Topics include correlations related to bulk phenomena, including femtoscopic correlations, flow, event-by-event fluctuations.
The bulkcorr pwg protected area can be found at: http://www.star.bnl.gov/protected/bulkcorr/
The forum can be found at: http://www.star.bnl.gov/HyperNews-star/protected/get/bulkcorr.html
Current conveners: Nu Xu & W.J. Llope
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Stony Brook collaboration meeting agenda (tentative)
20” each talk including time for discussions
Each talk should cover the following issues:(i) Physics motivations
(ii) Analysis status
(iii) Summary
(iv) QM2015: Y/N
https://drupal.star.bnl.gov/STAR/conference/timetable/talk/32871
Most recent collaboration meeting: Nov 3-7 BNL
See this BES-hyper-new thread for more discussions
Fig. 1 Parity error estimates for 5M events of 9.2 GeV collisions.
Fig. 2 Parity error estimates are shown together with possible singal
for 1M events of 9.2 GeV collisions
(assuming the same values for 3-particle correlator as in 200GeV collisions)
DPF 2009 presentation (Ilya Selyuzhenkov)
Ilya Selyuzhenkov
"Azimuthal charged particle correlations
as a probe for local strong parity violation
in heavy-ion collisions"
Ilya Selyuzhenkov for the STAR Collaboration
Plenary talk at Joint CATHIE/TECHQM Workshop (December 14-18, 2009) on
"STAR probes of local strong parity violation in heavy ion collisions"
Poster 1
"Strong parity violation at STAR:
Quantifying background effects with Monte-Carlo event generators
and detector effects study"
Poster 2
"Strong parity violation at STAR:
Evaluating experimental measurement technique
and estimating background contributions from multi-particle production processes
Parity group recommended
Evan Finch (Yale) and Ilya Selyuzhenkov (Indiana)
as a possible candidates to present these posters at QM2009.
LPV workshop website:
http://www.bnl.gov/rhic_ags/users_meeting/Workshops/3.asp
Presentation:
Ilya Selyuzhenkov for the STAR Collaboration
"Probes of local strong parity violation: Experimental results from STAR"
Slides: see attached pdf(s)
Two methods were used to calculate directed flow:
The measurement of elliptic flow in AuAu at 62 and 200 GeV data were performed using TPC and FTPC data. The non-flow contribution to two particle correlations at different pseudorapidity regions was discussed.
Supporting materials:
Here is the brief list of what are in the Down Scale DST files:
NOTE: There is no event cuts - all events are taken.
The main advantage of DownScaleDst files is smaller size compared to STAR MuDst files. It is about 50 times smaller than those of MuDst files. The smaller size results in faster data analysis.
Down Scale files could be used in flow analysis of charged or strange particles, high pt correlations.
mZdcAdcAttentuatedSumWest
mZdcAdcAttentuatedSumEast
mZdcSmdWest[16]
mZdcSmdEast[16]
mCtbMultiplicity
mPrimaryVertexX
mPrimaryVertexY
mPrimaryVertexZ
mX[2][3][2][31] // X component of the event plane vector
mY[2][3][2][31] // Y component of the event planevector
// Q[charge][harmonic][subEvent][etaBin]; harmonic = 0 => multiplicity;
//ETA BINS: FTPCE -4.1 < eta < -2.5 (8 bins); FTPCW 2.5 < eta < 4.1 (8 bins); TPC -1.5 < eta < 1.5 (15 bins)
mEventId
mRunId
mNumberOfGoodPrimaryTracks
mNumberOfV0Tracks
mNumberOfPrimaryTracks
mNominalTriggerId[32]
mCentrality // centrality calculated according to the standard STAR refMult regions
mRefMult
mRefMultEtaWide // refMult calculated from tracks with wide eta cut |eta|<0.8
V0.mTypeOfStrangeParticle // 0 Lambda; 1 Anti-Lambda; 2 K0Short
V0.mMomPos.fX
V0.mMomPos.fY
V0.mMomPos.fZ
V0.mMomNeg.fX
V0.mMomNeg.fY
V0.mMomNeg.fZ
V0.mPtV0
V0.mPtPos
V0.mPtNeg
V0.mIsPosPrimary // need to remove auto correlations if the pos V0 track is in Event Plane
V0.mIsNegPrimary // if the neg V0 track is in Event Plane v0IsPrimary = etaBin+1-(nEtaTotal+1)*(1-subEvent)
V0.mPseudoRapV0
V0.mPseudoRapPos
V0.mPseudoRapNeg
V0.mMassLambda
V0.mMassAntiLambda
V0.mMassK0Short
Primary.mId
Primary.mCharge
Primary.mMaxPoints
Primary.mFitPoints
Primary.mTrackInEventPlaneFlag // need to remove auto correlations if track is in Event Plane TrackInEventPlane = etaBin+1-(nEtaTotal+1)*(1-subEvent)
Primary.mDEdx
Primary.mPt
Primary.mPhi
Primary.mEta
Primary.mDcaGlobal.mX1
Primary.mDcaGlobal.mX2
Primary.mDcaGlobal.mX3
Ilya Selyuzhenkov and Sergei Voloshin
The applicability of anisotropic flow measurement techniques and their extension for detectors with nonuniform azimuthal acceptance are discussed. Considering anisotropic flow measurements with two and three (mixed harmonic) azimuthal correlations we introduce a set of observables based on the x and y components of the event flow vector. These observables provide independent measures of anisotropic flow and can be used to test the self-consistency of the analysis. Based on these observables we propose a technique that explicitly takes into account the effects of nonuniform detector acceptance. Within this approach the acceptance corrections, as well as parameters that define the method applicability, can be determined directly from experimental data. For practical purposes a brief summary of the method is provided at the end.
