3rd Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan
Volume 54, Number 10
Tuesday–Saturday, October 13–17, 2009;
Waikoloa, Hawaii
Session 2WH: Workshop on the Expanding Future of High Energy Nuclear Physics at LHC and RHIC II
2:00 PM–5:30 PM,
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Room: Kings 3
Chair: Kenta Shigaki, Hiroshima University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.HAW.2WH.3
Abstract: 2WH.00003 : Photon Physics Potential at ALICE
3:00 PM–3:30 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Hisayuki Torii
(Hiroshima University)
The ALICE detector has been designed to study the strongly
interacting
matter created in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the Large
Hadron Collider~(LHC).
In heavy-ion collisions, it is very critical to measure
thermal photons, which are known to carry the
temperature information of hot created matter.
The thermal photon measurements at RHIC are suggesting the
systematic study
with better photon detectors at LHC.
Furthermore, the suppression of high $p_T$ hadrons has provided
the first strong signature
of hot and dense partonic matter created in heavy-ion
collisions at RHIC.
Therefore, the suppression behavior of various particle
species, including photons, up to LHC energy,
is a key observable for the study of the hot matter dynamics.
The ALICE PHOton Spectrometer~(PHOS) consists of 17920 PWO
crystals and Avalanche Photo Diode~(APD)
covering a rapidity range of $\pm0.3$ and an azimuthal range of
$100^{\circ}$.
The fine segment structure and small Moliere radius allow to
separate
two photons from $\pi^{0}$ decay at pT=30GeV/c with about 100\%
efficiency
and at even higher pT with smaller efficiency.
The decay photons from lower pT $\pi^{0}$ is the largest
background in measuring the thermal
photons and can be tagged in a very efficient way
with a good energy resolution ($3\%/\sqrt{E(GeV)}$).
The ALICE EMCAL consists of shashlik lead-scintillator sampling
units covering
a rapidity range of $\pm0.7$ and an azimuthal range of $110^
{\circ}$
and sits in the opposite coverage azimuthally to PHOS.
The jet measurements by EMCAL and other tracking detectors,
especially when tagged by a direct photon in the opposite PHOS
detector,
represent a key probe for investigating jet quenching effects.
In this presentation, physics potential with photon detectors
at ALICE during
the first physics run of LHC will be discussed.
The construction and installation
status of the photon detectors as well as their expected physics
will be presented.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.HAW.2WH.3