288 research outputs found
Boundary and expansion effects on two-pion correlation functions in relativistic heavy-ion collisions
We examine the effects that a confining boundary together with hydrodynamical
expansion play on two-pion distributions in relativistic heavy-ion collisions.
We show that the effects arise from the introduction of further correlations
due both to collective motion and the system's finite size. As is well known,
the former leads to a reduction in the apparent source radius with increasing
average pair momentum K. However, for small K, the presence of the boundary
leads to a decrease of the apparent source radius with decreasing K. These two
competing effects produce a maximum for the effective source radius as a
function of K.Comment: 6 pages, 5 Eps figures, uses RevTeX and epsfi
Strangeness Enhancement in p-A Collisions: Consequences for the Interpretation of Strangeness Production in A-A Collisions
Published measurements of semi-inclusive Lambda production in p-Au collisions
at the AGS are used to estimate the yields of singly strange hadrons in
nucleus-nucleus A-A collisions. Results of a described extrapolation technique
are shown and compared to measurements of K+ production in Si-Al, Si-Au, and
Au-Au collisions at the AGS and net Lambda production in Su-Su, S-Ag, Pb-Pb,
and inclusive p-A collisions at the SPS. The extrapolations can account for
more than 75% of the measured strange particle yields in all of the studied
systems except for very central Au-Au collisions at the AGS where RQMD
comparisons suggest large re-scattering contributions.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Phases of QCD, Thermal Quasiparticles and Dilepton Radiation from a Fireball
We calculate dilepton production rates from a fireball adapted to the
kinematical conditions realized in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions over
a broad range of beam energies. The freeze-out state of the fireball is fixed
by hadronic observables. We use this information combined with the initial
geometry of the collision region to follow the space-time evolution of the
fireball. Assuming entropy conservation, its bulk thermodynamic properties can
then be uniquely obtained once the equation of state (EoS) is specified. The
high-temperature (QGP) phase is modelled by a non-perturbative quasiparticle
model that incorporates a phenomenological confinement description, adapted to
lattice QCD results. For the hadronic phase, we interpolate the EoS into the
region where a resonance gas approach seems applicable, keeping track of a
possible overpopulation of the pion phase space. In this way, the fireball
evolution is specified without reference to dilepton data, thus eliminating it
as an adjustable parameter in the rate calculations. Dilepton emission in the
QGP phase is then calculated within the quasiparticle model. In the hadronic
phase, both temperature and finite baryon density effects on the photon
spectral function are incorporated. Existing dilepton data from CERES at 158
and 40 AGeV Pb-Au collisions are well described, and a prediction for the
PHENIX setup at RHIC for sqrt(s) = 200 AGeV is given.Comment: 31 pages, 15 figures, final versio
Sensitivity of HBT interferometry to the microscopic dynamics of freeze-out
We study the HBT interferometry of ultra-relativistic nuclear collisions
using a freezeout model in which free pions emerge in the course of the last
binary collisions in the hadron gas. We show that the HBT correlators of both
identical and non-identical pions change with respect to the case of
independent pion production. Practical consequences for the design of the event
generator with the built in Bose-Einstein correlations are discussed. We argue
that the scheme of inclusive measurement of the HBT correlation function does
not require the symmetrization of the multi-pion transition amplitudes
(wave-functions).Comment: 22 pages, 3 epsf figures, RevTe
Au+Au Reactions at the AGS: Experiments E866 and E917
Particle production and correlation functions from Au+Au reactions have been
measured as a function of both beam energy (2-10.7AGeV) and impact parameter.
