1,134 research outputs found
Strongly Intensive Measures for Multiplicity Fluctuations
The recently proposed two families of strongly intensive measures of
fluctuations and correlations are studied within Hadron-String-Dynamics (HSD)
transport approach to nucleus-nucleus collisions. We consider the measures
and for kaon and pion multiplicities in Au+Au
collisions in a wide range of collision energies and centralities. These
strongly intensive measures appear to cancel the participant number
fluctuations. This allows to enlarge the centrality window in the analysis of
event-by-event fluctuations up to at least of 10% most central collisions. We
also present a comparison of the HSD results with the data of NA49 and STAR
collaborations. The HSD describes reasonably well. However, the
HSD results depend monotonously on collision energy and do not reproduce the
bump-deep structure of observed from the NA49 data in the
region of the center of mass energy of nucleon pair
GeV. This fact deserves further studies. The origin of this `structure' is not
connected with simple geometrical or limited acceptance effects, as these
effects are taken into account in the HSD simulations
A Cone Jet-Finding Algorithm for Heavy-Ion Collisions at LHC Energies
Standard jet finding techniques used in elementary particle collisions have
not been successful in the high track density of heavy-ion collisions. This
paper describes a modified cone-type jet finding algorithm developed for the
complex environment of heavy-ion collisions. The primary modification to the
algorithm is the evaluation and subtraction of the large background energy,
arising from uncorrelated soft hadrons, in each collision. A detailed analysis
of the background energy and its event-by-event fluctuations has been performed
on simulated data, and a method developed to estimate the background energy
inside the jet cone from the measured energy outside the cone on an
event-by-event basis. The algorithm has been tested using Monte-Carlo
simulations of Pb+Pb collisions at TeV for the ALICE detector at
the LHC. The algorithm can reconstruct jets with a transverse energy of 50 GeV
and above with an energy resolution of .Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
Observing Quark-Gluon Plasma with Strange Hadrons
We review the methods and results obtained in an analysis of the experimental
heavy ion collision research program at nuclear beam energy of 160-200A GeV. We
study strange, and more generally, hadronic particle production experimental
data. We discuss present expectations concerning how these observables will
perform at other collision energies. We also present the dynamical theory of
strangeness production and apply it to show that it agrees with available
experimental results. We describe strange hadron production from the
baryon-poor quark-gluon phase formed at much higher reaction energies, where
the abundance of strange baryons and antibaryons exceeds that of nonstrange
baryons and antibaryons.Comment: 39 journal pages (155kb text), 8 postscript figures, 8 table
Statistical hadronization phenomenology in fluctuations at ultra-relativistic energies
We discuss the information that can be obtained from an analysis of
fluctuations in heavy ion collisions within the context of the statistical
model of particle production. We then examine the recently published
experimental data on ratio fluctuations, and use it to obtain constraints on
the statistical properties (physically relevant ensemble, degree of chemical
equilibration, scaling across energies and system sizes) and freeze-out
dynamics (amount of reinteraction between chemical and thermal freeze-out) of
the system.Comment: Proceedings, SQM2009. Fig. 4, the main results figure, was wrong due
to editing mistake, now correcte
How large is "large " for Nuclear matter?
We argue that a so far neglected dimensionless scale, the number of neighbors
in a closely packed system, is relevant for the convergence of the large
expansion at high chemical potential. It is only when the number of colors is
large w.r.t. this new scale (\sim \order{10}) that a convergent large
limit is reached. This provides an explanation as to why the large
expansion, qualitatively successful in in vacuum QCD, fails to describe high
baryo-chemical potential systems, such as nuclear matter. It also means that
phenomenological claims about high density matter based on large
extrapolations should be treated with caution.Comment: Proceedings of CPOD2010 conference, in Dubna. Results based on
Phys.Rev.C82, 055202 (2010), http://arxiv.org/abs/1006.247
Longitudinal Flow of Protons from 2-8 AGeV Central Au+Au Collisions
Rapidity distributions of protons from central Au + Au
collisions measured by the E895 Collaboration in the energy range from 2 to 8
AGeV at the Brookhaven AGS are presented. Longitudinal flow parameters derived
using a thermal model including collective longitudinal expansion are extracted
from these distributions. The results show an approximately linear increase in
the longitudinal flow velocity, , as a function of the
logarithm of beam energy.Comment: 5 Pages, including 3 figures, 1 tabl
Laying the groundwork at the AGS: Recent results from experiment E895
The E895 Collaboration at the Brookhaven AGS has performed a systematic
investigation of Au+Au collisions at 2-8 AGeV, using a large-acceptance Time
Projection Chamber. In addition to extensive measurements of particle flow,
spectra, two-particle interferometry, and strangeness production, we have
performed novel hybrid analyses, including azimuthally-sensitive pion HBT,
extraction of the six-dimensional pion phasespace density, and a first
measurement of the Lambda-proton correlation function.Comment: Presented at Quark Matter 2001, 8 pages, 5 figure
Charged Pion Production in 2 to 8 AGeV Central Au+Au Collisions
Momentum spectra of charged pions over nearly full rapidity coverage from
target to beam rapidity have been measured in the 0-5% most central Au+Au
collisions in the beam energy range from 2 to 8 AGeV by the E895 Experiment.
Using a thermal parameterization to fit the transverse mass spectra, rapidity
density distributions are extracted. The observed spectra are compared with
predictions from the RQMD v2.3 cascade model and also to a thermal model
including longitudinal flow. The total 4 yields of the charged pions are
used to infer an initial state entropy produced in the collisions.Comment: 13 pgs, 19 figs, accepted by Phys. Rev. C. Data tables available at
http://nuclear.ucdavis.edu/~e895/published_spectra.htm
- …