1,373 research outputs found
On the sensitivity of the dijet asymmetry to the physics of jet quenching
The appearance of monojets is among the most striking signature of jet
quenching in the context of ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions.
Experimentally, the disappearance of jets has been quantified by the ATLAS and
CMS collaborations in terms of the dijet asymmetry observable A_J. While the
experimental findings initially gave rise to claims that the measured A_J would
challenge the radiative energy loss paradigm, the results of a systematic
investigation of A_J in different models for the medium evolution and for the
shower-medium interaction presented here suggest that the observed properties
of A_J arise fairly generically and independent of specific model assumptions
for a large class of reasonable models. This would imply that rather than
posing a challenge to any particular model, the observable prompts the question
what model dynamics is not compatible with the data.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, added computations of jet R_AA and R=0.2 result
Energy deposition in hard dihadron triggered events in heavy-ion collisions
The experimental observation of hadrons correlated back-to-back with a
(semi-)hard trigger in heavy ion collisions has revealed a splitting of the
away side correlation structure in a low to intermediate transverse momentum
(P_T) regime. This is consistent with the assumption that energy deposited by
the away side parton into the bulk medium produced in the collision excites a
sonic shockwave (a Mach cone) which leads to away side correlation strength at
large angles. A prediction following from assuming such a hydrodynamical origin
of the correlation structure is that there is a sizeable elongation of the
shockwave in rapidity due to the longitudinal expansion of the bulk medium.
Using a single hadron trigger, this cannot be observed due to the unconstrained
rapidity of the away side parton. Using a dihadron trigger, the rapidity of the
away side parton can be substantially constrained and the longitudinal
structure of the away side correlation becomes accessible. However, in such
events several effects occur which change the correlation structure
substantially: There is not only a sizeable contribution due to the
fragmentation of the emerging away side parton, but also a systematic bias
towards small energy deposition into the medium and hence a weak shockwave. In
this paper, both effects are addressed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Systematics of parton-medium interaction from RHIC to LHC
Despite a wealth of experimental data for high-P_T processes in heavy-ion
collisions, discriminating between different models of hard parton-medium
interactions has been difficult. A key reason is that the pQCD parton spectrum
at RHIC is falling so steeply that distinguishing even a moderate shift in
parton energy from complete parton absorption is essentially impossible. In
essence, energy loss models are effectively only probed in the vicinity of zero
energy loss and, as a result, at RHIC energies only the pathlength dependence
of energy loss offers some discriminating power. At LHC however, this is no
longer the case: Due to the much flatter shape of the parton p_T spectra
originating from 2.76 AGeV collisions, the available data probe much deeper
into the model dynamics. A simultaneous fit of the nuclear suppression at both
RHIC and LHC energies thus has great potential for discriminating between
various models that yield equally good descriptions of RHIC data alone.Comment: Talk given at Quark Matter 2011, 22-28 May 2011, Annecy, Franc
Outage Capacity of Incremental Relaying at Low Signal-to-Noise Ratios
We present the \epsilon-outage capacity of incremental relaying at low
signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) in a wireless cooperative network with slow
Rayleigh fading channels. The relay performs decode-and-forward and repetition
coding is employed in the network, which is optimal in the low SNR regime. We
derive an expression on the optimal relay location that maximizes the
\epsilon-outage capacity. It is shown that this location is independent of the
outage probability and SNR but only depends on the channel conditions
represented by a path-loss factor. We compare our results to the
\epsilon-outage capacity of the cut-set bound and demonstrate that the ratio
between the \epsilon-outage capacity of incremental relaying and the cut-set
bound lies within 1/\sqrt{2} and 1. Furthermore, we derive lower bounds on the
\epsilon-outage capacity for the case of K relays.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be presented at VTC Fall 2009 in Anchorage,
Alask
Thermal photons from fluctuating initial conditions
Event-by-event fluctuations of initial QCD-matter density produced in
heavy-ion collisions at RHIC enhance the production of thermal photons
significantly in the region GeV/ compared to a smooth
initial-state averaged profile in the ideal hydrodynamic calculation. This
enhancement is a an early time effect due to the presence of hotspots or
over-dense regions in the fluctuating initial state. The effect of fluctuations
is found to be stronger in peripheral than in central collisions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Talk given at Quark Matter 2011, 22-28 May 2011,
Annecy, Franc
Energy loss in a fluctuating hydrodynamical background
Recently it has become apparent that event-by-event fluctuations in the
initial state of hydrodynamical modelling of ultrarelativistic heavy-ion
collisions are crucial in order to understand the full centrality dependence of
the elliptic flow coefficient v_2. In particular, in central collisions the
density fluctuations play a major role in generating the spatial eccentricity
in the initial state. This raises the question to what degree high P_T physics,
in particular leading-parton energy loss, which takes place in the background
of an evolving medium, is sensitive to the presence of the event-by-event
density fluctuations in the background. In this work, we report results for the
effects of fluctuations on the nuclear modification factor R_AA in both central
and noncentral sqrt(s_NN) = 200 GeV Au+Au collisions at RHIC. Two different
types of energy-loss models, a radiative and an elastic, are considered. In
particular, we study the dependence of the results on the assumed spatial size
of the density fluctuations, and discuss the angular modulation of R_AA with
respect to the event plane.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Comparing different freeze-out scenarios in azimuthal hadron correlations induced by fast partons
I review the linearized hydrodynamical treatment of a fast parton traversing
a perturbative quark-gluon plasma. Using numerical solutions for the medium's
response to the fast parton, I obtain the medium's distribution function which
is then used in a Cooper-Frye freeze-out prescription to obtain an azimuthal
particle spectrum. Two different freeze-out scenarios are considered which
yield significantly different results. I conclude that any meaningful
comparison of azimuthal hadron correlation functions to RHIC data requires
implementing a realistic freeze-out scenario in an expanding medium.Comment: Contribution to the Proceedings for 2008 Hot Quarks in Estes Park,
CO, as accepted for publication in EPJ-
Angular hadron correlations probing the early medium evolution
Hard processes are a well calibrated probe to study heavy-ion collisions.
However, the information to be gained from the nuclear suppression factor R_AA
is limited, hene one has to study more differential observables to do medium
tomography. The angular correlations of hadrons associated with a hard trigger
appear suitable as they show a rich pattern when going from low p_T to high
p_T. Of prime interest is the fate of away side partons with an in-medium
pathlength O(several fm). At high p_T the correlations become dominated by the
punchtrough of the away side parton with subsequent fragmentation. We discuss
what information about the medium density can be gained from the data.Comment: Talk given at the 19th International Conference on Ultrarelativistic
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions: Quark Matter 2006 (QM 2006), Shanghai, China,
14-20 Nov 200
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