Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Preprint (448)
- Article (377)
- Working Paper (1)
Language
- English (826)
Has Fulltext
- yes (826)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (826)
Keywords
- BESIII (14)
- Heavy Ion Experiments (12)
- Branching fraction (9)
- e +-e − Experiments (9)
- Hadron-Hadron Scattering (8)
- Particle and Resonance Production (6)
- Quarkonium (6)
- Hadron-Hadron scattering (experiments) (5)
- Hadronic decays (5)
- Branching fractions (4)
- Collective Flow (4)
- Electroweak interaction (4)
- Lepton colliders (4)
- Quark-Gluon Plasma (4)
- new species (4)
- taxonomy (4)
- Charm Physics (3)
- Charmed mesons (3)
- Charmonium (3)
- Elastic scattering (3)
- Exotics (3)
- Experimental nuclear physics (3)
- Experimental particle physics (3)
- Heavy Quark Production (3)
- Heavy-ion collision (3)
- Initial state radiation (3)
- Jets (3)
- Jets and Jet Substructure (3)
- LHC (3)
- Particle and resonance production (3)
- Polarization (3)
- QCD (3)
- Spectroscopy (3)
- e+-e− Experiments (3)
- ALICE experiment (2)
- Bhabha (2)
- Charm physics (2)
- Collectivity (2)
- Correlation (2)
- Cross section (2)
- Diffraction (2)
- Electroweak Interaction (2)
- Hadronic cross section (2)
- Lepton-Nucleon Scattering (experiments) (2)
- Leptonic, semileptonic & radiative decays (2)
- Muon anomaly (2)
- Particle Correlations and Fluctuations (2)
- Particle decays (2)
- Pion form factor (2)
- RHIC (2)
- Shear viscosity (2)
- description (2)
- morphology (2)
- pp collisions (2)
- ALICE (1)
- Alleles (1)
- Angular distribution (1)
- Annihilation (1)
- Aortic valve (1)
- Apoptosis (1)
- Atractides (1)
- B-slope (1)
- BESIII detector (1)
- Beauty production (1)
- Boosted Jets (1)
- Born cross section measurement (1)
- CP violation (1)
- Cell proliferation (1)
- Charged-particle multiplicity (1)
- Charm quark spatial diffusion coefficient (1)
- Charmonia (1)
- Charmonium (-like) (1)
- Coalescence (1)
- Cold nuclear matter effects (1)
- Collective Flow, (1)
- Comparison with QCD (1)
- Computational models (1)
- Covariance matrix (1)
- Critical point (1)
- Cross section measurements (1)
- Cryoelectron microscopy (1)
- D meson (1)
- D0 and D+ mesons (1)
- DNA barcode (1)
- Dalitz decay (1)
- Dark photon (1)
- Dark sector (1)
- Deuteron production (1)
- Di-hadron correlations (1)
- D⁰ meson (1)
- Electromagnetic form factor (1)
- Electromagnetic form factors (1)
- Electron-pion identification (1)
- Elliptic flow (1)
- Endothelial cells (1)
- FFPE (1)
- FOS: Physical sciences (1)
- Fibre/foam sandwich radiator (1)
- Flavor changing neutral currents (1)
- Flavor symmetries (1)
- Flavour Physics (1)
- Flow (1)
- Form factors (1)
- Groomed jet radius (1)
- Hadron production (1)
- Hadron-Hadron Scattering Heavy (1)
- Hadron-hadron interactions (1)
- Hadronization (1)
- Hadrons (1)
- Hard Scattering (1)
- Heart (1)
- Heavy Ion Experiment (1)
- Heavy flavor production (1)
- Heavy flavour production (1)
- Heavy ion collisions (1)
- Heavy ion storage ring (1)
- Heavy-Ion Collision (1)
- Heavy-flavor decay electron (1)
- Heavy-ion (1)
- Heavy-ion collisions (1)
- High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) (1)
- Higher moments (1)
- Homeostasis (1)
- Hyperons (1)
- Immunostaining (1)
- Inclusive spectra (1)
- Interference fragmentation function (1)
- Invisible decays (1)
- Ionisation energy loss (1)
- J/ψ suppression (1)
- Jet Physics (1)
- Jet Substructure (1)
- Jet substructure (1)
- Macrothele (1)
- Material budget (1)
- Membrane proteins (1)
- Mid-rapidity (1)
- Multi-Parton Interactions (1)
- Multi-strange baryons (1)
- Multi-wire proportional drift chamber (1)
- Multiple parton interactions (1)
- Net-charge correlations (1)
- Net-charge fluctuations (1)
- Neural network (1)
- Neutrinos (1)
- New species (1)
- Nonflow (1)
- Orbital electron capture (1)
- Particle correlations and fluctuations (1)
- Particle phenomena (1)
- Properties of Hadrons (1)
- Proton (1)
- Proton-proton collisions (1)
- Proton–proton (1)
