Studying the mechanisms for strange particle production with ALICE at LHC
Meenakshi Sharma (for the ALICE Collaboration)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the mechanisms behind strange particle production in high-energy collisions using ALICE data, revealing that soft processes and event multiplicity significantly influence strangeness enhancement across different collision systems.
Contribution
It introduces new multi-differential analyses and event classification methods to disentangle initial and final state effects in strange particle production.
Findings
Strangeness enhancement correlates with event multiplicity and underlying event activity.
Soft processes dominate the production of strange hadrons, independent of initial state properties.
The results suggest a universal mechanism for strangeness production across collision systems.
Abstract
The main goal of the ALICE experiment is to study the physics of strongly interacting matter, focusing on the properties of the quark-gluon plasma (QGP). The relative production of strange hadrons with respect to non-strange hadrons in heavy-ion collisions was historically considered as one of the signatures of QGP formation. However, the latest results in proton-proton (pp) and proton-lead (p-Pb) collisions have revealed an increasing trend in the yield ratio of strange hadrons to pions with the charged-particle multiplicity in the event, showing a smooth evolution across different collision systems and energies. We present the new studies which are performed with the aim of better understanding the production mechanisms for strange particles and hence the strangeness enhancement phenomenon in small collision systems. In one of the recent studies, the very forward energy transported…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-Energy Particle Collisions Research · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
