1,753 research outputs found
Particle Production in Heavy Ion Collisions
The status of thermal model descriptions of particle production in heavy ion
collisions is presented. We discuss the formulation of statistical models with
different implementation of the conservation laws and indicate their
applicability in heavy ion and elementary particle collisions. We analyze
experimental data on hadronic abundances obtained in ultrarelativistic heavy
ion collisions, in a very broad energy range starting from RHIC/BNL ( A GeV), SPS/CERN ( A GeV) up to AGS/BNL ( A GeV) and SIS/GSI ( A GeV) to test equilibration
of the fireball created in the collision. We argue that the statistical
approach provides a very satisfactory description of experimental data covering
this wide energy range. Any deviations of the model predictions from the data
are indicated. We discuss the unified description of particle chemical
freeze--out and the excitation functions of different particle species. At SPS
and RHIC energy the relation of freeze--out parameters with the QCD phase
boundary is analyzed. Furthermore, the application of the extended statistical
model to quantitative understanding of open and hidden charm hadron yields is
considered.Comment: Invited review for Quark Gluon Plasma 3, eds. R. C. Hwa and Xin-Nian
Wang, World Scientific Publishin
The statistical model in Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC
We briefly review the predictions of the thermal model for hadron production
in comparison to latest data from RHIC and extrapolate the calculations to LHC
energy. Our main emphasis is to confront the model predictions with the
recently released data from ALICE at the LHC. This comparison reveals an
apparent anomaly for protons and anti-protons which we discuss briefly. We also
demonstrate that our statistical hadronization predictions for J/
production agree very well with the most recent LHC data, lending support to
the picture in which there is complete charmonium melting in the quark-gluon
plasma (QGP) followed by statistical generation of J/ mesons at the phase
boundary.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, proceedings of QM201
Confronting LHC data with the statistical hadronization model
The most recent data from the CERN LHC are compared with calculations within
the statistical hadronization model. The parameters temperature und baryon
chemical potential are fitted to the data. The best fit yields a temperature of
156 MeV, slightly below the expectation from RHIC data. Proton yields are
nearly three standard deviations below this fit and possible reasons are
discussed.Comment: Proceedings of Strange Quark Matter 2013 Conference, to be published
in J. Phys.
The thermal model on the verge of the ultimate test: particle production in Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC
We investigate the production of hadrons in nuclear collisions within the
framework of the thermal (or statistical hadronization) model. We discuss both
the ligh-quark hadrons as well as charmonium and provide predictions for the
LHC energy. Even as its exact magnitude is dependent on the charm production
cross section, not yet measured in Pb-Pb collisions, we can confidently predict
that at the LHC the nuclear modification factor of charmonium as a function of
centrality is larger than that observed at RHIC and compare the experimental
results to these predictions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; proceedings of QM201
Heavy quark(onium) at LHC: the statistical hadronization case
We discuss the production of charmonium in nuclear collisions within the
framework of the statistical hadronization model. We demonstrate that the model
reproduces very well the availble data at RHIC. We provide predictions for the
LHC energy where, dependently on the charm production cross section, a
dramatically different behaviour of charmonium production as a function of
centrality might be expected. We discuss also the case in elementary
collisions, where clearly the statistical model does not reproduce the
measurements.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures; proceeding of SQM09, Buzios, Brazil, to be
published in J. Phys.
Statistical hadronization of charm at SPS, RHIC and LHC
We study the production of charmonia and charmed hadrons for nucleus-nucleus
collisions at SPS, RHIC, and LHC energies within the framework of the
statistical hadronization model. Results from this model are compared to the
observed centrality dependence of J/psi production at SPS energy. We further
provide predictions for the centrality dependence of the production of open and
hidden charm mesons at RHIC and LHC.Comment: Contribution to Quark Matter 2002, 4 pages, 3 figures; revised
version including charmed hyperons (omitted in v1
Hadron production in Au-Au collisions at RHIC
We present an analysis of particle production yields measured in central
Au-Au collisions at RHIC in the framework of the statistical thermal model. We
demonstrate that the model extrapolated from previous analyses at SPS and AGS
energy is in good agreement with the available experimental data at GeV implying a high degree of chemical equilibration. Performing a
fit to the data, the range of thermal parameters at chemical freezeout
is determined. At present, the best agreement of the model and the data is
obtained with the baryon chemical potential MeV and
temperature MeV. More ratios, such as multistrange baryon to
meson, would be required to further constrain the chemical freezeout
conditions. Extrapolating thermal parameters to higher energy, the predictions
of the model for particle production in Au-Au reactions at GeV
are also given.Comment: Final version, minor changes to text and figures. To appear in Phys.
Lett.
Statistical hadronization of charm: from FAIR to the LHC
We discuss the production of charmonium in nuclear collisions within the
framework of the statistical hadronization model. We demonstrate that the model
reproduces very well the availble data at RHIC. We provide predictions for the
LHC energy where, dependently on the charm production cross section, a
dramatically different behaviour of charmonium production as a function of
centrality might be expected. We extend our predictions for charm production
towards the threshold energies, where charm is expected to be measured at the
future FAIR facility.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; proceedings of QM200
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