Refine
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (2)
- Master's Thesis (1)
Language
- English (3)
Has Fulltext
- yes (3)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (3)
Institute
- Physik (3)
Lepton pairs emerging from decays of virtual photons represent promising probes of nuclear matter under extreme conditions of temperature and density. These etreme conditions can be reached in heavy-ion collisions in various facilities around the world. Hereby the collision energy in the center-of-mass system (√SNN) varies from few GeV (SIS) to the TeV (LHC). In the energy domain of 1 - 2 GeV per nucleon (GeV/u), the HADES experiment at GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung in Darmstadt studies dielectrons and strangeness production.
Various reactions, for example collisions of pions, protons, deuterons and heavy-ions with nuclei have been studied since its installation in the year 2001. Hereby the so called DLS Puzzle was solved experimentally, with remeasuring C+C at 1 and 2 GeV/u and by careful studies of inclusive pp and pn reactions at 1.25 GeV. With these measurements the so-called reference spectrum was established. Measurements of e+ e− production Ar+KCl showed an enhancement on the dilepton spectrum above the trivial NN back-
ground. Theory predicts a strong enhancement of medium radiation with the system size, due to large production of fast decaying baryonic resonances like ∆ and N∗ . The heaviest system measured so far was Au+Au at a kinetic beam energy of 1.23 GeV/u. The precise determination of the medium radiation depends
on a precise knowledge of the underlying hadronic cocktail composed of various sources contributing to the measured dilepton spectrum. In general the medium radiation needs to be separated from contributions coming from long-lived particles, that decay after the freeze out of the system. For a more model independent
understanding of the dilepton cocktail the production cross sections of these particles need to measured independently. In the related energy regime the main contributers are π0 and η Dalitz decays. Both mesons have a dominant decay into two real photons and have been reconstructed successfully in this channel. Since HADES has no electromagnetic calorimeter the mesons can not be identified in this decay channel directly. In this thesis the capability of HADES to detect e+ e− pairs from conversions of real photons is demonstrated.
Therefore not only the conversion probability but also the resulting efficiencies are shown. Furthermore, the reconstruction method for neutral mesons will be explained and the resulting spectra are interpreted. The measurement of neutral pions is compared to the independent measured charged pion distribution, and
extrapolated to full phase space. An integrated approach is used to determine the η yield. Both measurement are compared to the world data and to theory model claculations. Finally, the measurements will be used together with the reconstructed dilepton spectra to determine the amount and the properties of in medium radiation in the Au+Au system.
QCD matter is expected to exist in different phases, when heated to high temperatures and getting highly compressed. Each phase could be characterized by distinct properties. A way to access extreme phases of matter in the laboratory are heavy-ion collisions at (ultra-)relativistic energies. During the collision, the temperature and density is evolving and reaches a maximum temperature and density far beyond the ground state of matter. The matter properties depend on the incident collision energy. Typically, a collision is separated into three collisions stages, namely first chance collisions (I), hot and dense stage (II) and freeze-out stage (III). Out of those, the second one is of major interest, since the extreme states of matter are generated within. For this reason, the most prominent change of the hadrons is expected to appear there in. Those changes are caused by i.e. modification of the hadronic spectral function. However, to retrieve such information is complicated. Hadrons are strongly interacting particles and therefore, carry little information about the hot and dense stage. For that purpose, decays of hadrons (low-mass vector mesons) to e+e- pairs via a virtual photon, so-called dielectrons, are an ideal probe. Electrons and positrons do not interact strongly and transport the information about the hot and dense stage nearly undisturbed to the detector. Unfortunately, the production of dielectrons is suppressed by a branching ratio of ≈ 10^(-5) and requires a precise lepton identification. Nonetheless, previous experiments have extracted a dilepton signal and observed in the low-mass range an excess over the hadronic cocktail. Latter one is expected to be caused by thermal radiation induced by the medium. Up to now, experiments conducted dilepton measurements with a focus on larger collision energies and large collision systems. Measurements of dielectrons at collision energies of around 1-2A GeV were only conducted for small and medium size collision systems. HADES continued the systematic studies by a measurement of Au+Au collisions at 1.23A GeV.
The detection of dielectrons requires detectors that handle high data rates and specific detectors for a high purity lepton identification. In HADES, the strongest separation of electrons or positrons from the hadronic background is provided by a ring imaging Cherenkov detector (RICH). Its electron identification is based on Cherenkov photons, that are emitted in ring like patterns. In this work a new approach, using the time-of-flight information to preselect electrons and the reconstructed particle trajectory to estimate ring positions, is utilized to improve the lepton identification. The concept of the so-called backtracking algorithm will be explained and applied to e+e- identification in Au+Au collisions. The whole analysis chain comprises single lepton identification, pair reconstruction and correction for efficiency and acceptance losses. The final pair spectra will be presented in form of their invariant mass, pt, mt and helicity distributions. Subsequently, transport model calculations as well as results from the recently developed coarse-grained transport approach will be compared to the dielectron spectra. Moreover, the centrality dependence of the excess yield and true (not "blue-shifted") temperature of the fireball will be presented. The results will be put in context to measurements of lighter collisions systems and at higher energies.
Electron identification with a likelihood method and measurements of di-electrons for the CBM-TRD
(2017)
In this work a likelihood method has been implemented and investigated as particle identification algorithm for the CBM-TRD.
The creation of the probability distributions for the likelihood method via V0-topologies seems to be feasible and the purity of the obtained samples is sufficient for the usage in the likelihood method.
The comparison between the ANN and the likelihood method shows no differences in the identification performance. The pion suppression factor reaches the same values for the same electron identification efficiencies and the yields of the resulting di-lepton signals are comparable. The signal-to-background ratios for both methods have the same values and show a value of about 10−2 in the invariant mass range of minv = 1.5 - 2.5 GeV/c2, which is expected to be sufficient to provide access to the thermal in-medium and QGP radiation.
The investigation of a detector system without a TRD shows no pion suppression for a momentum above p = 6 GeV/c. Therefore, the background contributions increase drastically and the signal-to-background ratio decreases at all invariant masses, but especially in the invariant mass range of minv = 1.5 - 2.5 GeV/c2.
The background contributions in the invariant mass range of minv = 1.5 - 2.5 GeV/c 2 are also influenced by the selected electron identification efficiency of the TRD, which significantly shifts the fraction of the eπ contributions relative to the total number of pairs.