- Proton–proton collisions (1)
- Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (1)
- Quantum chromodynamics (1)
- Quark Deconfinement (1)
- Quark Gluon Plasma (1)
- Quark Production (1)
- R value (1)
- Radiative decay (1)
- Rare decays (1)
- Relativistic heavy-ion collisions (1)
- STAR (1)
- SWATH (1)
- Semi-leptonic decays (1)
- Single electrons (1)
- Single muons (1)
- Single particle decay spectroscopy (1)
- SoftDrop (1)
- Spin alignment (1)
- Splitting function (1)
- TR (1)
- Techniques Electromagnetic calorimeters (1)
- Thermal model (1)
- Tibet (1)
- Tracking (1)
- Transition radiation detector (1)
- Transversity (1)
- Trigger (1)
- Triple quarkonia (1)
- Two body weak decay (1)
- Vector Boson Production (1)
- Xenon-based gas mixture (1)
- Y (4260) (1)
- Y states (1)
- Yunnan (1)
- biomarker (1)
- center-of-mass energy (1)
- charmonium-like states (1)
- dE/dx (1)
- detector (1)
- dimuon (1)
- diphoton (1)
- e+e − annihilation (1)
- e+e⁻ − Experiments (1)
- e+e− Experiments (1)
- e+e− annihilation (1)
- ectosomes (1)
- electron-positron collision (1)
- exosomes (1)
- experimental results (1)
- extracellular vesicles (1)
- guidelines (1)
- hadron spectroscopy (1)
- hadronic events (1)
- helicity amplitude analysis (1)
- illustration (1)
- inclusive J/ψ decays (1)
- long-jawed orbweavers (1)
- luminosity (1)
- machine learning (1)
- microparticles (1)
- microvesicles (1)
- minimal information requirements (1)
- new combination (1)
- new genera (1)
- number of J/ψ events (1)
- p+p collisions (1)
- portable electronic nose (1)
- pressure cycling technology (1)
- proteome (1)
- re-descripction (1)
- reproducibility (1)
- rigor (1)
- sheet-web spiders (1)
- spectra (1)
- standardization (1)
- support vector machine (1)
- tetraquark (1)
- trigger efficiency (1)
- tumor (1)
- water mite (1)
- wine (1)
- wolf spider (1)
- Λ+c baryon (1)
- Σ hyperon (1)
Institute
- Physik (776)
- Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies (FIAS) (516)
- Informatik (464)
- Informatik und Mathematik (3)
- Medizin (3)
- Biochemie und Chemie (2)
- Geowissenschaften (2)
- MPI für Biophysik (2)
- Center for Financial Studies (CFS) (1)
- ELEMENTS (1)
Antimatter particles such as positrons and antiprotons abound in the cosmos. Much less common are light antinuclei, composed of antiprotons and antineutrons, which can be produced in our galaxy via high-energy cosmic-ray collisions with the interstellar medium or could also originate from the annihilation of the still undiscovered dark-matter particles. On Earth, the only way to produce and study antinuclei with high precision is to create them at high-energy particle accelerators like the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Though the properties of elementary antiparticles have been studied in detail, knowledge of the interaction of light antinuclei with matter is rather limited. This work focuses on the determination of the disappearance probability of \ahe\ when it encounters matter particles and annihilates or disintegrates. The material of the ALICE detector at the LHC serves as a target to extract the inelastic cross section for \ahe\ in the momentum range of 1.17≤p<10 GeV/c. This inelastic cross section is measured for the first time and is used as an essential input to calculations of the transparency of our galaxy to the propagation of 3He¯¯¯¯¯¯ stemming from dark-matter decays and cosmic-ray interactions within the interstellar medium. A transparency of about 50% is estimated using the GALPROP program for a specific dark-matter profile and a standard set of propagation parameters. For cosmic-ray sources, the obtained transparency with the same propagation scheme varies with increasing 3He¯¯¯¯¯¯ momentum from 25% to 90%. The absolute uncertainties associated to the 3He¯¯¯¯¯¯ inelastic cross section measurements are of the order of 10%−15%. The reported results indicate that 3He¯¯¯¯¯¯ nuclei can travel long distances in the galaxy, and can be used to study cosmic-ray interactions and dark-matter decays.
