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Why would I want to look at strange particle production? “Truth is ALWAYS strange” Lord Byron (1788-1824) Helen Caines Yale University Hot Quarks - July 2004 Strangeness enhancement • General arguments for enhancement: 1. Lower energy threshold Strange particles with charged decay modes TQGP > TC ~ ms = 150 MeV q q s s g g s s Ethres 2ms 300 MeV NK Ethres 530 MeV K N Ethres 1420 MeV K us , u s (64%,3.7m) K 0s (ds d s ) (69%,2.7cm) ( ss ) K K (49%, n/a) (uds ) p (64%,7.9cm) (dss ) (100%,4.9cm) ( sss ) K (68%,2.5cm) Note that strangeness is conserved in the strong interaction 2. Larger production cross-section QGP ss HG ss resonances Enhancement is expected to be more pronounced for multi-strange baryons and their anti-particles Arguments still valid but now use strange particles for MUCH MORE. Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 2 A theoretical view of the collision 2 1 3 ♦ Hadronic ratios. ♦ pT spectra. ♦ Resonance production. 4 ♦ Partonic collectivity. ♦ High pT measurements. Tc – Critical temperature for transition to QGP Tch– Chemical freeze-out (Tch Tc) : inelastic scattering stops Tfo – Kinetic freeze-out (Tfo Tch): elastic scattering stops Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 3 The search proton After Before Primary vertex pion Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 4 PID over large pT range STAR Preliminary K0s STAR Prelimin ary STAR Preliminary K* preliminary STAR Prelimin ary Preliminary preliminary Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 K 5 Collective motion in Au-Au data data / power law not absolute mT scaling... p-p but if you rescale not in Au-Au Au-Au Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 6 Kinetic Freeze-out STAR Preliminary Blastwave parameterization Tdec = 100 MeV Kolb and Rapp, PRC 67 (2003) 044903. Large flow, lots of re-interactions, thermalization likely ,K,p: Tkin decreases with centrality , : Tkin = const. Hydro does not need different T for multi-strange Freeze-out T different – Is blastwave realistic? Helen Caines Are re-interactions till freeze-out realistic either? Hot Quarks – July 2004 7 Strange baryon production at SPS 30 AGeV 40 AGeV 80 AGeV NA49 Pb-Pb Collisions – C.Meurer QM2004 158 AGeV , , A clear evolution of shape of is visible. No big change of shape of and with energy. Due to baryon transport from beam to mid-rapidity Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 8 Baryon transport to mid-rapidity ♦ Clear systematic trend with collision energy ♦ Very similar trend between heavy ion and p-p E866 - At RHIC top energies ~25 TeV is stopped for particle production That’s ~75% of 62.4 the beam plenty for making strangeness GeVenergy data –fits intoaround pattern Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 9 Energy (in)dependence of yields Centrality regions: NA57: 0-5% (,K), 0-12% (,) STAR*: 0-5% (), 0-6% (K), 0-10% (,) T, µB and V can all vary with energy, but in such a way as to ensure Λ, Ξ- yields stays constant Change in baryon transport *Refs: Physical Review Letters 89 (2002), 092301 reflected in anti-particles and K nucl-ex/0206008, nucl-ex/0307024 Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 10 What can Kaons tell us? Kaons carry large percentage of strangeness content. RHIC Au-Au K- = us K+ = su Ratio tells about baryon transport even though not a baryon. By varying rapidity range can study many different physics regions – Especially at RHIC Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 11 Statistical hadronic models Assume thermally (constant Tch) and chemically (constant ni) equilibrated system at chemical freeze-out System composed of non-interacting hadrons and resonances Given Tch and 's (+ system size), ni can be calculated in a grand canonical ensemble ni g p 2 dp 2 2 0 e( E ( p ) ) / T 1 i i , Ei p 2 mi2 Obey conservation laws: Baryon Number, Strangeness, Isospin Short-lived particles and resonance feed-down need to be taken into account Minimization of difference between calculated ratios and experimental data Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 Tch, B 12 Constraining the parameters Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 13 Data – Fit (s) Ratio Works very well Fit to NA49 data STAR Preliminary Au-Au 200 GeV [Becattini et al.: hep-ph/0310049] Tch = 1582 MeV gs = 0.840.03 Helen Caines B = 247 8MeV Tch = 1605 MeV B = 24 5 MeV gs = 0.990.07 Hot Quarks – July 2004 s = 1.4 1.4 MeV 14 Tch systematics ♦ Hagedorn (1965): – If the resonance mass spectrum grows exponentially (and this seems to be the case): – There