2,020 research outputs found

    Kaon femtoscopy of Pb-Pb and pp collisions at the LHC with the ALICE experiment

    Full text link
    We report on the results of femtoscopic analyses of Pb-Pb collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{NN}}=2.76 TeV and pp collisions at s\sqrt{s}= 7 TeV with identical charged and neutral kaons. The femtoscopic correlations allow one to measure the space-time characteristics of particle production using particle correlations due to the effects of quantum statistics for identical particles and final state interaction for both identical and non-identical ones. Small contributions from resonance decays make kaon femtoscopy an ideal tool for the correlation studies. In conjunction with pion and proton femtoscopy, they can also reveal properties of collective dynamics in heavy-ion collisions. ALICE results are compared with the existing world data on kaon femtoscopy in different type of collisions. The theoretical expectations for pp and Pb-Pb collisions are considered.Comment: Proceedings of International Conference on New Frontiers in Physics, Crete, 201

    Femtoscopy with ALICE at the LHC

    Get PDF
    Femtoscopy allows one to measure the space-time characteristics of particle production using correlations resulting from the effects of quantum statistics and final state interactions. We present the results of femtoscopic analyses for different two-particle systems measured by ALICE in Pb-Pb, p-Pb and pp collisions, pointing out the similarities and differences between small and large systems. Results for kaons provide a cross-check of the information about the dynamics of the source and the importance of the hadronic rescattering phase. The recent femtoscopic results for baryon-(anti-)baryon pairs and kaon pairs allow one to study the strong interaction parameters and cross-sections

    Dynamical vs geometric anisotropy in relativistic heavy-ion collisions: which one prevails?

    Full text link
    We study the influence of geometric and dynamical anisotropies on the development of flow harmonics and, simultaneously, on the second- and third-order oscillations of femtoscopy radii. The analysis is done within the Monte Carlo event generator HYDJET++, which was extended to dynamical triangular deformations. It is shown that the merely geometric anisotropy provides the results which anticorrelate with the experimental observations of either v2v_2 (or v3v_3) or second-order (or third-order) oscillations of the femtoscopy radii. Decays of resonances significantly increase the emitting areas but do not change the phases of the radii oscillations. In contrast to the spatial deformations, the dynamical anisotropy alone provides the correct qualitative description of the flow and the femtoscopy observables simultaneously. However, one needs both types of the anisotropy to match quantitatively the experimental data.Comment: minor corrections, published versio
    corecore