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Download Study of baryonic matter with the BM@N
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The BM@N experiment at the Nuclotron. Figure 1. BM@N experimental set-up. BM@N (Baryonic Matter @ Nuclotron) is the first experiment at the accelerator complex of NICA-Nuclotron-M. The aim of the BM@N experiment is to study interactions of relativistic heavy ion beams with fixed targets [5]. The Nuclotron will provide verity of beams from protons to gold ions with the kinetic energy from 1 to 6 GeV per nucleon. The BM@N experimental zone is situated at the far end of the building for extracted beams. The beam line between the Nuclotron and the BM@N experiment is around 160 meter in length. It comprises 26 elements of magnetic optics: 8 dipole magnets and 18 quadruple lenses. The planned intensity of the gold ion beam accelerated and accumulated in the Nuclotron with the Booster and transported to the BM@N experimental zone is up to 107 ions per second. The gold ion beam is expected in the end of 2018. The xenon ion beam is planned for the end of 2017. The first technical run of the BM@N detectors was performed with deuteron and carbon beams in spring 2015. A sketch of the proposed experimental set-up is shown in figure 1. It combines high precision track measurements with time-of-flight information for particle identification and total energy measurements for the analysis of the collision centrality. The charged track momentum and multiplicity will be measured with the set of 12 two coordinate planes of GEM (Gaseous Electron Multipliers) detectors located downstream of the target inside the analyzing magnet and drift/straw chambers (DCH, Straw) situated outside the magnetic field. The GEM detectors sustain high rates of particles and are operational in the strong magnetic field. At the second stage of the BM@N experiment, at least 4 planes of twocoordinate silicon strip detectors will be installed between the GEM tracker and the target. The magnetic field can be varied up to 1.2 T to get the optimal BM@N detector acceptance and momentum resolution for different processes and beam energies. The design parameters of the time-of-flight detectors based on multi-gap Resistive Plate Chambers (mRPC-1,2) with a strip read-out allow us to discriminate between hadrons (π,K,p) as well as light nuclei with the momentum up to a few GeV/c produced in multi-particle events. The Zero Degree Calorimeter (ZDC) is designed for the analysis of the collision centrality by measuring the energy of forward going particles. The T0 detector, partially covering the backward hemisphere around the target, is planned to trigger central heavy ion collisions and provide a start T0 signal for the mRPC-1,2 detectors. Optionally, an electro-magnetic calorimeter can be installed behind the mRPC-1 wall to study processes with electro-magnetic probes (γ, e±) in the final state. At present, the activities on the detector and beam line construction are complemented with intensive Monte Carlo simulation studies for optimization of the detector set-up. A focus is made on the efficiency of the measurement of strange hyperons and hyper-nuclei in Au+Au collisions at the maximal kinetic energy of 4.5 AGeV. The simulation of Au+Au collisions is performed using the URQMD and DCH-QGSM models of heavy ion collisions [2]. The products of collisions are transported through the BM@N setup using the GEANT program and reconstructed using track reconstruction algorithms for multi-particle events. Figure 2. Left plot: distribution of primary protons generated in Au+Au collisions at 4.5AGeV in the phase space of the transverse momentum and rapidity in the laboratory frame. Right plot: acceptance of the GEM tracker for primary protons as a function of the particle transverse momentum and rapidity. Figure 3. Momentum resolution and vertex impact parameter resolution of charged particles reconstructed in the GEM tracker shown as a function of the particle momentum. Figure 2 illustrates the distribution of primary protons generated in Au+Au collisions at the beam kinetic energy of 4.5AGeV in the phase space of the transverse momentum and rapidity in the laboratory frame. The acceptance of the GEM tracker for primary protons for the same phase space is shown on the right plot. Figure 3 presents the momentum resolution and vertex impact parameter resolution of charged particles reconstructed in the GEM tracker. The results are presented for the magnetic field in the center of the magnet of 0.44 T. Figure 4 presents the distributions of the invariant mass of decay products of -hyperon, Ξ- hyperon and hyper-triton 3HΛ reconstructed with the GEM tracker in central Au+Au collisions at the beam kinetic energy of 4.5 AGeV. The obtained results indicate that the proposed set-up has a reasonable reconstruction capability for strange hyperons produced in high multiplicity central Au+Au collisions. The reconstructed signals of Ξ- hyperon and hyper-triton 3HΛ correspond to 0.9M and 2M of central collisions, respectively. Taking into account the signal reconstruction efficiency, data acquisition capacity (20 kHz of triggered events at the 1st stage of the BM@N experiment) and the duty factor of the Nuclotron beam (0.2), the expected statistics of Ξ- hyperons and hyper-tritons 3HΛ for a month of the BM@N operation are 2.7M and 4M, respectively. Figure 4. The distributions of the invariant mass of Λ-hyperon, Ξ- hyperon and hyper-triton 3HΛ reconstructed with the GEM tracker in central Au+Au collisions at 4.5 AGeV. The expected statistics is sufficient to perform studies of strange hyperon and hyper-nuclei production yields and ratios, transverse momentum spectra, rapidity and angular distributions, as well as fluctuations and correlations of particles as a function of the collision energy and centrality. References 1. BM@N Conceptual Design Report. http://nica.jinr.ru/files/BM@N/BMN_CDR.pdf 2. References to the URQMD and DCM-QGSM models.