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STAR focus: Evidence for Charm Quark Thermalization at RHIC
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STAR has recently
published its
first paper to Phys. Rev. Letters on measurements enabled by the Heavy Flavor
Tracker (HFT) high-resolution silicon detector system. The results are the first
from a detector based on Monolithic Active Pixel Sensor (MAPS) technology in a
collider environment and are the first measurements of D0
elliptic flow, v2, in Au+Au collisions at
√sNN = 200
GeV.
Heavy flavor quarks, due to their large masses, are considered to offer unique
information about QGP dynamics in heavy-ion collisions. A measurement of heavy flavor
hadron v2, particularly in the low-to-intermediate pT region,
will provide us a better understanding of medium thermalization, and can help
quantitatively measure the heavy quark diffusion coefficient – one of the
intrinsic transport parameters of the QGP.

Figure 1. Left: The Heavy Flavor Tracker (HFT) system which consists of one layer of
Silicon Strip Detector (SSD), one layer of Intermediate Silicon Tracker (IST), and two layers of
PiXeL detector (PXL). Right: Pointing resolution in the transverse plane as a function of
particle momentum (or transverse momentum) at mid-rapidity from experiments at RHIC
and the LHC.
The HFT consists of three subsystems: one layer of Silicon Strip Detector (SSD),
one layer of Intermediate Silicon Tracker (IST) and two layers of silicon PiXeL
(PXL) detectors. The HFT-PXL detector is the first application of the MAPS
technology in a collider experiment. Its unique features include fine pixel size and
thin material budget which provides superior track pointing resolution for charged
particles over a broad momentum range. The HFT was designed for precision
measurements of charmed hadron production via topological reconstruction of
displaced vertices in heavy-ion collisions. The HFT was installed and taken physics
data during RHIC Runs 2014-2016. The dataset used in the PRL was about 1.1B
minimum-bias-triggered Au+Au 200 GeV events taken in 2014. Fig. 1 (right)
shows the track pointing resolution in the transverse plane as a function of
particle momentum (or transverse momentum) at mid-rapidity from experiments at RHIC
and the LHC.

Figure 2. Left: v2 normalized by the
number-of-constituent-quarks (nq) as a function of transverse kinetic
energy (also normalized by nq) for D0 mesons and light hadrons
in 10-40% central Au+Au collisions at 200 GeV. Right: v2 as a
function of pT for D0 in 0-80% Au+Au collisions at 200 GeV
compared to various model calculations.
Fig. 2 (left) shows the v2 normalized by the number-of-constituent-quark
(nq) vs. the transverse kinetic energy (also normalized by nq)
for D0 mesons from this measurement and other light hadron
results. With unprecedented precision, the result shows that D0
v2 follows the same trend as light hadrons with this scaling. In the low
pT region, this indicates a clear mass ordering for light hadrons
and D0 mesons. In the intermediate pT region, the
magnitude of the D-meson v2 is the same as light mesons. This
result suggests that charm quarks have gained a similar amount of collectivity in
these collisions as light mesons.
Fig. 2 (right) shows the D-meson v2 compared to various
theoretical model calculations. One interesting observation is that the
measured D-meson v2 can be well-described by a 3D viscous
hydrodynamic model calculation, which indicates that charm quarks may have reached
local thermal equilibrium. The precision of the current data allows us to
distinguish different models but there are non-trivial differences between different
models that need to be settled. One important physics goal, for the future, is to
constrain the temperature dependence of the heavy quark diffusion coefficient
parameter via joint investigations between theorists and experimentalists.
The D0 v2 results, together with other heavy flavor
results from STAR (e.g. the enhancement observed in the Ds
and ΛC production in mid-central Au+Au
collisions as well as the charm/bottom-separated single-electron RAA
measurements) have been reported and highlighted in the recent Quark Matter 2017
conference in Chicago in February
[see Guannan's
contribution to
STAR
Newsletter February 2017 edition]. These measurements strongly suggest that
charm quarks may have reached thermalization in the Au+Au collisions at
RHIC energy.
The paper was made possible with significant contributions from colleagues at BNL,
CCNU, KSU, LBNL, MIT, Purdue, SINAP, UIC, USTC, and UT Austin, with critical support
from the STAR operation and computing teams as well as the paper's GPC.
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Posted Jun. 30, 2017
Previous STAR Focus Features
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community links
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collaboration links
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STAR Regional Meeting: Heavy Quark Production, Jets and Correlations Jun. 27-29, 2017, Warsaw
STAR Collaboration Meeting May 15-19, 2017, BNL
CBM-STAR joint Workshop Mar. 18, 2017, TU Darmstadt
STAR Pre-QM Meeting Feb. 1-3, 2017, BNL
Mini-Workshop for TOF and MTD in STAR Dec. 8-10, 2016, NCKU
STAR Analysis Meeting Nov. 10-12, 2016, LBL
STAR Collaboration Meeting Aug. 15-20, 2016, OSU
STAR Regional Meeting Jun. 13-15, 2016, AGH, Cracow
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recent news
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August 1, 2017
Congratulations to Dr. Kevin Adkins on successfully defended his Ph.D.
thesis at University of Kentucky his thesis title is: "Studying Transverse
Momentum Dependent Distributions in Polarized Proton Collisions via
Azimuthal Single Spin Asymmetries of Charged Pions in Jets"
July 11, 2017
Congratulations to Chris Flores on successfully defended his PhD thesis at
UC Davis. His thesis title is: "A Systematic, Large Phase Space Study of
Pion, Kaon, and Proton Production in Au+Au Heavy-Ion Collisions from the
RHIC Beam Energy Scan Program at STAR"
July 4, 2017
Congratulations to Kunsu Oh who successfully defended his PhD thesis at
Pusan in May, 2017. His thesis title is: "Charm and Bottom Hadron
Production via Semi-leptonic Decay Channel in Relativistic Heavy Ion
Collisions".
June 30, 2017
We get to know one of our new collaborating institutions in the June 2017
edition of the STAR Newsletter, and are called to volunteer for the
annual Summer Sunday at BNL. We also hear from our spokesperson about
Collaboration topics, and our S&C Leader on computing efforts. The recent
PAC and RHIC/AGS Users' Meetings make the news, along with recognitions for
members of the STAR Collaboration.
June 23, 2017
Congratulations Prashanth Shanmuganathan (Ph.D. Supervisor Declan Keane,
Kent State) and Zilong Chang (Ph.D. Supervisor Carl Gagliardi, Texas A&M
University) for wining the RHIC/AGS Users Thesis awards.
Their theses can be found on our web pages or via the links below:
June 18, 2017
Congratulations to Xu Wang who successfully defended his PhD thesis at SDU
on May 26, 2017. His thesis title is: "Setup of a PMT Test System for
LHAASO-KM2A and STAR-iTPC MWPC Prototype Design and Performance
Measurement".
May 25, 2017
Congratulations to Long Ma who successfully defended his PhD thesis at
SINAP on May 25, 2017. His thesis title is: "Measurement of D-meson
triggered azimuthal correlations and study of anisotropic flow fluctuations
at RHIC energies".
May 25, 2017
Congratulations to Zhengqiao Zhang who successfully defended his PhD thesis
at SINAP on May 25, 2017. His thesis title is: "Measurement of interaction
between antiprotons".
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