CERN Accelerating science

Talk
Title Isolated photon production and correlations in pp and p-Pb collisions at LHC with ALICE
Video
Loading
If you experience any problem watching the video, click the download button below
Download Embed
Mp4:Medium
(1000 kbps)
High
(4000 kbps)
More..
Copy-paste this code into your page:
Author(s) Dixit, Dhruv Utpalkumar (speaker) (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US))
Corporate author(s) CERN. Geneva
Imprint 2020-06-01. - 0:20:45.
Series (Conferences)
(10th International Conference on Hard and Electromagnetic Probes of High-Energy Nuclear Collisions)
Lecture note on 2020-06-01T12:20:00
Subject category Conferences
Abstract Isolated photon production in pp collisions is one of the most clear tests of hard QCD processes and proton structure functions. Their measurement in pA collisions provides the possiblity to check initial geometrical scaling and possible modifications of the nucleon structure function in nuclei. Furthermore, the isolated photons constrain the kinematics of scattered partons and therefore, the measurement of isolated photon-hadron correlations has some advantages in the extraction of parton fragmentation function in pp and pA collisions. ALICE collected data on pp and p-Pb collisions at several colliding energies. Thanks to the low material budget, ALICE is able to measure isolated photons down to relatively small $p_{\rm T} \sim 10$ GeV/$c$, thus probing structure functions down to small $x$. In this talk, the isolated photon spectra measured in pp collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 5.02 and 7 TeV will be presented and compared to those in p-Pb collisions at $\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}}$ = 5.02 TeV. By constructing the nuclear modification factor even stronger constraints on the geometrical model and the amount of modification of nucleon structure functions in nuclei can be provided due to partial error cancelation. Additionally, the isolated photon-hadron correlations in pp and p-Pb collisions will be presented and contrasted with the corresponding fragmentation functions and jet-hadron correlations at the LHC.
Copyright/License © 2020-2024 CERN
Submitted by cmarkert@physics.utexas.edu

 


 Record created 2020-06-19, last modified 2022-11-02


External links:
Download fulltextTalk details
Download fulltextEvent details