Referee report and Reply
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31 32 33 34 35 36
The strange "File Id" dependence in both FTPC East and FTPC West were found in AuAu@200GeV data. It was fould that for the same production library there was files produced with different library setup, and large part of the files was with broken FTPC data.
Supporting materials:
The method for acceptance correction in the case of azimuthally asymmetric detector (for example ZDC SMD in STAR) was suggested. The method was successfully applied in the anisotropic flow analysis of AuAu@62GeV ZDC SMD data
Supporting materials:
Ilya Selyuzhenkov and Sergei Voloshin (for the STAR collaboration)
The system created in non-central relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions possesses large orbital angular momentum. Due to spin-orbit coupling, particles produced in such a system could become globally polarized along the direction of the system angular momentum. We present the results of Lambda and Anti-Lambda hyperon global polarization measurements in Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=62 GeV and 200 GeV performed with the STAR detector at RHIC.
The observed global polarization of Lambda and Anti-Lambda hyperons in the STAR acceptance is consistent with zero within the precision of the measurements. The obtained upper limit, |P_{Lambda,Anti-Lambda}| < 0.02, is compared to the theoretical values discussed recently in the literature.
GPC: 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, 5.0, 6.0, 7.0, 8.0, 9.0, 10.0
Collaboration: 11.0 12.0 13.0 14.0
Referee: 15.0 16.0
As sumbitted to PRC: 01 02
God Parent Committee (GPC) comments
comments by the STAR Collaboration
Referee reports
Note: Separate page for the Anti-Lambda hyperon global polarization
Fig.1 Global polarization of Lambda hyperons as a function of Lambda transverse momentum.
Filled circles show the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV (centrality region 20-70%) and open squares indicate the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=62 GeV (centrality region 0-80%).
Fig.2 Global polarization of Lambda hyperons as a function of Lambda pseudorapidity.
Filled circles show the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV (centrality region 20-70%). A constant line fit to these data points yields P_Lambda = (2.8 +- 9.6)x10^{-3} with chi^2/ndf = 6.5/10. Open squares show the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=62 GeV (centrality region 0-80%). A constant line fit gives P_Lambda = (1.9 +- 8.0)x10^{-3} with chi^2/ndf = 14.3/10.
Fig.3 Global polarization of Lambda hyperons as a function of centrality given as fraction of the total inelastic hadronic cross section.
Filled circles show the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV (centrality region 20-70%) and open squares indicate the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=62 GeV (centrality region 0-80%).
The Lambda and Anti-Lambda hyperon global polarization has been measured in Au+Au collisions at center of mass energies sqrt{s_NN}=62 and 200 GeV with the STAR detector at RHIC.
An upper limit of |P_{Lambda,Anti-Lambda}| < 0.02 for the global polarization of Lambda and Anti-Lambda hyperons within the STAR acceptance is obtained. This upper limit is far below the few tens of percent values discussed in Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 102301 (2005), but it falls within the predicted region from the more realistic calculations Liang:Xian Workshop (2006) based on the HTL (Hard Thermal Loop) model.
Z.-T. Liang and X.-N. Wang
Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 102301 (2005) [ erratum:Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 039901 (2006)]
Sergei A. Voloshin
nucl-th/0410089
Z.-T. Liang and X.-N. Wang
Phys.Lett.B629:20-26 (2005) [nucl-th/0411101]
Gao Jian-hua and Z. T. Liang
Talk on November 24, 2006 (power point file) at Xi'an Workshop (Xi'an, China)
Ilya Selyuzhenkov [for the STAR Collaboration]
International Workshop on "Hadron Physics and Property of High Baryon Density Matter", Xi'an, China (2006)
arXiv:nucl-ex/0702001 (2007)
Ilya Selyuzhenkov [for the STAR Collaboration]
19th International Conference on "Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions" (Quark Matter 2006) Shanghai, China, 2006
arXiv:nucl-ex/0701034 (2007)
Ilya Selyuzhenkov [for the STAR Collaboration]
9th Conference on the Intersections of Particle and Nuclear Physics ( CIPANP 2006), Westin Rio Mar Beach, Puerto Rico, 2006
AIP Conf. Proc. 870, 712 (2006) [arXiv:nucl-ex/0608034]
Ilya Selyuzhenkov [for the STAR Collaboration]
International Conference on Strangeness in Quark Matter (SQM 2006), Los Angeles, CA, USA, 2006
J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys. 32, S557 (2006) [arXiv:nucl-ex/0605035]
Ilya Selyuzhenkov [for the STAR Collaboration]
Midwest Critical Mass Workshop (MCM), Toledo OH, USA, 2005
Download slides
Ilya Selyuzhenkov [for the STAR Collaboration]
18th International Conference on "Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions" (Quark Matter 2005), Budapest, Hungary, 2005
Rom.Rep.Phys. 58, 049 (2006) [arXiv:nucl-ex/0510069]
Fig.1 A_0 for Lambda (Filled circles) and Anti-Lambda (open squares) hyperons as a function of hyperon pseudorapidity.
Fig.2 A_0 for Lambda (Filled circles) and Anti-Lambda (open squares) hyperons as a function of hyperon transverse momentum.
Fig.3 A_0 for Lambda (Filled circles) and Anti-Lambda (open squares) hyperons as a function of centrality.
Fig.4 A_2 for Lambda (Filled circles) and Anti-Lambda (open squares) hyperons as a function of hyperon pseudorapidity.
Fig.5 A_2 for Lambda (Filled circles) and Anti-Lambda (open squares) hyperons as a function of hyperon transverse momentum.
The reason why we present uncorrected data is that due to detector effects the higher harmonic terms of the global polarization expansion (6) can contribute. To measure higher harmonic terms one needs to use different observable than (3), and such measurement requires an independent analysis.