W±-boson production in p–Pb collisions at √sNN = 8.16 TeV and Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 5.02 TeV
(2023)
The production of the W± bosons measured in p–Pb collisions at a centreof-mass energy per nucleon–nucleon collision √sNN = 8.16 TeV and Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 5.02 TeV with ALICE at the LHC is presented. The W± bosons are measured via their muonic decay channel, with the muon reconstructed in the pseudorapidity region −4 < ηµ lab < −2.5 with transverse momentum p µ T > 10 GeV/c. While in Pb–Pb collisions the measurements are performed in the forward (2.5 < yµ cms < 4) rapidity region, in p–Pb collisions, where the centre-of-mass frame is boosted with respect to the laboratory frame, the measurements are performed in the backward (−4.46 < yµ cms < −2.96) and forward (2.03 < yµ cms < 3.53) rapidity regions. The W− and W+ production cross sections, leptoncharge asymmetry, and nuclear modification factors are evaluated as a function of the muon rapidity. In order to study the production as a function of the p–Pb collision centrality, the production cross sections of the W− and W+ bosons are combined and normalised to the average number of binary nucleon–nucleon collision hNcolli. In Pb–Pb collisions, the same measurements are presented as a function of the collision centrality. Study of the binary scaling of the W±-boson cross sections in p–Pb and Pb–Pb collisions is also reported. The results are compared with perturbative QCD calculations, with and without nuclear modifications of the Parton Distribution Functions (PDFs), as well as with available data at the LHC. Significant deviations from the theory expectations are found in the two collision systems, indicating that the measurements can provide additional constraints for the determination of nuclear PDFs and in particular of the light-quark distributions.
In particle collider experiments, elementary particle interactions with large momentum transfer produce quarks and gluons (known as partons) whose evolution is governed by the strong force, as described by the theory of quantum chromodynamics (QCD)1. These partons subsequently emit further partons in a process that can be described as a parton shower2, which culminates in the formation of detectable hadrons. Studying the pattern of the parton shower is one of the key experimental tools for testing QCD. This pattern is expected to depend on the mass of the initiating parton, through a phenomenon known as the dead-cone effect, which predicts a suppression of the gluon spectrum emitted by a heavy quark of mass mQ and energy E, within a cone of angular size mQ/E around the emitter3. Previously, a direct observation of the dead-cone effect in QCD had not been possible, owing to the challenge of reconstructing the cascading quarks and gluons from the experimentally accessible hadrons. We report the direct observation of the QCD dead cone by using new iterative declustering techniques4,5 to reconstruct the parton shower of charm quarks. This result confirms a fundamental feature of QCD. Furthermore, the measurement of a dead-cone angle constitutes a direct experimental observation of the non-zero mass of the charm quark, which is a fundamental constant in the standard model of particle physics.
J/ψ production as a function of charged-particle multiplicity in p-Pb collisions at √sNN = 8.16 TeV
(2020)
Inclusive J/ψ yields and average transverse momenta in p-Pb collisions at a center-of-mass energy per nucleon pair s NN $$ \sqrt{s_{\mathrm{NN}}} $$ = 8.16 TeV are measured as a function of the charged-particle pseudorapidity density with ALICE. The J/ψ mesons are reconstructed at forward (2.03 < y cms < 3.53) and backward (−4.46 < y cms < −2.96) center-of-mass rapidity in their dimuon decay channel while the charged-particle pseudorapidity density is measured around midrapidity. The J/ψ yields at forward and backward rapidity normalized to their respective average values increase with the normalized charged-particle pseudorapidity density, the former showing a weaker increase than the latter. The normalized average transverse momenta at forward and backward rapidity manifest a steady increase from low to high charged-particle pseudorapidity density with a saturation beyond the average value.
This paper presents the measurements of π±, K±, p and p¯¯¯ transverse momentum (pT) spectra as a function of charged-particle multiplicity density in proton–proton (pp) collisions at s√ = 13 TeV with the ALICE detector at the LHC. Such study allows us to isolate the center-of-mass energy dependence of light-flavour particle production. The measurements reported here cover a pT range from 0.1 to 20 GeV/c and are done in the rapidity interval |y|<0.5. The pT-differential particle ratios exhibit an evolution with multiplicity, similar to that observed in pp collisions at s√ = 7 TeV, which is qualitatively described by some of the hydrodynamical and pQCD-inspired models discussed in this paper. Furthermore, the pT-integrated hadron-to-pion yield ratios measured in pp collisions at two different center-of-mass energies are consistent when compared at similar multiplicities. This also extends to strange and multi-strange hadrons, suggesting that, at LHC energies, particle hadrochemistry scales with particle multiplicity the same way under different collision energies and colliding systems.
The first measurement of the cross section for coherent J/ψ photoproduction as a function of |t|, the square of the momentum transferred between the incoming and outgoing target nucleus, is presented. The data were measured with the ALICE detector in ultra-peripheral Pb–Pb collisions at a centre-of-mass energy per nucleon pair √sNN = 5.02 TeV with the J/ψ produced in the central rapidity region |y| < 0.8,
which corresponds to the small Bjorken-x range (0.3 − 1.4) × 10−3.
