161 research outputs found
Traces of Thermalization at RHIC
I argue that measurements of Au+Au collisions at 20, 130 and 200 GeV of the
centrality dependence of the mean p_t together with p_t and net-charge
fluctuations reflect the approach to local thermal equilibrium.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figures, for proc. Quark Matter 2004, to be published
in J. Phys.
Heavy ion collisions: Correlations and Fluctuations in particle production
Correlations and fluctuations (the latter are directly related to the
2-particle correlations) is one of the important directions in analysis of
heavy ion collisions. At the current stage of RHIC exploration, when the
details matter, basically any physics question is addressed with help of
correlation techniques. In this talk I start with a general introduction to the
correlation and fluctuation formalism and discuss weak and strong sides of
different type of observables. In more detail, I discuss the two-particle
correlations/\mpt fluctuations. In spite of not observing any dramatic
changes in the event-by-event fluctuations with energy, which would indicate a
possible phase transition, such correlations measurements remain an interesting
and important subject, bringing valuable information. Lastly, I show how radial
flow can generate characteristic azimuthal, transverse momentum and rapidity
correlations, which could qualitatively explain many of recently observed
phenomena in nuclear collisions.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures. Invited talk at 5th International Conference on
Physics and Astrophysics of Quark Gluon Plasma, February 8-12, 2005, Salt
Lake City, Kolkata, Indi
An Overview of Fluctuation and Correlation Results in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
A great deal of recent data on event-by-event fluctuation and correlation
measurements has been released by several experiments at the SPS and RHIC.
Recent results on charge fluctuations, balance functions in pseudorapidity, and
average transverse momentum fluctuations will be reviewed. The results will be
compared to various model predictions after examining contributions to each
observable from known physics processes.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Contribution to the Proceedings of the 17th
International Conference on Ultra Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions
(Quark Matter 2004), Oakland, California, 11-17 Jan 2004. Submitted to
J.Phys.
Hydrodynamic emission of strange and non-strange particles at RHIC and LHC
The hydrodynamic model is used to describe the single-particle spectra and
elliptic flow of hadrons at RHIC and to predict the emission angle dependence
of HBT correlations at RHIC and LHC energies.Comment: 6 pages LaTeX, 3 postscript figures. Proceedings for the conference
"Strange Quark Matter 2003", Atlantic Beach, NC, March 12-17, 2003, to appear
in J. Phys.
Observation of charge asymmetry dependence of pion elliptic flow and the possible chiral magnetic wave in heavy-ion collisions
We present measurements of and elliptic flow, , at
midrapidity in Au+Au collisions at 200, 62.4, 39, 27,
19.6, 11.5 and 7.7 GeV, as a function of event-by-event charge asymmetry,
, based on data from the STAR experiment at RHIC. We find that
() elliptic flow linearly increases (decreases) with charge asymmetry
for most centrality bins at and higher.
At , the slope of the difference of
between and as a function of exhibits a
centrality dependence, which is qualitatively similar to calculations that
incorporate a chiral magnetic wave effect. Similar centrality dependence is
also observed at lower energies.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Centrality and transverse momentum dependence of elliptic flow of multi-strange hadrons and meson in Au+Au collisions at = 200 GeV
We present high precision measurements of elliptic flow near midrapidity
() for multi-strange hadrons and meson as a function of
centrality and transverse momentum in Au+Au collisions at center of mass energy
200 GeV. We observe that the transverse momentum dependence of
and is similar to that of and , respectively,
which may indicate that the heavier strange quark flows as strongly as the
lighter up and down quarks. This observation constitutes a clear piece of
evidence for the development of partonic collectivity in heavy-ion collisions
at the top RHIC energy. Number of constituent quark scaling is found to hold
within statistical uncertainty for both 0-30 and 30-80 collision
centrality. There is an indication of the breakdown of previously observed mass
ordering between and proton at low transverse momentum in the
0-30 centrality range, possibly indicating late hadronic interactions
affecting the proton .Comment: 7 pages and 4 figures, Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Azimuthal anisotropy in U+U and Au+Au collisions at RHIC
Collisions between prolate uranium nuclei are used to study how particle
production and azimuthal anisotropies depend on initial geometry in heavy-ion
collisions. We report the two- and four-particle cumulants, and
, for charged hadrons from U+U collisions at =
193 GeV and Au+Au collisions at = 200 GeV. Nearly fully
overlapping collisions are selected based on the amount of energy deposited by
spectators in the STAR Zero Degree Calorimeters (ZDCs). Within this sample, the
observed dependence of on multiplicity demonstrates that ZDC
information combined with multiplicity can preferentially select different
overlap configurations in U+U collisions. An initial-state model with gluon
saturation describes the slope of as a function of multiplicity in
central collisions better than one based on Glauber with a two-component
multiplicity model.Comment: Final paper version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett. New
version includes comparisons to a constituent quark glauber mode
Observation of Transverse Spin-Dependent Azimuthal Correlations of Charged Pion Pairs in at GeV
We report the observation of transverse polarization-dependent azimuthal
correlations in charged pion pair production with the STAR experiment in
collisions at RHIC. These correlations directly probe quark
transversity distributions. We measure signals in excess of five standard
deviations at high transverse momenta, at high pseudorapidities eta>0.5, and
for pair masses around the mass of the rho-meson. This is the first direct
transversity measurement in p+p collisions. Comparing the results to data from
lepton-nucleon scattering will test the universality of these spin-dependent
quantities.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 15 tables. Submitted to PR
Elliptic flow of electrons from heavy-flavor hadron decays in Au+Au collisions at 200, 62.4, and 39 GeV
We present measurements of elliptic flow () of electrons from the decays
of heavy-flavor hadrons () by the STAR experiment. For Au+Au collisions
at 200 GeV we report , for transverse momentum
() between 0.2 and 7 GeV/c using three methods: the event plane method
({EP}), two-particle correlations ({2}), and four-particle
correlations ({4}). For Au+Au collisions at = 62.4 and
39 GeV we report {2} for GeV/c. {2} and {4} are
non-zero at low and intermediate at 200 GeV, and {2} is consistent
with zero at low at other energies. The {2} at the two lower beam
energies is systematically lower than at 200 GeV for
GeV/c. This difference may suggest that charm quarks interact less
strongly with the surrounding nuclear matter at those two lower energies
compared to GeV.Comment: Version accepted by PR
Measurements of and Production in + Collisions at = 200 GeV
We report measurements of charmed-hadron (, ) production cross
sections at mid-rapidity in + collisions at a center-of-mass energy of
200 GeV by the STAR experiment. Charmed hadrons were reconstructed via the
hadronic decays , and their charge conjugates,
covering the range of 0.62.0 GeV/ and 2.06.0 GeV/ for
and , respectively. From this analysis, the charm-pair production cross
section at mid-rapidity is = 170 45
(stat.) (sys.) b. The extracted charm-pair cross section is
compared to perturbative QCD calculations. The transverse momentum differential
cross section is found to be consistent with the upper bound of a Fixed-Order
Next-to-Leading Logarithm calculation.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures. Revised version submitted to Phys. Rev.
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