Anomalous evolution of the near-side jet peak shape in Pb–Pb collisions at √ sNN = 2.76 TeV
Abstract
The measurement of two-particle angular correlations is a powerful tool
to study jet quenching in a p(T) region inaccessible by direct jet
identification. In these measurements pseudorapidity (Delta(eta)) and
azimuthal (Delta phi) differences are used to extract the shape of the
near-side peak formed by particles associated with a higher p(T) trigger
particle (1 < p(T,trig) < 8 GeV/c). A combined fit of the near-side peak
and long-range correlations is applied to the data allowing the
extraction of the centrality evolution of the peak shape in Pb-Pb
collisions at root s(NN) = 2.76 TeV. A significant broadening of the
peak in the Delta(eta) direction at low p(T) is found from peripheral to
central collisions, which vanishes above 4 GeV/c, while in the
Delta(phi) direction the peak is almost independent of centrality. For
the 10\% most central collisions and 1 < p(T,assoc) < 2 GeV/c, 1 <
p(T,trig) < 3 GeV/c a novel feature is observed: a depletion develops
around the center of the peak. The results are compared to pp collisions
at the same center of mass energy and AMPT model simulations. The
comparison to the investigated models suggests that the broadening and
the development of the depletion is connected to the strength of radial
and longitudinal flow.
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