The measured |t|-dependence is not described by computations based only on the Pb nuclear form factor, while the photonuclear cross section is better reproduced by models including shadowing according to the leading-twist approximation, or gluon-saturation effects from the impact-parameter dependent Balitsky–Kovchegov equation. These new results are therefore a valid tool to constrain the relevant model parameters and to investigate the transverse gluonic structure at very low Bjorken-x.
The first measurement of the coherent photoproduction of ρ0 vector mesons in ultra-peripheral Xe–Xe collisions at √sNN = 5.44 TeV is presented. This result, together with previous HERA γ p data and γ –Pb measurements from ALICE, describes the atomic number (A) dependence of this process, which is particularly sensitive to nuclear shadowing effects and to the approach to the black-disc limit of QCD at a semi-hard scale. The cross section of the Xe + Xe → ρ0 + Xe + Xe process, measured at midrapidity through the decay channel ρ0 → π+π−, is found to be dσ/dy = 131.5 ± 5.6(stat.)+17.5 −16.9(syst.) mb. The ratio of the continuum to resonant contributions for the production of pion pairs is also measured. In addition, the fraction of events accompanied by electromagnetic dissociation of either one or both colliding nuclei is reported. The dependence on A of cross section for the coherent ρ0 photoproduction at a centre-of-mass energy per nucleon of the γ A system of Wγ A,n = 65 GeV is found to be consistent with a power-law behaviour σ(γ A → ρ0 A) ∝ Aα with a slope α = 0.96 ± 0.02(syst.). This slope signals important shadowing effects, but it is still far from the behaviour expected in the black-disc limit.
ϒ production and nuclear modification at forward rapidity in Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 5.02TeV
(2021)
The production of ϒ mesons in Pb–Pb collisions at a centre-of-mass energy per nucleon pair √sNN = 5.02 TeV is measured with the muon spectrometer of the ALICE detector at the LHC. The yields as well as the nuclear modification factors are determined in the forward rapidity region 2.5 < y < 4.0, as a function of rapidity, transverse momentum and collision centrality. The results show that the production of the ϒ(1S) meson is suppressed by a factor of about three with respect to the production in proton–proton collisions. For the first time, a significant signal for the ϒ(2S) meson is observed at forward rapidity, indicating a suppression stronger by about a factor 2–3 with respect to the ground state. The measurements are compared with transport, hydrodynamic, comover and statistical hadronisation model calculations.
The measurement of the azimuthal-correlation function of prompt D mesons with charged particles in pp collisions at s√=5.02 TeV and p–Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=5.02 TeV with the ALICE detector at the LHC is reported. The D0, D+, and D∗+ mesons, together with their charge conjugates, were reconstructed at midrapidity in the transverse momentum interval 3<pT<24 GeV/c and correlated with charged particles having pT>0.3 GeV/c and pseudorapidity |η|<0.8. The properties of the correlation peaks appearing in the near- and away-side regions (for Δφ≈0 and Δφ≈π, respectively) were extracted via a fit to the azimuthal correlation functions. The shape of the correlation functions and the near- and away-side peak features are found to be consistent in pp and p–Pb collisions, showing no modifications due to nuclear effects within uncertainties. The results are compared with predictions from Monte Carlo simulations performed with the PYTHIA, POWHEG+PYTHIA, HERWIG, and EPOS 3 event generators.
Annihilation dynamics plays a fundamental role in the baryon–antibaryon interaction (B–B) at lowenergy and its strength and range are crucial in the assessment of possible baryonic bound states. Experimental data on annihilation cross sections are available for the p–p system but not in the low relative momentum region. Data regarding the B–B interaction with strange degrees of freedom are extremely scarce, hence the modeling of the annihilation contributions is mainly based on nucleon–antinucleon (N–N) results, when available. In this letter we present a measurement of the p–p, p–⊕p– and – interaction using correlation functions in the relative momentum space in high-multiplicity triggered pp collisions at √s = 13 TeV recorded by ALICE at the LHC. In the p–p system the couplings to the mesonic channels in different partial waves are extracted by adopting a coupled-channel approach with recent χEFT potentials. The inclusion of these inelastic channels provides good agreement with the data, showing a significant presence of the annihilation term down to zero momentum. Predictions obtained using the Lednický–Lyuboshits formula and scattering parameters obtained from heavy-ion collisions, hence mainly sensitive to elastic processes, are compared with the experimental p–⊕p– and – correlations. The model describes the – data and underestimates the p–⊕p– data in the region of momenta below 200 MeV/c. The observed deviation indicates a different contribution of annihilation channels to the two systems containing strange hadrons.