Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5493841 | Nuclear and Particle Physics Proceedings | 2016 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Bottomonium measurements provide unique insight into hot and cold nuclear matter effects present in the medium that is formed in high-energy heavy-ion collisions. Recent STAR results show that in sNN=200 GeV central Au+Au collisions the Ï(1S) state is suppressed more than the case that if only cold nuclear matter effects were present, and the excited state yields are consistent with a complete suppression. In 2012, STAR also collected 263.4 μbâ1 high-energy-electron triggered data in U+U collisions at sNN=193 GeV. Central U+U collisions, with an estimated 20% higher energy density than that in central Au+Au data, extend the Ï(1S+2S+3S) and Ï(1S) nuclear modification trends observed in Au+Au towards higher number of participant nucleons, and confirm the suppression of the Ï(1S) state. We see a hint with 1.8 Ï significance that the Ï(2S+3S) excited states are not completely suppressed in U+U collisions. These data support the sequential in-medium quarkonium dissociation picture and favor models with a strong qqâ¾ binding.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Nuclear and High Energy Physics
Authors
Róbert Vértesi, STAR Collaboration STAR Collaboration,