2,683 research outputs found
Overview on jet results from STAR
Full jet reconstruction allows access to the parton kinematics over a large
energy domain and can be used to constrain the mechanisms of energy loss in
heavy-ion collisions. Such measurements are challenging at RHIC, due to the
high-multiplicity environments created in heavy-ion collisions. In these
proceedings, we report an overview of the results on full jet reconstruction
obtained by the STAR experiment. Jet measurements in 200 GeV p+p show that jets
are calibrated pQCD probes and provide a baseline for jet measurements in Au+Au
collisions. Inclusive differential jet production cross sections and ratios are
reported for central 200 GeV Au+Au collisions and compared to p+p. We also
present measurements of fully reconstructed di-jets at mid-rapidity, and
compare spectra and fragmentation functions in p+p and central Au+Au
collisions.Comment: Proceedings for the 26th WWND conferenc
Non Identical strange particle correlations in Au-Au collisions at 200 GeV from the STAR experiment
Information about the space-time evolution of colliding nuclei can be
extracted correlating particles emitted from nuclear collisions. The high
density of particles produced in the STAR experiment allows the measurement of
non-identical strange particle correlations. Due to the absence of Coulomb
interaction, and systems are more sensitive to
the source size than pairs. Strong interaction potential has been studied
using , and for the first time, pairs. The
experimental correlation functions have been described in the frame of a model
based on the interaction. The first preliminary measurement of -
correlations has been performed, allowing to extract information about
the freeze-out time and the space-time asymmetries in particle emission closely
related to the transverse radial expansion and decay of resonances.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, contribution to proceedings of the Second Warsaw
Meeting on Particle Correlations and Resonances in Heavy Ion Collisions,
Warsaw 15-18 Oct 2003, to be published in Nucleonic
Recent STAR results in high-energy polarized proton-proton collisions at RHIC
The STAR experiment at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider at Brookhaven
National Laboratory is carrying out a spin physics program in high-energy
polarized collisions at GeV to gain a
deeper insight into the spin structure and dynamics of the proton.
One of the main objectives of the spin physics program at RHIC is the
extraction of the polarized gluon distribution function based on measurements
of gluon initiated processes, such as hadron and jet production. The STAR
detector is well suited for the reconstruction of various final states
involving jets, , , e and , which allows to
measure several different processes. Recent results will be shown on the
measurement of jet production and hadron production at GeV. The
RHIC spin physics program has recently completed the first data taking period
in 2009 of polarized collisions at GeV. This
opens a new era in the study of the spin-flavor structure of the proton based
on the production of bosons. Recent STAR results on the first
measurement of boson production in polarized collisions
will be shown.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, Talk presented at the 26th Winter Workshop on
Nuclear Dynamics, Ocho Rios, Jamaica, January 2-9, 2010 to be published in
Journal of Physics: Conference Series (JPCS) The author may be contacted via:
[email protected]
Azimuthally-sensitive pion HBT at RHIC
The STAR Collaboration has measured two-pion correlation functions versus
emission angle with respect to the event plane in non-central Au+Au collisions
at \sqrt{s_{NN}}=130, 200 GeV. In the context of a parameterized freezeout
scenario, the data suggest an out-of-plane freezeout geometry, and a rapid
system evolution to freezeout.Comment: presented at XXXII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics
(ISMD2002), Alushta, Ukraine; to appear in the proceeding
Search for Conical Emission with Three-Particle Correlations
We present preliminary STAR results on 3-particle azimuthal angle correlation
studies in Au+Au collisions at = 200 GeV. The studies are
carried out at mid-rapidity between a trigger particle with 3 4 GeV/c and two associated particles in 1 2 GeV/c. A
cumulant analysis reveals finite 3-particle azimuthal correlations, dominated
by near and away side particle correlations consistent with jet production, and
jet-flow correlations. We use a two-component model to remove underlying
background correlations. This analysis indicates the presence of the conical
emission signals in central Au+Au collisions within the model assumptions about
background composition and normalization.Comment: Proceedings for STAR talk presented at Quark Matter 2006, 4 pages 2
figures, Version 2: typos corrected, references adde
- …