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Local Charged Particle Multiplicity Fluctuations in PHENIX

Local Charged Particle Multiplicity Fluctuations in PHENIX. Tarun Kanti Ghosh for the PHENIX Collaboration Vanderbilt University. Motivation. This is famous and unusual JACEE event In circle area : one charged hadrons and many photons Does it DCC? Do we expect to see such events at RHIC?.

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Local Charged Particle Multiplicity Fluctuations in PHENIX

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  1. Local Charged Particle Multiplicity Fluctuations in PHENIX Tarun Kanti Ghosh for the PHENIX Collaboration Vanderbilt University APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  2. Motivation • This is famous and unusual JACEE event • In circle area : one charged hadrons and many photons • Does it DCC? Do we expect to see such events at RHIC? O Photon + Charged Particle Anti Centauro APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  3. DCC Signal • Likely many uncorrelated domains can be formed, then this asymmetric distribution will become Gaussian • S0 such fluctuations should be looked in localized  or  space, localized momentum space • We look for localized charged fluctuations in -space to isolate the rare events that may correspond to higher or lower value of “f”. APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  4. Wavelet : Formalism • Wavelets jk() are the set of orthogonal functions where index j labels the scale and k labels the spatial bin • We use Discrete Wavelet Transformation technique to extract events with localized fluctuations in eta space over large events sample • Define Sample function f() = 1- Nch()/Nch() • Expansion for a given scale j fj() =  fjkjk() • Wavelet coefficients fjk = 2j f()jk() d • Power Pj = (1/2j) |fjk|2 APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  5. Wavelet : stairwell function Wavelet functions jk() = (2j  - k) 1 for 0  x  1/2 (x) = -1 for 1/2  x  1 0 otherwise j k 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 0 2 1 2 2 2 3  =0 =1 APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  6. Wavelet Transform: Daubechies • We are using D-4 wavelets in the DWT • Linear operation that operates on a data vector : a[n] • Length n of the data vector is an integer power of 2 • Transform to a numerically different vector of same length • A particular set of wavelets are specified by a particular set of numbers : wavelet filter coefficients • Daubechies ( D-4) : c0, c1, c2, c3 This is what a D-4 wavelet basis Looks like at j=2 APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  7. Simulation: FFC • Wavelet coefficients fjk = 2j f()jk() d plotted at different scale j • Simulated data with fluctuation size  = 30% where  = Ncand./Nmult • Distributions become wider by adding the fluctuations in simulated data wih HIJING APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  8. Acceptance pseudo-rapidity • We looked for PHENIX global tracks projected on three pad chamber detectors • Gap at Z=0 for PC2 & PC3 • PC3 further away from PC1 • PC2 only in one side  = .7 j=1  = .7/21 = .35 j=5  = .7 / 25 = .022 APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  9. Wavelet Coefficients @200 GeV tracks projected to PC1: PHENIX data is not significantly different from simulated data and mixed events. APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  10. Wavelet Coefficients @200 GeV tracks projected to PC2: PHENIX data is not significantly different from simulated data and mixed events. APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  11. Wavelet Coefficients @200 GeV tracks projected to PC3 : PHENIX data is not significantly different than the simulated data and mixed events APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  12. Power Spectrum@200 GeV • Correlation in power spectrum is similar for PHENIX data, mixed events, and in simulated data. Random sample shows a flat power spectrum. • This is work in progress. This sample has 60K PHENIX events and 120K mixed events. power spectrum is convolution of physics results and detector effects APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

  13. Summary • DWT can be effective tool to look for Charged particle fluctuations in pseudo-rapidity space • Analysis was performed for a small fraction of 200 GeV Au+Au data and current status of this analysis is work in progress • Comparison is made with simulated and mixed events using similar cuts • Correlation in power spectrum is consistent with the detector acceptance for this sample of minimum bias PHENIX data • Rare events can be searched from the tail of ffc distribution APS meeting / Albuquerque 04/20/02

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