Centrality dependent particle production at y = 0 and y approx. 1 in Au + Au collisions at s(NN)**(1/2) = 200-GeV.

The BRAHMS collaboration Arsene, I. ; Bearden, I.G. ; Beavis, D. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.C 72 (2005) 014908, 2005.
Inspire Record 678407 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.89446

Particle production of identified charged hadrons, $\pi^{\pm}$, $K^{\pm}$, $p$, and $\bar{p}$ in Au+Au collisions at $\sqrt(snn) =$ 200 GeV has been studied as a function of transverse momentum and collision centrality at $y=0$ and $y\sim1$ by the BRAHMS experiment at RHIC. Significant collective transverse flow at kinetic freeze-out has been observed in the collisions. The magnitude of the flow rises with the collision centrality. Proton and kaon yields relative to the pion production increase strongly as the transverse momentum increases and also increase with centrality. Particle yields per participant nucleon show a weak dependence on the centrality for all particle species. Hadron production remains relatively constant within one unit around midrapidity in Au+Au collisions at $\sqrt(snn) =$ 200 GeV.

13 data tables

$\frac{1}{2\pi p_{\mathrm{T}}}\frac{\mathrm{d}^2N}{\mathrm{d}p_{\mathrm{T}}\mathrm{d}y}$ versus $p_{\mathrm{T}}$ for $\mathrm{\pi}^{+}$,$\mathrm{\pi}^{-}$,$\mathrm{K}^{+}$,$\mathrm{K}^{-}$,$\mathrm{p}$,$\overline{\mathrm{p}}$ in $\mathrm{Au}-\mathrm{Au}$ at $\sqrt{s_{\mathrm{NN}}}=200\,\mathrm{Ge\!V}$

$\langle p_{\mathrm{T}}\rangle$ versus $N_{\mathrm{part}}$ for $\mathrm{\pi}^{+}$,$\mathrm{\pi}^{-}$,$\mathrm{K}^{+}$,$\mathrm{K}^{-}$,$\mathrm{p}$,$\overline{\mathrm{p}}$ in $\mathrm{Au}-\mathrm{Au}$ at $\sqrt{s_{\mathrm{NN}}}=200\,\mathrm{Ge\!V}$

$\beta_{\mathrm{S}}$,$T$,$\chi^2$,$\nu$ versus $\mathrm{Centrality}$ for $\mathrm{h}^{+}$ in $\mathrm{Au}-\mathrm{Au}$ at $\sqrt{s_{\mathrm{NN}}}=200\,\mathrm{Ge\!V}$

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Nuclear stopping in Au + Au collisions at s(NN)**(1/2) = 200-GeV.

The BRAHMS collaboration Bearden, I.G. ; Beavis, D. ; Besliu, C. ; et al.
Phys.Rev.Lett. 93 (2004) 102301, 2004.
Inspire Record 636579 DOI 10.17182/hepdata.89443

Transverse momentum spectra and rapidity densities, dN/dy, of protons, anti-protons, and net--protons (p-pbar) from central (0-5%) Au+Au collisions at sqrt(sNN) = 200 GeV were measured with the BRAHMS experiment within the rapidity range 0 < y < 3. The proton and anti-proton dN/dy decrease from mid-rapidity to y=3. The net-proton yield is roughly constant for y<1 at dN/dy~7, and increases to dN/dy~12 at y~3. The data show that collisions at this energy exhibit a high degree of transparency and that the linear scaling of rapidity loss with rapidity observed at lower energies is broken. The energy loss per participant nucleon is estimated to be 73 +- 6 GeV.

2 data tables

$\frac{1}{2\pi p_{\mathrm{T}}}\frac{\mathrm{d}^2N}{\mathrm{d}p_{\mathrm{T}}\mathrm{d}y}$ versus $p_{\mathrm{T}}$ for $\mathrm{p}$,$\overline{\mathrm{p}}$ in $\mathrm{Au}-\mathrm{Au}$ at $\sqrt{s_{\mathrm{NN}}}=200\,\mathrm{Ge\!V}$ . NaN values means no observation.

$\frac{\mathrm{d}N}{\mathrm{d}y}$ versus $y$ for $\mathrm{p}$,$\overline{\mathrm{p}}$,$\mathrm{p}-\overline{\mathrm{p}}$ in $\mathrm{Au}-\mathrm{Au}$ at $\sqrt{s_{\mathrm{NN}}}=200\,\mathrm{Ge\!V}$ . The correction for the $\Lambda$ contribution is not straight forward since BRAHMS does not measure the $\Lambda$s and PHENIX and STAR only measures the $\Lambda$s at mid-rapidity! If one assumes that the mid-rapidity estimated in the paper of $$R=\frac{\Lambda-\bar{\Lambda}}{\mathrm{p}-\bar{\mathrm{p}}} = \frac{\Lambda}{\mathrm{p}} = \frac{\bar{\Lambda}}{\bar{\mathrm{p}}} = 0.93\pm 0.11(\mathrm{stat})\pm 0.25(\mathrm{syst}) $$ and the BRAHMS "acceptance factor" of $A=0.53\pm 0.05$ which includes both that only 64% decays to protons and that some are rejected by the requirement of the track to point back to the IP. The corrected $\mathrm{p}$ ($\bar{\mathrm{p}}$ or net-$\mathrm{p}$) is then : $$\left.\frac{\mathrm{d}N}{\mathrm{d}y}\right|_{\mathrm{corrected}} = \frac{\mathrm{d}N}{\mathrm{d}y}(1/(1+RA))= \frac{\mathrm{d}N}{\mathrm{d}y}\left(0.67\pm 0.05(\mathrm{stat})\pm 0.11(\mathrm{syst})\right)$$ Which can be used at all rapidities if one believes that R is constant. The fact that net-$\mathrm{K}=\mathrm{K}^{+}-\mathrm{K}^{-}$ follows net-$\mathrm{p}$ (see fx. talk by Djamel Ouerdane at QM04), seems to indicate that the net-$\Lambda$ follow the net-$\mathrm{p}$ trend and the correction is reasonable.