is a maximum possible temperature for a system of hadrons. r(m) (GeV-1) Blue – Exp. fit Tc= 158 MeV Green - 1411 states of 1967 Red – 4627 states of 1996 m filled: AA open: elementary [Satz: Nucl.Phys. A715 (2003) 3c] Seems he was correct – don’t get above Tch ~170 MeV Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 15 Limits of thermodynamics ♦ This exercise in “hadro-chemistry” – Applies to final-state (ordinary) hadrons – Does not (necessarily) indicate • Deconfinement • Says nothing about how or when the system got there or its dynamical properties ♦ A smooth continuation of trends seen – at lower energies – in p-p, even e+eHelen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 16 Wroblewski factor Produced strange quarks to light quark ratio P. Braun-Munzinger, J. Cleymans, H.Oeschler, K. Redlich, NPA 697(2002) 902 Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 17 Elementary collisions thermal? • Beccatini, Heinz, Z.Phys. C76 (1997) 269 Also Seems to work well ?! Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 18 Statistics Thermodynamics p+p Ensemble of events constitutes a statistical ensemble T and µ are simply Lagrange multipliers “Phase Space Dominance” A+A Helen Caines One (1) system is already statistical ! • We can talk about pressure • T and µ are more than Lagrange multipliers they have physical meaning Hot Quarks – July 2004 19 How do we know when its thermal? – Canonical (small system i.e. p-p): Quantum Numbers conserved exactly. Computations take into account energy to create companion to ensure conservation of strangeness. Relative yields given by ratios of phase space volumes Pn/Pn’ = n(E)/n’(E) – Grand Canonical limit (large system i.e. central AA): Quantum Numbers conserved on average via chemical potential Just account for creation of particle itself. The rest of the system “picks up the slack” When reach grand canonical limit strangeness will saturate. ♦ Canonical suppression increases ♦ Canonical suppression with increasing strangeness increases with decreasing energy σ(N ) / N = ε σ(pp) ε > 1 Enhancement! part part Not new idea pointed out by Hagedorn in 1960’s Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 20 SIS energies Pion density C: N ~ V2 (V 0) n() = exp(-E/T) GC: N ~ V (V ) Strangeness is conserved! KaoS ( Au-Au 1 GeV) M. Mang et al. Assume V ~ Npart Kaon density – need to balance strangeness Pions/Apart constant NN N Λ K+ grand-canonical! n(K+) = exp(-EK+/T)* Kaons/Apart rising (gKV ∫ … exp[-EK/T] + canonical! g V ∫ … exp[-(EΛ-µB)/T]) In agreement with T=60 MeV Helen Caines J. Cleymans, H. Oeschler, K. Redlich, PRC 59 (1999) Hot Quarks – July 2004 21 Top SPS energies NA57, √sNN = 17.3 GeV We seem to understand what is happening Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 22 But then at √s= 8.8 GeV NA57 (D. Elia QM2004) C to GC predicts a factor 4 - 5 larger - enhancement at √sNN =8.8 GeV than at 17 GeV Perhaps yields don’t have time to reach limit – hadronic system? Need to see thermal fit. (word is it is not too bad) Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 23 And then at 200 GeV... Preliminary Not evenorflat any more! But does it over saturate ONLY just reach saturation? Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 24 What happens to other particles? – show Npart scaling p – show slight increase phase space suppression of baryons? K0s – show increase only small phase space suppression of strange mesons? What about the ? Contains s and s quark, so not strange should show no volume dependence Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 25 Can we find a scaling? The more strangeness you add to the baryon the less it scales with Npart The larger strangeness content scales better with Nbin 100 200 300 Npart Still not perfect Scaling dependant on pT? Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 26 RAA of strangeness STAR Preliminary Phase space suppression of strangeness in p-p plus other effects all pT dependent – need to disentangle Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 27 Summary The more we learn the less we know! Seems that and freeze-out differently as a function of centrality – except at SPS... Net baryon density depends on collision energy not system Appear to have strangeness saturation at most central top RHIC but not before What happens at SPS? Seems our simple thermal pictures are only approximately correct. The devil is in the details but we have the data to figure it all out. Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 28 Backup and stuff • That’s really the end Helen Caines Hot Quarks – July 2004 29