298 research outputs found

    Pion femtoscopy measurements in ALICE at the LHC

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    We present the results of two-pion Bose-Einstein correlations measured in Pb--Pb collisions at a center-of-mass energy sqrt(s_NN) = 2.76 TeV recorded by ALICE at the Large Hadron Collider. These types of correlations allow to extract, using the technique of femtoscopy (also known as Hanburry-Brown Twiss interferometry, or shortly HBT), the space-time characteristics of the source from the correlation calculated as a function of the pair momentum difference. The femtoscopic analysis was performed using both the Spherical Harmonics decomposition and the standard 3D Cartesian representation of the correlation function. The source sizes in three dimensions, the HBT radii, were extracted by fitting the experimental correlation functions. The resulting dependencies of the radii as a function of centrality and pair transverse momentum are shown. The results indicate the existence of a flowing medium and provide constraints on existing dynamical models. The ALICE Pb-Pb HBT radii are also compared to the pp analysis and other heavy-ion experiments in order to test the multiplicity scaling between different systems.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to the European Physical Journal: Web of Conferences (proceedings of ICNFP 2013 conference

    Studies of final state interactions via femtoscopy in ALICE

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    Femtoscopy is a technique enabling measurements of the space-time characteristics of particle-emitting sources. However, the femtoscopic analysis is also sensitive to the interaction cross-section. In this paper we show the first preliminary measurements of KS0K±\rm K^0_SK^{\pm} correlation functions in Pb-Pb collisions at sNN=5.02\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}}=5.02 TeV. These correlations originate from the final-state interactions which proceed through the a0(980)a_0(980) resonance only and can be employed to constrain its parameters. A similar approach can be applied to baryon pairs to extract the unknown interaction cross-sections for some (anti-)baryon-(anti-)baryon pairs. We show baryon--baryon and baryon--anti-baryon correlation functions of protons and lambdas, as well as discuss shortly the fitting method.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, proceedings from Strangeness in Quark Matter 2016 conferenc

    Soft QGP probes with ALICE

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    In heavy-ion collisions at the LHC a hot and dense medium of deconfided partons, the Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP), is created. Its global properties can be characterized by the measurements of particles in the low transverse momentum (or "soft") regime, which represent the majority of created particles. In this report we outline a selection of measurements of the soft probes by the ALICE experiment in pp, p--Pb, and Pb--Pb collisions. The paper focuses on recent flow measurements via angular correlations and femtoscopic studies. The first ever preliminary analysis of KS0K±\mathrm{K}^0_{\rm S}\mathrm{K}^{\pm} femtoscopy is also presented.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, proceedings of Cracow Epiphany Conference on the Physics in LHC Run

    New developments for ALICE MasterClasses and the new Particle Therapy MasterClass

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    International MasterClasses (IMC), an outreach activity of the International Particle Physics Outreach Group (IPPOG), has been bringing cutting-edge particle physics research to schoolchildren for over 15 years now. All four LHC experiments participate in the event, including ALICE, the experiment optimised for the study of heavy-ion collisions. Heavy-ion physics is actively contributing to IMC with new developments including experimental measurements but also applications for society, such as treatment of cancer with ions. In particular, ALICE provides three MC measurements related to the main observables used to characterize the properties of the produced Quark-Gluon Plasma. Historically, those MC measurements were developed independently, inheriting from the first one, by several ALICE groups. Since all of them are based on the ROOT EVE package, a project to integrate them into a common framework was undertaken. ALICE delivers now a single and easy-to-use application, compiled under Linux, MacOS, and, for the first time, Windows. Then, in line with current IPPOG goals to increase the global reach and scope of the IMC programme a newly developed measurement on medical applications of particle physics, the Particle Therapy MasterClass (PTMC) was introduced in the IMC2020 programme. It is a simplified version of matRad, a MATLAB-based toolkit for calculation of dose deposition in the body and allows for planning of radiotherapy using different modalities and highlighting the benefits of treatment with ions.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, proceedings of the 24th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP 2019

    GPU propagation and visualisation of particle collisions with ALICE magnetic field model

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    The ALICE Collaboration at CERN developed a 3D visualisation tool capable of displaying a representation of collected collision data (particle trajectories, clusters and calorimeter towers) called the Event Display. The Event Display is constantly running in the ALICE Run Control Center as part of the Quality Assurance system, providing the monitoring personnel with visual cues about possible problems of both hardware and software components during periods of data gathering. In the software, particle trajectories (which are curved due to presence of magnetic field inside the detector) are generated from physical parameters of detected particles, such as electrical charge and momentum. Previously this process in the Event Display used a uniform, constant magnetic field for these calculations, which differs from the spatial variations of the real magnetic field and does not model one of the two magnets used in the detector. Recently, a detailed model of ALICE magnetic field was made available as a shader program for execution on the GPU. In this work we attempt to implement the reconstruction algorithm in a shader form as well, allowing us to combine it with the detailed model to create a full solution for rendering trajectories from collision event data directly on the GPU. This approach has several possible advantages, such as better performance and the ability to alter the magnetic field properties in real-time. This was not previously done for ALICE and as such could be used in the future to upgrade the Event Display

    Particle identification with machine learning in ALICE Run 3

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    The main focus of the ALICE experiment, quark--gluon plasma measurements, requires accurate particle identification (PID). The ALICE subdetectors allow identifying particles over a broad momentum interval ranging from about 100 MeV/c up to 20 GeV/c. However, a machine learning (ML) model can explore more detector information. During LHC Run 2, preliminary studies with Random Forests obtained much higher efficiencies and purities for selected particles than standard techniques. For Run 3, we investigate Domain Adaptation Neural Networks that account for the discrepancies between the Monte Carlo simulations and the experimental data. Preliminary studies show that domain adaptation improves particle classification. Moreover, the solution is extended with Feature Set Embedding and attention to give the network more flexibility to train on data with various sets of detector signals. PID ML is already integrated with the ALICE Run 3 Analysis Framework. Preliminary results for the PID of selected particle species, including real-world analyzes, are discussed as well as the possible optimizations.Comment: Proceedings of the 26th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP 2023) in Norfolk, Virginia, USA, 8-12 May, 202

    Centrality evolution of the charged-particle pseudorapidity density over a broad pseudorapidity range in Pb-Pb collisions at root s(NN)=2.76TeV

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    Femtoscopy of proton-proton collisions at the LHC with the ALICE experiment

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    We present the results on two-particle Bose-Einstein correlations measured in proton-proton collisions at center of mass energies of sqrt{s}=0.9 TeV, sqrt{s}=2.76 TeV and sqrt{s}=7 TeV registered by the ALICE experiment at the Large Hadron Collider. Detailed analysis reveals that the three dimensional experimental correlation functions do not have Gaussian shape in two dimensions. We found that they are better described by an exponential functional form in the outward and longitudinal directions, while the sideward remains a Gaussian. This is interpreted as a result of a significant contribution of strongly decaying resonances to the shape of the emission region
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