This question is discussed on page 8 of the paper draft (left column at the bottom):
"Since the values of P_H^(2) (p_t^H, eta^H) are not measured in this analysis we present uncorrected data in Figs.3-8 providing only an estimate of the non-uniform detector acceptance effects."
We do not want to obstruct the first equation with acceptance function and we introduce it only when discussing detector acceptance effect in section IIC (see equation (5)).
There is a proportionality sign in equation (1). In the average the proportionality coefficient cancels out and we get the equality sign in (2). Equation (2) assumes the perfect detector acceptance. The effects of non uniform acceptance and modification of this equation are discussed later in section IIC.
We are measuring polarization with respect to the system orbital momentum (perpendicular to the reaction plane) which is defined in transverse plane of the collision (two dimensions). This is the reason why we transform from equation (2) to (3). In two dimensions the appropriate orthogonal set of function in the range of (0,2pi) are cos and sin functions, not the Legendre polynomials.
We are studying the polarization as a function of kinematics variables of hyperon (such as p_t and eta) and collision parameters (energy and centrality). This is a complete set of variables on which polarization can depends in heavy ion collisions. Although none of results are significantly deviates from zero, we report them for completeness.
We are comparing the results with available theory predictions, which are limited so far to those in reference [1-4]. For the moment we have only an estimate of the integrated value for the global polarization, and no expectations on p_t, or centrality dependence. The only expectation is that at mid rapidity the polarization should not change much. Thus we fit the results with constant line.
In principle, based on particle azimuthal distribution in pp or dAu collisions, we can define the quantity similar to the reaction plane in non central AuAu collisions, but physics of such phenomena is different from those of global polarization in heavy ion collisions.
We estimate the feed down effects assuming the same polarization for hyperons and multi-strange hyperons. Thus the uncertainty in polarization is proportional to feed-down from multiply strange hyperons.
The gamma_lambda,lambdabar is a Lorenz factor: gamma = 1/sqrt(1-v**2). For p = 3 GeV it is about 2.87. The effect on polarization is defined by cos(delta_phi), what is approximately 1-delta_phi^2/2, since angle delta_phi is small. This leads to the estimate of <0.1%.
There are two different contribution from acceptance effects, A_0 and A_2. As it can be seen from equation (9) the term (10) and (11) affect the global polarization in a different way and we have a separate estimate of 20% for each of them.
With that many sources of systematic uncertainties it is very difficult to calculate the confidence level, and we feel that it is not needed. If you have any specific idea how to do it, we can try it.
The obtained upper limit of 0.01 (or 0.02 together with systematic uncertainties), is very small compared to the first, naive, predictions of 0.3 for the polarization discussed in [1]. At this point the large magnitude of 125% for the relative uncertainty is not change the significance of the results, which gives an order of magnitude smaller value. More work from the theory side has to be done to understand the reason why the polarization is so small.
We can not measure this in STAR, as far as we know.
We are reffering to the STAR detector in section IIA when discussing the analysis technique. We think it is not necessary to give such a reference in the introduction.
In the PDG book, which we are referring to, there is an introduction to what decay parameter is and how it is defined from the amplitude.
Corrected in the paper draft Version 11.
Fixed in the paper draft Version 11.
Replaced it by "multistrange hyperons" in the paper draft Version 11.
(answer by Spencer Klein) Ref. 15 is OK as written. The article begins on pg. 1; and we give the first page of journal article references, not the page where the result appears.
This is how it was done. We do not think it needs further explanations.
This is a theory paper. These numbers can be found in the Tables at the end of this paper.
We use ZDC SMD to define the sign of directed flow in the FTPC region and consequently reconstruct the system orbital momentum direction as it is explained in the paragraph just after equation (4).
Fixed in the paper draft Version 11.
For the FTPC event plane resolution study please have a look at the following slides (in particular page 4):
20060202_ChargedFlowWithFileIdCuts_FlowPhoneMeeting.pdf
We expect global polarization to be a symmetric function of pseudorapidity, but the first order polynomial is anti-symmetric.
These functions are calculated in the hyperons rest frame, which is defined both by pion and proton momenta. Thus the acceptance effects both from pion and proton are important.
In this reference the hyperon reconstruction procedure (for dAu) is discussed.
Removed in the paper draft Version 11.
Fixed in the paper draft Version 11.
In the conclusion we are stating that we set an upper limit for the global polarization, what is more than just saying "We do not observe any transfer ...". We think that in the current form the conclusion is more appropriate for the obtained results.
Please, have a look at the following link:
20050922_FTPCmultiplicity_FlowPhoneMeeting.pdf
On page 3 you can see the correlation between multiplicity in TPC and FTPC. Together with plot for v1 in FTPC pseudorapidity region (what is essentially defines the resolution of the first order event plane from FTPC) this should clarify this question. Note, that we expect RFF and FF results to be consistent. The discrepancy between them for most central collisions is an additional indication on detector effects at higher multiplicities in AuAu@200GeV.
You can also check the links at the FTPC event plane study web page:
"FTPC Systematics"
We check this by measuring both Lambda and anti-Lambda global polarization
The centrality region 0-5% corresponds to a wide range of impact parameters and it is not clear how we can interpret results and compare them with the expected zero polarization at b=0. Together with observed zero signal we afraid that such discussions can be misleading and will potentially confuse the reader.
We essentially measuring the polarization at mid rapidity and the results are dominated by small p_t region. Again, it is not clear how to compare the obtained zero result in this region with theoretical predictions your are referring to.
We have checked this from the measurement. See reference [21] in the paper draft and corresponding text on page 9 (right column, last paragraph):
"The hyperon directed flow is defined as the first order coefficient in the Fourier expansion of the hyperon azimuthal angular distribution with respect to the reaction plane. Due to non-uniform detector acceptance it will interfere with the hyperon global polarization measurement and this can dilute the measured polarization [21]."
