Pair invariant mass to isolate background in the search for the chiral magnetic effect in Au+Au collisions at $\sqrt{s_{_{\rm NN}}}$= 200 GeV
STAR Collaboration: J. Adam, L. Adamczyk, J. R. Adams, J. K. Adkins,, G. Agakishiev, M. M. Aggarwal, Z. Ahammed, I. Alekseev, D. M. Anderson, A., Aparin, E. C. Aschenauer, M. U. Ashraf, F. G. Atetalla, A. Attri, G. S., Averichev, V. Bairathi, K. Barish, A. Behera, R. Bellwied

TL;DR
This study measures the azimuthal correlator in heavy-ion collisions as a function of pair invariant mass to distinguish the potential chiral magnetic effect signal from resonance background, setting upper limits on the CME contribution.
Contribution
It introduces a differential measurement of the correlator versus invariant mass and employs event-shape engineering to isolate a potential CME signal from background effects.
Findings
Resonance backgrounds significantly affect the correlator at low invariant mass.
At high invariant mass, the correlator value decreases, indicating reduced background influence.
An upper limit of 15% on the CME signal contribution is established at 95% confidence level.
Abstract
Quark interactions with topological gluon configurations can induce local chirality imbalance and parity violation in quantum chromodynamics, which can lead to the chiral magnetic effect (CME) -- an electric charge separation along the strong magnetic field in relativistic heavy-ion collisions. The CME-sensitive azimuthal correlator observable () is contaminated by background arising, in part, from resonance decays coupled with elliptic anisotropy (). We report here differential measurements of the correlator as a function of the pair invariant mass () in 20-50\% centrality Au+Au collisions at = 200 GeV by the STAR experiment at RHIC. Strong resonance background contributions to are observed. At large where this background is significantly reduced, the value is found to be significantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-Energy Particle Collisions Research · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
