observable the discussion is
divided into three sections: first the connection between the respective
observable and QGP formation in terms of the underlying theoretical concepts is
given, then the relevant experimental results are reviewed and finally the
current status concerning the interpretation of both, theory and experiment, is
discussed. A comprehensive summary including an outlook towards RHIC is given
in the final section.Comment: Topical review, submitted to Journal of Physics G: 68 pages,
including 39 figures (revised version: only minor modifications, some
references added
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