This method requires to introduce additional bins in theta* and further fits dN/dcos(theta*) distribution assuming the polarization dependence according to equation (1). Reconstructed dN/dcos(theta*) distribution can contains other contributions together with those from global polarization (i.e. directed flow, or higher harmonics from expansion (6)). This requires to make additional assumptions regarding the fitting function, what will complicates the interpretation of the final result.
In the current analysis we are averaging other theta* angle (equations (2) and (3)) and cuts only the particular harmonic in the dN/dcos(theta*) distribution, which corresponds to the polarization contribution. We think is is more straightforward and not biased by assumptions regarding the fitting function. We also have a good control on anisotropic flow contribution in this case.
Yes, we estimate systematic errors from Sigma^0 feed-down based on results for dAu collisions. This is the only known measurement by STAR so far. Since we do not have such a measurement for AuAu collisions, we only mention that according to theoretical calculations it is possible for this uncertainty to be larger for AuAu collisions. See page 5, left column, second paragraph from top:
"The Sigma0/Lambda production ratio value (15%) is measured [29] for d+Au and it can be 2-3 times higher for Au+Au collisions (this can affect the estimated uncertainty)."
The reason why we present uncorrected data is that due to detector effects the higher harmonic terms of the global polarization expansion (6) can contribute. To measure higher harmonic terms one needs to use different observable than (3), and such measurement requires the independent analysis.
This question is discussed on page 8 of the paper draft (left column at the bottom):
"Since the values of P_H^(2) (p_t^H, eta^H) are not measured in this analysis we present uncorrected data in Figs.3-8 providing only an estimate of the non-uniform detector acceptance effects."
Figure 9 presents the function A_0, which is independent of the global polarization and it is unity in case of perfect acceptance.
According to equation (9) the deviation of this function from unity affects the overall scale of the measured global polarization. Thus we consider it as a relative uncertainty.
We use the same technique as for anisotropic flow measurement. We do the recentering (or shifting) of the event plane vector.
The integration over reaction plane angle is independent from integration over the angles of hyperon and its decay products. Thus effects from event plane determination are separate from acceptance effects due to hyperon's reconstruction procedure. This allows us to integrate over psi_RP in equation (5) and further introduce function A_0 and A_2 in equation (9). The residual effects from event plane determination procedure (after the event plane vector recentering) are taken into account when the results are corrected by the event plane resolution.
To our understanding, it is better to base estimates on experimental results (although the preliminary one) rather that completely rely on theoretical assumptions. Note, that Gene mentioned that systematic errors in his measurement are also strongly model dependent. As a compromise, we provide an estimate based on Gene's results and state in the paper draft, that depends on model predictions for Au+Au the systematic uncertainty can be larger.
The acceptance effects can not be completely taken into account since they affects not only the magnitude of the measured polarization (A_0 term) but due to these effects the higher harmonics of the global polarization expansion (A_2 term) or the hyperon directed flow can contribute. We believe that, providing a partially corrected points will be misleading since it can be understood that we completely correct our results on acceptance. Thus we estimate the acceptance effects from the data and put them together with other systematic uncertainty.
The relative uncertainty means that if polarization is decreasing in its absolute value (goes to zero) the uncertainty of the measurement is also decreasing (in its value).
In your example it is assumed that hyperons theta*_p angle is correlated with the reaction plane angle due to narrow detector acceptance (measured with the same detector). In our measurement these angles are independent, since we are using two different detectors (TPC for hyperons and FTPC to reconstruct the event plane). This validates our derivation in section IIC and equations (8)-(11) where it is assumed that acceptance effects originates from hyperon reconstruction procedure and due to reaction plane angle determination are independent. This also makes possible to measure polarization even with a narrow detector acceptance for the hyperons.
Note, that this is true only for global polarization measurement and the acceptance effects in case of narrow detector you discussed will be a real problem when measuring polarization (or spin alignment) with respect to production plane, where polarization axis and particle angle theta* are affected by the same detector effects.
The systematic uncertainty from P_H(phi_H-psi_RP) dependence are defined not only by values of term with P_H^(2) in the expansion (6), but they also ruled by the deviation from zero (the perfect detector case) of function A_2. Only non zero values of A_2 due to non-uniform acceptance leads to the contribution from higher harmonic term in the observable (9). It happens that in this case detector effects and physics contribution are linked with each other. This is the reason why we can not take into account all detector effects, although functions A_0 and A_2 are well defined from the data. In this view, providing a partially corrected points will be misleading since it can be understood that we completely correct our results on acceptance.
Indeed we can not determine the exact direction in each event, and we do it only on statistical basis. What you call the efficiency for determining the direction we call event plane resolution. It is determined from correlations of two event plane defined in different FTPCs. According to a convention, the directed flow of neurons in the ZDC SMD is taken to be positive. From correlations between FTPC and ZDC SMD we find that directed flow in FTPC is negative for a positive pseudorapidity values. This fixes the direction of the orbital momentum.
We do not expect that the relative sign of directed flow in ZDC SMD and Forward TPC region depends on centrality.
In reference 10 it is only stated that results for directed flow measured with ZDC SMD event plane failed for most central collisions, this does not mean that it is not possible to measure directed flow and to define the event plane angle for charge particles measured with FTPCs in these region (see for example this slides, page 2: FTPCmultiplicity) The only uncertainty is in the "resolution" of the event plane angle, which is defined by the denominator in equation (4). This uncertainty depends on centrality and it increases towards most central collisions. This is discussed in Section IIC of the paper draft, page 10, right column, first paragraph).
It looks like we calculate feed down uncertainty in a different way. Your estimate is obtained from this relation:
P_observed = alpha * P_lambda (in you case for 30% of feed down alpha = 0.69)
and in our calculations we get it from:
P_lambda = (1/alpha) P_observed (for 17% [Gene's proceedings: nucl-ex/0512018] feed down I get for 1/alpha = 1.29)
From these different numbers (0.69 and 1.2) we both occasionally conclude the same, i.e. the uncertainty of 30%. I think this is the source of our confusion.
