Hyper-order cumulants C5/C1 and C6/C2 of net-baryon distributions are
anticipated to offer crucial insights into the phase transition from
quark-gluon plasma to hadronic matter in heavy-ion collisions. However, the
accuracy of C5 and C6 is highly contingent on the fine shape of the
distribution's tail, the detectable range of which could be essentially
truncated by low statistics. In this paper, we use the fast Skellam-based
simulations, as well as the Ultrarelativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics model,
to assess the impact of limited statistics on the measurements of C5/C1 and
C6/C2 of net-proton distributions at lower RHIC energies. Both ratios
decrease from the unity baseline as we reduce statistics, and could even turn
negative without a pertinent physics mechanism. By incorporating statistics
akin to experimental data, we can replicate the net-proton C5/C1 and
C6/C2 values comparable to the corresponding measurements for Au+Au
collisions at sNN= 7.7, 11.5 and 14.5 GeV. Our findings underscore
a caveat to the interpretation of the observed beam energy dependence of
hyper-order cumulants.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure