Beam Energy Dependence of Jet-Quenching Effects in Au+Au Collisions at $\sqrt{s_{_{ \mathrm{NN}}}}$ = 7.7, 11.5, 14.5, 19.6, 27, 39, and 62.4 GeV
STAR Collaboration: L. Adamczyk, J. R. Adams, J. K. Adkins, G., Agakishiev, M. M. Aggarwal, Z. Ahammed, N. N. Ajitanand, I. Alekseev, D. M., Anderson, R. Aoyama, A. Aparin, D. Arkhipkin, E. C. Aschenauer, M. U. Ashraf,, A. Attri, G. S. Averichev, X. Bai, V. Bairathi, K. Barish

TL;DR
This paper investigates how jet-quenching effects in gold-gold collisions vary with collision energy, revealing a transition from suppression at high energies to enhancement at lower energies, with detailed measurements of particle spectra and nuclear modification factors.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive measurement of the nuclear modification factor across a wide range of collision energies, highlighting the energy dependence of jet-quenching phenomena in heavy-ion collisions.
Findings
High-$p_T$ suppression observed at 62.4 GeV in central collisions.
Net enhancement of high-$p_T$ yields at lower energies.
Proton and anti-proton $R_{CP}$ do not show net suppression at any energy.
Abstract
We report measurements of the nuclear modification factor, , for charged hadrons as well as identified , , and for Au+Au collision energies of = 7.7, 11.5, 14.5, 19.6, 27, 39, and 62.4 GeV. We observe a clear high- net suppression in central collisions at 62.4 GeV for charged hadrons which evolves smoothly to a large net enhancement at lower energies. This trend is driven by the evolution of the pion spectra, but is also very similar for the kaon spectra. While the magnitude of the proton at high does depend on collision energy, neither the proton nor the anti-proton at high exhibit net suppression at any energy. A study of how the binary collision scaled high- yield evolves with centrality reveals…
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