The global polarization is already defined in the first paragraph of the introduction as a transformation of the system orbital momentum L into the particles spin which leads to the polarization of secondary produced particles along the direction of L. We think that this definition is enough for the introduction section. We gave mathematical definition with equation (1) shortly in the beginning of section II.
We do not define resolution for each particular event and we do not correct on it for each event separately. In other words the correct equation we use is:
P_Lambda = 8/(pi alpha) <[sin(phi_p)cos(Psi_EP) - cos(phi_p)sin(Psi_EP)]> / < R_EP >
This equation assumes the symmetry between these two terms and the results for each terms can be used to check the consistency of the measurements. In fact this is one of the systematics and consistency checks done in the analysis.
The above expression for P_Lambda can be obtained as follows. We start from the equation:
< sin(psi-Psi_RP)> = < sin(phi- Psi_EP) cos(Psi_EP-Psi-RP) + cos(...) sin(...)>
We assume that there is no correlation between arguments of sin and cos in this expression and do average separately. Then the second term vanishes due to < sin(Psi_EP-Psi_RP) > = 0 and the first term gives < sin(phi-Psi_EP) > < cos(Psi_EP-Psi_RP >. the second term we call resolution: R_EP = < cos(Psi_EP-Psi_RP >. Dividing everything by this resolution we obtain equation for the polarization.
We are using scalar product technique, the resolution is the same order as the directed flow in FTPC pseudorapidity region. Such results can be found in reference [10].
Please, see the detailed answer above to Jim Sowinski's comment.
It is not clear if you propose to put lambda and anti-lambda results in one plot or you propose to combine statistics?
In general Lambda and anti-Lambda global polarization can be defined by different spin orbital transformation mechanisms and they can have a different magnitude, thus we do not like to combine these results in a single plot.
We are also reluctant to create a new table as it is not obvious it would clarify the presentation.
We modify the very end of the text before Conclusions in the paper draft Version 11:
"Taking all these possible correction factors into account, and that our measurements are consistent with zero with statistical error of about 0.01, our results suggest that the global Lambda and anti-Lambda polarizations are |P_{Lambda, anti-Lambda}| < 0:02 in magnitude."
We did not just ruled out one of the theory paper. We are trying to set an upper limit for the global polarization, which appears to has an order of magnitude smaller value than those from the first estimate. It is hard to make any further physics conclusions.
Fixed in the paper draft Version 11.
This is the first measurement of the effect of global polarization. The orbital momentum transformation into the particles spin can reveals itself in other effects, such as spin alignment of vector mesons. This is the first measurement of the global polarization and, although we present only Lambda and anti-Lambda results, the measurement technique discussed in the paper is applicable not only for these particular particles but can be used to measure polarization of other hyperons, for example multistrange one. We think that in the current form the title of the paper is more appropriate in this case.
In the beginning of Section II we discuss the hyperon global polarization, and this discussion is applicable not only for Lambda and anti-Lambda particles, but for other hyperons (for example multistrange hyperons). We provide the particular numbers for Lambda and anti-Lambda decay parameter later, when discussing the measurement details.
See answer to Spencer Klein comment #3 above.
In the current style of PRL with two columns it will be difficult to put these plots side by side because the scale of the plots will be too small. We also do not like to put legends in the figures, since it will clutter the plots, in particular Fig. 4 and 7.
It was requested by GPC, but we do not mind to remove them from the captions.
We think it's better to discuss feed down effects together with the Lambda/anti-Lambda hyperon reconstruction technique. To indicate that these effects are contribute to systematic uncertainties of the measurement we refer here to section IIC (Acceptance effects and systematic uncertainties) and also provide our estimates in the summary Table I.
From Figure 2 of the reference [21] you can see that 2x10^3 value is at maximum (essentially one point at low p_t). For most points the values are much smaller (of the order of 5*10^-4) what decrease the estimate of 10% by 75 per cent. Furthermore directed flow is also p_t dependant (unfortunately our STAR results for Lambda/anti-Lambda are consistent with zero so far). For charge particles it goes to zero at low p_t and saturates at about 2 GeV (see figure 4 in the reference [10]). The value of 10% for directed flow is also can be over estimated by a factor of 2. In this case it is difficult to get an exact estimate from just Figure 2 of the reference [21], and taking into account the written above we estimate it to be <1%.
We report the systematic errors on feed down from multi strange hyperon assuming the same polarization as for direct lambdas. Therefore we report the relative systematic error in percents.
Second line in equation (9) of the paper draft shows that both acceptance function A^(0,2) contribute together with polarization expansion coefficients P_H^(0,2). If polarization is zero (all P_H^(n) = 0), the acceptance effects in A^(0,2) are not contribute. This allows us to treat the deviation in A^(0,2) of 20% from perfect acceptance case as a relative uncertainty.
We do expect the polarization and anisotropic flow (which defines the event plane) are goes to zero only for b=0. Centrality region 0-5% corresponds to a relatively large range of impact parameters. Although the systematic uncertainties are larger, we still are able to reconstruct reaction plane angle and measure the polarization in this centrality region.
Large error bars for lowest p_t points are showing the increase in uncertainty to reconstruct hyperons in this p_t region and we left these points in figures to indicate this effect.
We estimate systematic errors from Sigma^0 feed-down based on results for dAu collisions and exactly this estimate is given in the paper draft. Since we do not have such a measurement for AuAu collisions, we only mention that it is possible for this uncertainty to be larger for AuAu collisions.
