Abstract
Differential measurements of charged particle azimuthal anisotropy are presented for lead-lead collisions at √sNN = 2.76 TeV with the ATLAS detector at the LHC, based on an integrated luminosity of approximately 8 μb− 1. This anisotropy is characterized via a Fourier expansion of the distribution of charged particles in azimuthal angle relative to the reaction plane, with the coefficients vn denoting the magnitude of the anisotropy. Significant v2–v6 values are obtained as a function of transverse momentum (0.5 < pT < 20 GeV), pseudorapidity (|η| < 2.5), and centrality using an event plane method. The vn values for n ≥ 3 are found to vary weakly with both η and centrality, and their pT dependencies are found to follow an approximate scaling relation, v1/n n (pT) ∝ v1/2 2 (pT), except in the top 5% most central collisions. A Fourier analysis of the charged particle pair distribution in relative azimuthal angle (Δϕ = ϕa − ϕb) is performed to extract the coefficients vn, n = (cos nΔϕ). For pairs of charged particles with a large pseudorapidity gap (|Δη = ηa − ηb| > 2) and one particle with pT < 3 GeV, the v2,2–v6,6 values are found to factorize as vn, n(pa T, pb T) ≈ vn(pa T)vn(pb T) in central and midcentral events. Such factorization suggests that these values of v2,2–v6,6 are primarily attributable to the response of the created matter to the fluctuations in the geometry of the initial state. A detailed study shows that the v1,1(pa T, pb T) data are consistent with the combined contributions from a rapidity-even v1 and global momentum conservation.A two-component fit is used to extract the v1 contribution. The extracted v1 isobserved to cross zero at pT ≈ 1.0 GeV, reaches a maximum at 4–5 GeV with a value comparable to that for v3, and decreases at higher pT.
Original language | English (US) |
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Article number | 014907 |
Pages (from-to) | 014907-1-014907-41 |
Journal | Physical Review C - Nuclear Physics |
Volume | 86 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 2012 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Nuclear and High Energy Physics