Distinguishing the nonjet azimuth quadrupole from QCD jets and hydrodynamic flows via 2D angular correlations and quadrupole spectrum analysis
Thomas A. Trainor

TL;DR
This paper isolates and analyzes the nonjet quadrupole component in high-energy nuclear collisions, revealing it differs from flow or hydro interpretations and suggesting a unique QCD mechanism.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the nonjet quadrupole spectra are distinct from single-particle spectra and are consistent with a universal boosted hadron source, challenging traditional flow models.
Findings
Nonjet quadrupole spectra differ from single-particle spectra.
Quadrupole spectra indicate a common boosted hadron source.
Shape of quadrupole spectra remains consistent from RHIC to LHC energies.
Abstract
According to the flow narrative commonly applied to high-energy nuclear collisions a 1D cylindrical-quadrupole component of 2D angular correlations conventionally denoted by quantity is interpreted to represent elliptic flow: azimuth modulation of transverse or radial flow in noncentral nucleus-nucleus (A-A) collisions. The nonjet (NJ) quadrupole component exhibits various properties inconsistent with a flow or hydro interpretation, including the observation that NJ-quadrupole centrality variation in - collisions has no relation to strongly-varying jet modification ("jet quenching") in those collisions commonly attributed to jet interaction with a dense flowing medium. In the present study I report isolation of quadrupole spectra from -differential data obtained at the relativistic heavy ion collider (RHIC) and large hadron collider (LHCr). I demonstrate that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Computational Physics and Python Applications
