2,300 research outputs found
Hadronic resonance production in Pb-Pb collisions at the ALICE experiment
Measurements of the yields of hadronic resonances (relative to
non-resonances) in high-energy heavy-ion collisions allow the chemical
freeze-out temperature and the time between chemical and thermal freeze-out of
the collision system to be studied, while modifications to resonance masses and
widths could be a signature of chiral symmetry restoration. The spectra (for pT
< 5 GeV/c), total integrated yields, ratios to non-resonances (phi/pi and
phi/K), mass, and width of the phi(1020) meson and the uncorrected yields,
mass, and width of the K*(892)0 and anti-K*(892)0 mesons have been measured
using the ALICE detector for Pb-Pb collisions at 2.76 TeV. These measurements
will be compared to results from other collision systems and energies. Angular
correlations between leading trigger hadrons and phi(1020) mesons have been
measured in Pb-Pb and pp collisions; the mass and width of the phi(1020) meson
as a function of the correlation angle will be presented.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures; Proceedings for Nucleus-Nucleus 2012, 21 May-1
June 2012, San Antonio, Texas, USA; Submitted for publication in J. Phys.:
Conference Serie
Resonances as Probes of Heavy-Ion Collisions at ALICE
Hadronic resonances serve as unique probes in the study of the hot and dense
nuclear matter produced in heavy-ion collisions. Properties of the hadronic
phase of the collision can be extracted from measurements of the suppression of
resonance yields. A comparison of the transverse-momentum spectra of the
phi(1020) meson and the proton (which have similar masses) can be used to study
particle production mechanisms. Resonance measurements in pp collisions provide
input for tuning QCD-inspired particle production models and serve as reference
measurements for other collision systems. Measurements of resonances in p-Pb
collisions allow nuclear effects in the absence of a hot and dense final state
to be studied. The ALICE Collaboration has measured resonances in pp, p-Pb, and
Pb-Pb collisions. These measurements will be discussed and compared to results
from other experiments and to theoretical models.Comment: 4 Pages, 1 figure, Proceedings of Hot Quarks 2014, Las Negras, Spain,
21-28 September 2014, to be published in Journal of Physics: Conference
Serie
Recent hadronic resonance measurements at ALICE
In heavy-ion physics, measurements of short-lived hadronic resonances allow
the properties of the hadronic phase of the collision to be studied. In
addition, resonances can be used along with stable hadrons to study parton
energy loss in the quark-gluon plasma and the mechanisms that shape hadron pT
spectra at intermediate transverse momenta. Resonance measurements in small
systems serve as a reference for heavy-ion collisions and contribute to
searches for collective effects. An overview of recent results on hadronic
resonance production measured in ALICE is presented. These results include the
pT spectra and yields of the rho(770)0, K*(892)0, and phi(1020) mesons in pp,
p-Pb, and Pb-Pb collisions at different energies as well as the Sigma(1385)+/-
and Xi(1530)0 baryons in pp and p-Pb collisions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the 16th International Conference
on Strangeness in Quark Matter (SQM 2016), Berkeley, California, USA, 27
June-1 July 2016, to be published in Journal of Physics: Conference Serie
Hadronic resonances in heavy-ion collisions at ALICE (Strangeness in Quark Matter 2013)
Properties of the hadronic phase of high-energy heavy-ion collisions can be
studied by measuring the ratios of hadronic resonance yields to the yields of
longer-lived particles. These ratios can be used to study the strength of
re-scattering effects, the chemical freeze-out temperature, and the lifetime
between chemical and kinetic freeze-out. The restoration of chiral symmetry
during the early hadronic phase or near the phase transition may lead to shifts
in the masses and increases in the widths of hadronic resonances. The ALICE
collaboration has measured the spectra, masses, and widths of the K*(892)0 and
phi(1020) resonances in Pb-Pb collisions at 2.76 TeV. These results, including
RAA and the ratios of the integrated resonance yields to stable hadron yields,
are presented and compared to results from other collision systems and to
theoretical predictions.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of Strangeness in Quark Matter
conference, 21-27 July 2013, Birmingham, U
The ALICE electromagnetic calorimeter high level triggers
The ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) detector yields a huge sample of
data from different sub-detectors. On-line data processing is applied to select
and reduce the volume of the stored data. ALICE applies a multi-level hardware
trigger scheme where fast detectors are used to feed a three-level (L0, L1, and
L2) deep chain. The High-Level Trigger (HLT) is a fourth filtering stage
sitting logically between the L2 trigger and the data acquisition event
building. The EMCal detector comprises a large area electromagnetic calorimeter
that extends the momentum measurement of photons and neutral mesons up to
GeV/c, which improves the ALICE capability to perform jet
reconstruction with measurement of the neutral energy component of jets. An
online reconstruction and trigger chain has been developed within the HLT
framework to sharpen the EMCal hardware triggers, by combining the central
barrel tracking information with the shower reconstruction (clusters) in the
calorimeter. In the present report the status and the functionality of the
software components developed for the EMCal HLT online reconstruction and
trigger chain will be discussed, as well as preliminary results from their
commissioning performed during the 2011 LHC running period.Comment: Proceeding for the CHEP 2012 Conferenc
Nonphotonic electrons at RHIC within -factorization approach and with experimental semileptonic decay functions
We discuss production of nonphotonic electrons in proton-proton scattering at
RHIC. The distributions in rapidity and transverse momentum of charm and bottom
quarks/antiquarks are calculated in the -factorization approach. We use
different unintegrated gluon distributions from the literature. The
hadronization of heavy quarks is done by means of Peterson and Braaten et al.
fragmentation functions. The semileptonic decay functions are found by fitting
recent semileptonic data obtained by the CLEO and BABAR collaborations. We get
good description of the data at large transverse momenta of electrons and find
a missing strength concentrated at small transverse momenta of electrons.
Plausible missing mechanisms are discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure
An empirical test for cellular automaton models of traffic flow
Based on a detailed microscopic test scenario motivated by recent empirical
studies of single-vehicle data, several cellular automaton models for traffic
flow are compared. We find three levels of agreement with the empirical data:
1) models that do not reproduce even qualitatively the most important empirical
observations,
2) models that are on a macroscopic level in reasonable agreement with the
empirics, and 3) models that reproduce the empirical data on a microscopic
level as well.
Our results are not only relevant for applications, but also shed new light
on the relevant interactions in traffic flow.Comment: 28 pages, 36 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Single-vehicle data of highway traffic - a statistical analysis
In the present paper single-vehicle data of highway traffic are analyzed in
great detail. By using the single-vehicle data directly empirical time-headway
distributions and speed-distance relations can be established. Both quantities
yield relevant information about the microscopic states. Several fundamental
diagrams are also presented, which are based on time-averaged quantities and
compared with earlier empirical investigations. In the remaining part
time-series analyses of the averaged as well as the single-vehicle data are
carried out. The results will be used in order to propose objective criteria
for an identification of the different traffic states, e.g. synchronized
traffic.Comment: 12 pages, 19 figures, RevTe
Excitation and relaxation in atom-cluster collisions
Electronic and vibrational degrees of freedom in atom-cluster collisions are
treated simultaneously and self-consistently by combining time-dependent
density functional theory with classical molecular dynamics. The gradual change
of the excitation mechanisms (electronic and vibrational) as well as the
related relaxation phenomena (phase transitions and fragmentation) are studied
in a common framework as a function of the impact energy (eV...MeV). Cluster
"transparency" characterized by practically undisturbed atom-cluster
penetration is predicted to be an important reaction mechanism within a
particular window of impact energies.Comment: RevTeX (4 pages, 4 figures included with epsf
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