(Ernst Sichtermann) I do agree with Evan's comment that the repeated "Data points are not acceptance corrected" in the figure captions is not (longer) needed - it is clear enough from the text and can be viewed as just one source of systematic uncertainty. If you want to keep the message in the caption, I would probably phrase it as "The indicated uncertainties are statistical only. The systematic uncertainties include acceptance and other effects, and are estimated to be smaller as discussed in sec IIC."
Replaced in the paper draft Version 11
(Ernst Sichtermann) Reference [28], Y.J. Pei hep-ph/9703243 - have you considered F. Becattini and U. Heinz, ZPC 76 (1997) 269?
Added with corresponding discussions in the paper draft Version 11
(Ernst Sichtermann) Last, I would like to suggest some (other) minor rewording:
On page 5, "This estimate takes into account ... Au+Au collisions (this can affect the estimated uncertainty)." How about: This estimate takes into account the average polarization transfer from Σ0 to Λ, which we estimate to be -1/3 [26, 27], neglecting the possible effect from non-uniform acceptance of the daughter Λ. The production ratio of Σ0/Λ is measured to be 0.15 for d+Au collisions [29]. Our uncertainty estimate takes into account that it can be 2-3 times higher for Au+Au collisions.
There is a confusion here. Please see corresponding comment by Steve Vidgor at this page.
Added PACS numbers:
23.20.En Angular distribution and correlation measurements 24.70.+s Polarization phenomena in reactions 25.75.-q Relativistic heavy-ion collisions 25.75.Ld Collective flow 14.20.Jn Hyperons 25.75.Gz Particle correlations 25.75.Dw Particle and resonance production
Paragraph discussing simulation results is replaced by what Hal suggested: "To check the reconstruction code, Monte Carlo simulations with sizable linear transverse momentum dependence of hyperon global polarization and hydrodynamic p_t^H spectra have been performed. Both the sign and magnitude of the reconstructed polarization agreed with the input values within statistical uncertainties."
All figures are modified and only filled circles and oped squares symbols are used
sentences added
This para added. The only changes were made are (see page 9, left column): protons -> protons (anti-protons) Lambda -> Lambda (Anti-Lambda)
"factor of 2" replaced by "factor of 2-2.5"
I would take the statement "Data points are not acceptance corrected" out of the figure captions, It's clear now in the text and I think it will just confuse people who skim the text and look at the figures.
Left as is. This sentence was added as the result of previous GPC comments. We are ready to remove it if other GPC members agreed on this too.
The statement on strong feed down/string fragmentation model would benefit from mentioning what fraction of the indirect lambdas come from strong feed down (in the model) as opposed to sources you've already accounted for.
Left as is. This fraction of indirect hyperons from strong decay depends on both, our estimate of weak decay feed-downs and on the fraction of direct hyperons. Since the latter one is not measured with STAR, providing such a model dependent number without detailed explanation can potentially confuse the reader.
Is it possible to replace 'negligible' with a real number for the effect of spin precession? If you have a number at hand, it would be better to include it.
The relative uncertainty from this effect is < 0.1%. This number is added to the text and the Table 1.
In the acceptance section, I might replace "A() is a function to account for detector acceptance" with "A() is the fraction of lambdas which are accepted as a function of hyperon and daughter momentum".
Left as is. This statement will be difficult to understand together with the normalization of this function to unity. We can modified it as follows: "A() is a function to account for detector acceptance which is proportional to the fraction of accepted hyperons." In this form it is just a repetition of what we understand under detector acceptance.
And some minor grammar points... From the first line in page 3, I would remove "the". Also, take out the last occurence of "the" in that same paragraph.
Removed
Remove "in distance" from "at least 6cm in distance" on page 4. In that same paragraph, replace "choose" with "chose" to stay in the past tense.
Removed and replaced
Page 5, first column, I would add "in" to "Based on the results in [30].
Added
Fig.1 Global polarization of Anti-Lambda hyperons as a function of Anti-Lambda transverse momentum.
Filled circles show the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV (centrality region 20-70%) and open squares indicate the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=62 GeV (centrality region 0-80%).
Fig.2 Global polarization of Anti-Lambda hyperons as a function of Anti-Lambda pseudorapidity.
Filled circles show the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV (centrality region 20-70%). A constant line fit to these data points yields P_Anti-Lambda = (1.8 +- 10.8)x10^{-3} with chi^2/ndf = 5.5/10. Open squares show the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=62 GeV (centrality region 0-80%). A constant line fit gives P_Anti-Lambda = (-17.6 +- 11.1)x10^{-3} with chi^2/ndf = 8.0/10.
Fig.3 Global polarization of Ant-Lambda hyperons as a function of centrality.
Filled circles show the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=200 GeV (centrality region 20-70%) and open squares indicate the results for Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN}=62 GeV (centrality region 0-80%).
Main paper's web page
Some supporting material (see also files attached):
Lambda, Anti-Lambda, K0Short directed flow in AuAu@62GeV data was measured by two and three particle correlations (FTPC, ZDCSMD and TPC data were used). In the error range the obtained results are consistent with zero.
By using the different charged sub-events the significant non-flow contribution from KSI decays were found, both in Lambda and Anti-Lambda elliptic flows. By correlating with event planes from different pseudo-rapidity region (TPC and FTPC event planes) the non-flow contribution to V0 elliptic flow has been estimate.
The barion/anti-barion asymmetry investigated by studying the Lambda to anti-Lambda elliptic flow ratio. The barion to anti-barion elliptic flow ratio is found systematically different from 1 by few percents.
Supporting materials:
Talks and posters given at various conferences and workshops
2005 Mindwest Critical Mass workshop, Toledo OH
Global polarization and parity violation in Au+Au collisions:
Slides: pdf or Open Office format
Quark Matter 2005 conference
Poster presentation on "Global polarization and parity violation study in Au+Au collisions:
CIPANP2006 conference
Talk on "Acceptance effects in the hyperons global polarization measurement"
Quark Matter 2006 conference
Talk on "Centrality dependence of hyperon global polarization in Au+Au collisions at RHIC"
Strangeness in Quark Matter (SQM2006) conference
Talk on "Global polarization measurement in Au + Au collisions":
2006 Xian (China) workshop
Talk on "Anti-Lambda hyperon global polarization in Au+Au collisions at RHIC".