These results are used to probe the dynamics of heavy-ion reactions, confront
hadronic models over a wide range of conditions and to search for the onset of
new phenomena.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, Talk presented at Quark Matter '9
A Reaction Plane Detector for PHENIX at RHIC
A plastic scintillator paddle detector with embedded fiber light guides and
photomultiplier tube readout, referred to as the Reaction Plane Detector
(RXNP), was designed and installed in the PHENIX experiment prior to the 2007
run of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). The RXNP's design is
optimized to accurately measure the reaction plane (RP) angle of heavy-ion
collisions, where, for mid-central = 200 GeV Au+Au collisions,
it achieved a harmonic RP resolution of 0.75, which is a factor
of 2 greater than PHENIX's previous capabilities. This improvement was
accomplished by locating the RXNP in the central region of the PHENIX
experiment, where, due to its large coverage in pseudorapidity
() and (2), it is exposed to the high particle
multiplicities needed for an accurate RP measurement. To enhance the observed
signal, a 2-cm Pb converter is located between the nominal collision region and
the scintillator paddles, allowing neutral particles produced in the heavy-ion
collisions to contribute to the signal through conversion electrons. This paper
discusses the design, operation and performance of the RXNP during the 2007
RHIC run.Comment: 28 authors from 10 institutions, 24 pages, 16 figures and 3 tables.
Published in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section
The Fluid Nature of Quark-Gluon Plasma
Collisions of heavy nuclei at very high energies offer the exciting
possibility of experimentally exploring the phase transformation from hadronic
to partonic degrees of freedom which is predicted to occur at several times
normal nuclear density and/or for temperatures in excess of MeV.
Such a state, often referred to as a quark-gluon plasma, is thought to have
been the dominant form of matter in the universe in the first few microseconds
after the Big Bang. Data from the first five years of heavy ion collisions of
Brookhaven National Laboratory's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) clearly
demonstrate that these very high temperatures and densities have been achieved.
While there are strong suggestions of the role of quark degrees of freedom in
determining the final-state distributions of the produced matter, there is also
compelling evidence that the matter does {\em not} behave as a quasi-ideal
state of free quarks and gluons. Rather, its behavior is that of a dense fluid
with very low kinematic viscosity exhibiting strong hydrodynamic flow and
nearly complete absorption of high momentum probes. The current status of the
RHIC experimental studies is presented, with a special emphasis on the fluid
properties of the created matter, which may in fact be the most perfect fluid
ever studied in the laboratory.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures; to appear in Proceedings of the 2007
International Conference on Nuclear Physics; version posted as submitted on
27-Sep-0
Proximity effect at superconducting Sn-Bi2Se3 interface
We have investigated the conductance spectra of Sn-Bi2Se3 interface junctions
down to 250 mK and in different magnetic fields. A number of conductance
anomalies were observed below the superconducting transition temperature of Sn,
including a small gap different from that of Sn, and a zero-bias conductance
peak growing up at lower temperatures. We discussed the possible origins of the
smaller gap and the zero-bias conductance peak. These phenomena support that a
proximity-effect-induced chiral superconducting phase is formed at the
interface between the superconducting Sn and the strong spin-orbit coupling
material Bi2Se3.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Centrality Dependence of the High p_T Charged Hadron Suppression in Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 130 GeV
PHENIX has measured the centrality dependence of charged hadron p_T spectra
from central Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN)=130 GeV. The truncated mean p_T
decreases with centrality for p_T > 2 GeV/c, indicating an apparent reduction
of the contribution from hard scattering to high p_T hadron production. For
central collisions the yield at high p_T is shown to be suppressed compared to
binary nucleon-nucleon collision scaling of p+p data. This suppression is
monotonically increasing with centrality, but most of the change occurs below
30% centrality, i.e. for collisions with less than about 140 participating
nucleons. The observed p_T and centrality dependence is consistent with the
particle production predicted by models including hard scattering and
subsequent energy loss of the scattered partons in the dense matter created in
the collisions.Comment: 7 pages text, LaTeX, 6 figures, 2 tables, 307 authors, resubmitted to
Phys. Lett. B. Revised to address referee concerns. Plain text data tables
for the points plotted in figures for this and previous PHENIX publications
are publicly available at
http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/phenix/WWW/run/phenix/papers.htm
Heavy Quarks and Heavy Quarkonia as Tests of Thermalization
We present here a brief summary of new results on heavy quarks and heavy
quarkonia from the PHENIX experiment as presented at the "Quark Gluon Plasma
Thermalization" Workshop in Vienna, Austria in August 2005, directly following
the International Quark Matter Conference in Hungary.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, Quark Gluon Plasma Thermalization Workshop
(Vienna August 2005) Proceeding
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