1,330 research outputs found
Acceptance Dependence of Fluctuation in Particle Multiplicity
The effect of limiting the acceptance in rapidity on event-by-event
multiplicity fluctuations in nucleus-nucleus collisions has been investigated.
Our analysis shows that the multiplicity fluctuations decrease when the
rapidity acceptance is decreased. We explain this trend by assuming that the
probability distribution of the particles in the smaller acceptance window
follows binomial distribution. Following a simple statistical analysis we
conclude that the event-by-event multiplicity fluctuations for full acceptance
are likely to be larger than those observed in the experiments, since the
experiments usually have detectors with limited acceptance. We discuss the
application of our model to simulated data generated using VENUS, a widely used
event generator in heavy-ion collisions. We also discuss the results from our
calculations in presence of dynamical fluctuations and possible observation of
these in the actual data.Comment: To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
New mechanism for the production of the extremely fast light particles in heavy-ion collisions in the Fermi energy domain
Employing a four-body classical model, various mechanisms responsible for the
production of fast light particles in heavy ion collisions at low and
intermediate energies have been studied. It has been shown that at energies
lower than 50 A MeV, light particles of velocities of more than two times
higher than the projectile velocities are produced due to the acceleration of
the target light-particles by the mean field of the incident nucleus. It has
also been shown that precision experimental reaction research in normal and
inverse kinematics is likely to provide vital information about which mechanism
is dominant in the production of fast light particles.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX, to be published in Proceedings of VII
International School-Seminar on Heavy Ion Physics, May 27 - June 1, 2002,
Dubna, Russi
Comparative Analysis of the Mechanisms of Fast Light Particle Formation in Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions at Low and Intermediate Energies
The dynamics and the mechanisms of preequilibrium-light-particle formation in
nucleus-nucleus collisions at low and intermediate energies are studied on the
basis of a classical four-body model. The angular and energy distributions of
light particles from such processes are calculated. It is found that, at
energies below 50 MeV per nucleon, the hardest section of the energy spectrum
is formed owing to the acceleration of light particles from the target by the
mean field of the projectile nucleus. Good agreement with available
experimental data is obtained.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, LaTeX, published in Physics of Atomic Nuclei
v.65, No. 8, 2002, pp. 1459 - 1473 translated from Yadernaya Fizika v. 65,
No. 8, 2002, pp. 1494 - 150
Search for Free Decay of Negative Pions in Water and Light Materials
We report on a search for the free decay component of pi- stopped in water
and light materials. A non-zero value of this would be an indication of
anomalous nu_e contamination to the nu_e and nu_mu_bar production at
stopped-pion neutrino facilities. No free decay component of pi- was observed
in water, Beryllium, and Aluminum, for which upper limits were established at
8.2E-4, 3.2E-3, and 7.7E-3, respectively
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
Azimuthal Correlations in the Target Fragmentation Region of High Energy Nuclear Collisions
Results on the target mass dependence of proton and pion pseudorapidity
distributions and of their azimuthal correlations in the target rapidity range
are presented. The data have been taken with the
Plastic-Ball detector set-up for 4.9 GeV p + Au collisions at the Berkeley
BEVALAC and for 200 GeV/ p-, O-, and S-induced reactions on
different nuclei at the CERN-SPS. The yield of protons at backward rapidities
is found to be proportional to the target mass. Although protons show a typical
``back-to-back'' correlations, a ``side-by-side'' correlation is observed for
positive pions, which increases both with target mass and with impact parameter
of a collision. The data can consistently be described by assuming strong
rescattering phenomena including pion absorption effects in the entire excited
target nucleus.Comment: 7 pages, figures included, complete postscript available at
ftp://qgp.uni-muenster.de/pub/paper/azi-correlations.ps submitted to Phys.
Lett.
Configurable Electronics with Low Noise and 14-bit Dynamic Range for Photodiode-based Photon Detectors
We describe the principles and measured performance characteristics of custom configurable 32-channel shaper/digitizer Front End Electronics (FEE) cards with 14-bit dynamic range for use with gain-adjustable photon detectors. The electronics has been designed for the PHOS calorimeter of ALICE with avalanche photodiode (APD) readout operated at -25 C ambient temperature and a signal shaping time of . The electronics has also been adopted by the EMCal detector of ALICE with the same APD readout, but operated at an ambient temperature of +20 C and with a shaping time of 100ns. The CR-RC2 signal shapers on the FEE cards are implemented in discrete logic on a 10-layer board with two shaper sections for each input channel. The two shaper sections with gain ratio of 16:1 are digitized by 10-bit ADCs and provide an effective dynamic range of 14 bits. Gain adjustment for each individual APD is available through 32 bias voltage control registers of 10-bit range. The fixed gains and shaping times of the pole-zero compensated shapers are defined prior to FEE production by the values of a few R and C components. For trigger purposes, "fast OR" outputs with 12-bit dynamic range are available. FPGA based slave logic, combined with a USB processor supports a variety of remote control and monitoring features, including APD gain calibration. The measurements presented here for APDs at -25 C ambient temperature and shaping time achieve an average RMS noise level of 0.25 ADC counts or 290 electrons.The linearity over the dynamic range is better than 1%, as is the uniformity of shaping time and gain over 32 channels. Due to the excellent correspondence of the output pulse shape with offline fit, a differential timing resolution of less than 1.5 ns between channels has been achieved at ca. 2 GeV, i.e. at 1.5% of the dynamic range of PHOS
Hydrodynamics near the QCD Phase Transition: Looking for the Longest-Lived Fireball
We propose a new strategy for the experimental search of the QCD phase
transition in heavy ion collisions: One may tune collision energy around the
point where the lifetime of the fireball is expected to be longest. We
demonstrate that the hydrodynamic evolution of excited nuclear matter does
change dramatically as the initial energy density goes through the "softest
point" (where the pressure to energy density ratio reaches its minimum). For
our choice of equation of state, this corresponds to epsilon_i approx. = 1.5
GeV/fm^3 and collision energy E_lab/A approx. = 30 GeV (for Au+Au). Various
observables seem to show distinct changes near the softest point.Comment: 7 pages, 3 Postscript figures (tar compressed and uuencoded)
submitte
- …