9,935 research outputs found

    Elliptic Flow Measurements with the PHENIX Detector

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    Two particle azimuthal correlation functions are presented for charged hadrons produced in Au+Au collisions at RHIC (sNN=130\sqrt{s_{_{NN}}}=130 GeV). The measurements allow for the determination of elliptic flow without event-by-event estimation of the reaction plane. The measured correlation functions indicate elliptic flow values (v2v_2) which show significant sensitivity to both the collision centrality and the transverse momenta of emitted hadrons.Comment: Contribution to Quark Matter 2001, Long Island, New York, January 15-20, 200

    Recent results for source function imaging from AGS through CERN SPS to RHIC

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    Recent femtoscopic measurements involving the use of an imaging technique and a newly developed moment analysis are presented and discussed. We show that this new paradigm allows robust investigation of reaction dynamics for which the sound speed cs≠0c_s \neq 0 during an extended hadronization period. Source functions extracted for charged pions produced in Au+Au and Pb+Pb collisions show non-Gaussian tails for a broad selection of collision energies. The ratio of the RMS radii of these source functions in the out and side directions are found to be greater than 1, suggesting a finite emission time for pions.Comment: Proceedings, XXXVI International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics/Workshop on Particle Correlations and Femtoscopy, Brazil, 200

    Azimuth quadrupole component spectra on transverse rapidity yt{\bf y_t} for identified hadrons from Au-Au collisions at sNN=\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 200 GeV

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    I present the first isolation of azimuth quadrupole components from published v2(pt)v_2(p_t) data (called elliptic flow) as spectra on transverse rapidity yty_t for identified pions, kaons and lambdas/protons from minimum-bias Au-Au collisions at 200 GeV. The form of the spectra on yty_t indicates that the three hadron species are emitted from a common boosted source with boost Δyt0∼0.6\Delta y_{t0} \sim 0.6. The quadrupole spectra have a L\'evy form similar to the soft component of the single-particle spectrum, but with significantly reduced (∼0.7×\sim 0.7\times) slope parameters TT. Comparison of quadrupole spectra with single-particle spectra suggests that the quadrupole component comprises a small fraction (<5< 5%) of the total hadron yield, contradicting the hydrodynamic picture of a thermalized, flowing bulk medium. The form of v2(pt)v_2(p_t) is, within a constant factor, the product of pt′p'_t (ptp_t in the boost frame) times the ratio of quadrupole spectrum to single-particle spectrum. That ratio in turn implies that above 0.5 GeV/c the form of v2(pt)v_2(p_t) is dominated by the hard component of the single-particle spectrum (interpreted as due to minijets). It is therefore unlikely that so-called {\em constituent-quark scaling} attributed to v2v_2 is relevant to soft hadron production mechanisms (e.g., chemical freezeout).Comment: 22 pages, 17 figure

    Event-by-event shape and flow fluctuations of relativistic heavy-ion collision fireballs

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    Heavy-ion collisions create deformed quark-gluon plasma (QGP) fireballs which explode anisotropically. The viscosity of the fireball matter determines its ability to convert the initial spatial deformation into momentum anisotropies that can be measured in the final hadron spectra. A quantitatively precise empirical extraction of the QGP viscosity thus requires a good understanding of the initial fireball deformation. This deformation fluctuates from event to event, and so does the finally observed momentum anisotropy. We present a harmonic decomposition of the initial fluctuations in shape and orientation of the fireball and perform event-by-event ideal fluid dynamical simulations to extract the resulting fluctuations in the magnitude and direction of the corresponding harmonic components of the final anisotropic flow at midrapidity. The final harmonic flow coefficients are found to depend non-linearly on the initial harmonic eccentricity coefficients. We show that, on average, initial density fluctuations suppress the buildup of elliptic flow relative to what one obtains from a smooth initial profile of the same eccentricity, and discuss implications for the phenomenological extraction of the QGP shear viscosity from experimental elliptic flow data.Comment: 22 pages, 17 figures. Relative to [v2], minor changes in text. Fig. 9 redrawn. This version accepted by Phys. Rev.
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