Preliminary Figure repository of FCV PWG
Year | System | Author | Analysis | Conference presentation(s) | Figures |
Flow | |
||||
2024 | Au+Au 3.0 - 4.5 GeV (FXT) | Li-Ke Liu | Elliptic Flow of pi, K, KS0, p, Lambda | CPOD2024-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 14.6, 19.6, 27 & 54.4 GeV (BES-II) | Rishabh Sharma | Elliptic and triangular flow of light nuclei | QM2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3, 3.2, 3.5 & 3.9 GeV (FXT) | Zuowen Liu | Directed and triangular flow of identified particles | QM2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3.2 GeV FXT | Like Liu | Directed and elliptic flow of identified particles | QM2023 | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3.2, 3.5 & 3.9 GeV (FXT) | Chengdong Han | Directed flow of hyper-nuclei | QM2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 19.6GeV (BES-II) | Xiaoyu Liu | Directed flow in EPD | QM2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 7.7, 14.6 & 19.6 GeV (BES-II) | Aditya Prasad Dash | Charge dependent directed flow | QM2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 14.6, 19.6, 27, 54.4 & 200 GeV | Niseem Magdy | Flow correlations, SC, NSC | QM2023-poster | Blog |
2023 | O+O 200 GeV | Shengli Huang | Flow in small system | QM2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 200 GeV | Takahito Todoroki | Flow in gamma+Au | QM2023 | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3.2, 3.5 & 3.9 GeV (FXT) | Sharang Rav Sharma | Directed and triangular flow of PID | ISMD2023-talk, QM2023-poster |
Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3.2, 3.5 & 3.9 GeV (FXT) | Cameron Racz | Triangular flow of PID | QM2023 | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3.2, 3.5 &3.9 GeV (FXT) | Junyi Han | Directed flow of hypernuclei | QM2023-poster | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3.9 GeV | Xing Wu | Elliptic flow of lambda, KS0 | QM2023-poster | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3.9 GeV | Guoping Wang | Directed and Elliptic flow of pions | QM2023-poster | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 7.7, 14.6 GeV | Emmy Duckworth | Excess proton directed flow | QM2023-poster | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 3.0 GeV (FXT) | Ding Chen | Directed flow of PID far forward rapidity | QM2023 | Blog |
|
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Chirality | |
||||
2023 | Au+Au 7.7, 14.6, 19.6 & 27 GeV (BES-II) | Zhiwan Xu | CME ESS in BES-II | QM2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 200 GeV | Hansheng Li | CME ESE | QM2023-poster | Blog |
2023 | Isobar 200 GeV | Yufu Lin | CME force matching | Chirality2023 | Blog |
2023 | Isobar 200 GeV | Yicheng Feng | CME baseline | QM2023-talk | Blog |
|
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|
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Vorticity | |
||||
2023 | Isobar 200 GeV | Xingrui Gou | Global and local lambda polarization of lambda | QM2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 200 GeV | Baoshan Xi | Global spin alignment of rho meson (projection) | QM2023 | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au 14.6 GeV (BES-II) | Gavin Wilks | Global spin alignment of rho meson | QM2023 | Blog |
2023 | Isobar 200 GeV | Diyu Shen | J/psi spin alignment wrt 1st order EP | QM2023 | Blog, Blog2 |
2023 | Au+Au BES-II | Egor Alpatov | Xi global polarization | DSpin2023-talk | Blog |
2023 | Au+Au BES-II | CW Robertson | Global spin alignment invariant mass method | QM2023-poster | Blog |
|
|||||
|
Year | System | Author | Analysis | Conference presentation(s) | Figures |
Flow | |
||||
2022 | Au+Au 19.6 GeV (BES-II) | Zuowen Liu | Directed flow of pi, K, p | QM2022, SQM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 27 GeV (BES-II) | Xiaoyu Liu | Directed flow in EPD | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 200 GeV (2014, 2016), Isobar 200 GeV | Diyu Shen | Charge dependent directed flow of pi, K, p | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 27 GeV (BES-II), Au+Au 200 GeV (2016), | Ashik Ikbal | Directed flow of pi, K, p, phi, Lambda, Xi, Omega | QM2022 | Blog |
|
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2022 | Au+Au 14.6, 19.6 GeV (BES-II) | Li-Ke Liu | Elliptic flow of pi, K, p, KS0, Lambda, Xi, Omega | QM2022, SQM2022 | Blog_QM, Blog_SQM |
2022 | Au+Au 14.6 GeV (BES-II) | Prabhupada Dixit | Elliptic flow of phi meson | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 54.4 GeV (BES-I) Au+Au 14.6, 19.6, 27 GeV (BES-II) |
Rishabh Sharma | Elliptic flow of light (anti-) nuclei | QM2022, SQM2022 | Blog_QM, Blog_SQM |
