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STAR focus: Observation of an Energy-Dependent Difference in Elliptic Flow between Particles and Antiparticles in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions


We present elliptic flow (v2) measurements for identified particles at mid-rapidity in Au+Au collisions, measured by the STAR experiment in the Beam Energy Scan at RHIC at √sNN= 7.7-62.4 GeV. A beam-energy dependent difference of the values of v2 between particles and corresponding anti-particles was observed. The difference increases with decreasing beam energy and is larger for baryons compared to mesons. This implies that, at lower energies, particles and anti-particles are not consistent with the universal number-of-constituent-quark (NCQ) scaling of v2 - one of the evidences in support of the sQGP formation at √sNN = 200 GeV. The results were recently published in Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 142301 (2013).

Left figure: The difference in v2 between particles X and their corresponding anti-particles X (see legend) as a function of √sNN for 0-80% central Au+Au collisions. The dashed lines in the plot are fits with a power-law function. The error bars depict the combined statistical and systematic errors. The difference in the v2 values for particles and anti-particles increases with decreasing beam energy. The energy dependence in shape and magnitude is similar for all baryons. Baryons show a larger difference compared to mesons.

The v2(mT-m0) and possible NCQ scaling were investigated for particles and anti-particles separately, as shown in the lower figure. The baryons and mesons are clearly separated for √sNN = 62.4 GeV at (mT-m0) > 1 GeV/c2. While the effect is present for particles at √sNN = 11.5 GeV, no such separation is observed for the anti-particles at this energy in the measured (mT-m0) range up to 2 GeV/c2 . The lower panels of the figure depict the difference of the baryon v2 relative to a fit to the meson v2 data with the pions excluded from the fit. The anti-particles at √sNN = 11.5 GeV show a smaller difference compared to the particles.

In summary, the first observation of a beam-energy dependent difference in v2(pT) between particles and corresponding anti-particles for minimum bias √sNN = 7.7-62.4 GeV Au+Au collisions at mid-rapidity is reported. The difference increases with decreasing beam energy. It is apparent that, at the lower energies, particles and anti-particles are no longer consistent with the single NCQ scaling that was observed for √sNN = 200 GeV. However, for the group of particles the NCQ scaling holds within ±10% while for the group of anti-particles the difference between baryon and meson v2 continues to decrease to lower energies.

Posted Apr. 16, 2013

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May 6, 2013
Congratulations Jie Zhao, from Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, who has completed his PhD thesis on: "Di-electron Production from 200GeV Au+Au Collisions at RHIC".

May 6, 2013
Congratulations Hongwei Ke, from Central China Normal University, who has completed his PhD thesis on: "Beam Energy, Collision Centrality and Charge Asymmetry Dependence of the Pion Event Anisotropy in Au+Au Collisions at RHIC".

May 6, 2013
Congratulations Yuhui Zhu, from Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, who has completed her PhD thesis on: "Study on Hypertriton Production and Lifetime Measurement at RHIC STAR".

May 6, 2013
Congratulations Lizhu Chen, from Central China Normal University, who has completed her PhD thesis on: "The Sixth Order Cumulant of Net-proton Multiplicity Distributions at STAR".

May 2, 2013
Congratulations Elizabeth Oldag, from University of Texas at Austin, who has completed her PhD thesis on: "Two-Particle Correlations in Angular and Momentum Space in Heavy Ion Collisions at STAR".

May 2, 2013
Congratulations Alan Davila, from University of Texas at Austin, who has completed his PhD thesis on: "Jet characterization in Au + Au collisions at STAR".

May 2, 2013
Congratulations Masayuki Wada, from University of Texas at Austin, who has completed his PhD thesis on: "Resonance Particles in Heavy-Ion Collisions".

April 18, 2013
Congratulations Xin Li, from Purdue University, who has completed his PhD thesis on: "Non-photonic electron production in p + p and Au + Au collisions".


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