Correlations in azimuthal angle extending over a long range in pseudorapidity between particles, usually called the "ridge" phenomenon, were discovered in heavy-ion collisions, and later found in pp and p-Pb collisions. In large systems, they are thought to arise from the expansion (collective flow) of the produced particles. Extending these measurements over a wider range in pseudorapidity and final-state particle multiplicity is important to understand better the origin of these long-range correlations in small collision systems. In this Letter, measurements of the long-range correlations in p-Pb collisions at root s(NN) = 5.02 TeV are extended to a pseudorapidity gap of Delta eta similar to 8 between particles using the ALICE forward multiplicity detectors. After suppressing non-flow correlations, e.g., from jet and resonance decays, the ridge structure is observed to persist up to a very large gap of Delta eta similar to 8 for the first time in p-Pb collisions. This shows that the collective flow-like correlations extend over an extensive pseudorapidity range also in small collision systems such as p-Pb collisions. The pseudorapidity dependence of the second-order anisotropic flow coefficient, v(2)(eta), is extracted from the long-range correlations. The v(2)(eta) results are presented for a wide pseudorapidity range of -3.1 < eta < 4.8 in various centrality classes in p-Pb collisions. To gain a comprehensive understanding of the source of anisotropic flow in small collision systems, the v(2)(eta) measurements are compared with hydrodynamic and transport model calculations. The comparison suggests that the final-state interactions play a dominant role in developing the anisotropic flow in small collision systems.

Measurements of long-range two-particle correlation over a wide pseudorapidity range in p-Pb collisions at √sNN=5.02 TeV

Alocco, G;Beole, S;Bianchi, Livio;Botta, Elena;Ferretti, Alessandro;Gagliardi, Martino;Masera, Massimo;Mazzaschi, F;Pennisi, Michele;Perciballi, Stefania;Pucillo, Sara;Quaglia, Luca;Riffero, A. G.;Terlizzi, Livia;Trogolo, S;Vercellin, E;
2024-01-01

Abstract

Correlations in azimuthal angle extending over a long range in pseudorapidity between particles, usually called the "ridge" phenomenon, were discovered in heavy-ion collisions, and later found in pp and p-Pb collisions. In large systems, they are thought to arise from the expansion (collective flow) of the produced particles. Extending these measurements over a wider range in pseudorapidity and final-state particle multiplicity is important to understand better the origin of these long-range correlations in small collision systems. In this Letter, measurements of the long-range correlations in p-Pb collisions at root s(NN) = 5.02 TeV are extended to a pseudorapidity gap of Delta eta similar to 8 between particles using the ALICE forward multiplicity detectors. After suppressing non-flow correlations, e.g., from jet and resonance decays, the ridge structure is observed to persist up to a very large gap of Delta eta similar to 8 for the first time in p-Pb collisions. This shows that the collective flow-like correlations extend over an extensive pseudorapidity range also in small collision systems such as p-Pb collisions. The pseudorapidity dependence of the second-order anisotropic flow coefficient, v(2)(eta), is extracted from the long-range correlations. The v(2)(eta) results are presented for a wide pseudorapidity range of -3.1 < eta < 4.8 in various centrality classes in p-Pb collisions. To gain a comprehensive understanding of the source of anisotropic flow in small collision systems, the v(2)(eta) measurements are compared with hydrodynamic and transport model calculations. The comparison suggests that the final-state interactions play a dominant role in developing the anisotropic flow in small collision systems.
2024
2024
1
199
199
Collective Flow; Heavy Ion Experiments; Particle Correlations and Fluctuations
Alocco, G; Beole, S; Bianchi, Livio; Botta, Elena; Ferretti, Alessandro;Gagliardi, Martino;Masera, Massimo;Mazzaschi, F;Pennisi, Michele; Perciballi, ...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/2028568
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