2022 | Au+Au 19.6 GeV (BES-II) | Priyanshi Sinha | Elliptic flow of phi meson | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Isobar 200 GeV | Priyanshi Sinha | Elliptic flow of strange and multi-strange | SQM2022 | Blog |
|
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2022 | Au+Au 19.6 GeV (BES-II) | Priyanshi Sinha | Triangular flow of phi meson | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 3 GeV (FXT) | Cameron Racz | Triangular flow of pi, K, p | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 19.6 GeV (BES-II) | Prabhupada Dixit | Triangular flow of strange and multi-strange | SQM2022 | Blog |
|
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2022 | Au+Au 19.6, 27 GeV (BES-II), 54.4 GeV, isobar 200 GeV |
Gaoguo Yan | Longitudinal flow de-correlation (r2 and r3) | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Isobar 200 GeV | Chunjian Zhang | Nuclear deformation, vn-pt correlation | QM2022 | Blog |
|
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Chirality | |
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2022 | Isobar 200 GeV | Yicheng Feng | CME Baseline (Nonflow study) | QM2022, SQM2022 | Blog_QM, Blog_SQM |
2022 | Isobar 200 GeV | Jagbir Singh | CME SDM method | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 27 GeV (BES-II) | Zhiwan Xu | CME ESE | Blog |
|
2022 | Isobar 200 GeV | Haojie Xu | Neutron skin | QM2022 | Blog |
|
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Vorticity | |
||||
2022 | Au+Au 19.6, 27 GeV (BES-II) | Joseph Adams | Global lambda polarization | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Isobar 200 GeV | Xingrui Gou | Global and local lambda polarization | QM2022, SQM2022 | Blog_QM, Blog_SQM |
2022 | Isobar 200 GeV | Subhash Singha | Global spin alignment of K*0, K*+/- | QM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 19.6 GeV BES-II | Gavin Wilks | Global spin alignment of phi meson | SQM2022 | Blog |
2022 | Au+Au 19.6, 27 GeV BES-II | Qiang Hu | Baryonic SHE, Local lambda polarization | SQM2022 | Blog |
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|
2019 | Au+Au @ 4.5 GeV Run 15 FXT |
v1 of proton, pion, kaon |
2019 WWND (Hiroki Kato) |
link |
2019 | Cu+Au, Au+Au @ 200GeV Run12, Run11 |
HBT w.r.t. Psi1 | 2019 WWND (Yota Kawamura) |
link |
2020 | Au+Au @ 27GeV Run18 |
Global Polarization of Xi |
2020 ICPPA (Egor Alpatov) |
link |
2020 | Au+Au @ BES1, 27GeV Run18 | v2 and v3 of pi+-, K+-, p, pbar | 2020 ICPPA (Petr Parfenov) |
link |
2020 | Au+Au @ 27GeV Run18 | e-by-e corr Lambda handness/CME | 2020 DNP (Yicheng Feng) |
link |
2020 | Au+Au @ 27GeV Run18 | charge-dep. corr for CME | 2020 DNP (Yu Hu) |
link |
2020 | Au+Au @ 3 and 7.2 GeV FXT Run18 | phi-meson v1 | 2020 DNP (Ding Chen) |
link |
2020 | AuAu/UU @ 200/193GeV Run11/12 | pT-vn correlation | 2020 DNP (Chunjian Zhang) |
link |
2020 | AuAu @ 3/27/54GeV Run18/17 | PID v1 and v2 | 2020 DNP (Shaowei Lan) |
link |
2021 | AuAu @ 27GeV Run18 | de-correlation r2 and r3 | 2021 IS (Maowu Nie) |
link |
2021 | AuAu @ 3GeV FXT Run18 | Light nucleus v1 and v2 | 2021 CPOD (Xionghong He) |
link note |
2021 | AuAu @ 54GeV | Global hyperon polarization | 2021 Hadron (Egor Alpatov) |
link note |
2019 | AuAu @ 54GeV | Global lambda polarization | 2019 QM (Kosuke Okubo) |
link |
2021 | AuAu @ 7.2GeV FXT | Global lambda polarization | 2021 SQM (Kosuke Okubo) |
link |
2021 | Isobar @ 200GeV | v2, v3 and mean pT fluct. ratio | 2021 DNP (Chunjiang Zhang) |
link |
2021 | AuAu @ 27, 54, 200GeV | v2-pT, pT-pT correlation, an_pT | 2021 DNP (Niseem Magdy) |
link |
2021 | AuAu @ BES-I, 27 GeV (BES-II) | v2,v3 difference of particle and antiparticles | ICNFP-2020 and ICPPA-2020 (MEPhi group) |
link |
Year | System | Physics figures | First shown | Link to figures |
2017 | Au+Au FXT at 4.5 GeV | Specta, HBT, flow | 2017 QM (Kathryn Meehan) |
link |
2017 |
Au+Au @ 200 GeV
Run10, Run11
|
C6 of Net-Proton |
2017 QM
(Toshihiro Nonaka)
|
link |
2018 | Au+Au @ BES1 |
v1 of produced and
transported quarks
|
2018 QM
(Gang Wang)
|
link |
2018 | d+Au @ BES, p+Au | v2/v3 in small system |
2018 QM
(Shengli Huang)
|
link |
2018 |
Au+Au @ 200GeV
Run14
|
Z-component of
Lambda Polarization
|
2018 QM
(Takafumi Niida)
|
link |
2018 |
Au+Au @ 200 GeV
Run10, Run11
|
C1-C6 of Net-Charge
|
2018 QM/APS/JPS
(Tetsuro Sugiura) |
link |
2018 |
Au+Au @ 4.5 GeV
Run 15 FXT |
v1 of proton, pion
|
2018 APS/JPS
(Hiroki Kato) |
link |
2018 |
Cu+Au, Au+Au @ 200GeV
Run12, Run11 |
HBT w.r.t. Psi1
|
2018 APS/JPS
(Yota Kawamura) |
link |
2018 |
Au+Au @ 54.4GeV
Run17
|
Net-Charge dist. (un-corr.) |
2018 DEA-HEP
(Ashish Pandav) |
|
2018 |
Au+Au, Cu+Au, U+U, p(d)+Au @ 20, 27, 39, 200GeV
|
R(DS) correlator
|
2018 Chirality WS, WWND2019 (Niseem)
|
link |
2018 | Au+Au BES | Pion and kaon HBT | WPCF 2017, 2018, 2019 (Grigory Nigmatkulov, Jindrich Lidrych) |
link |