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Pentaquark Search in the Strange Sector at ALICE at the LHC

The primary objective of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland is to collide nuclear matter to study its properties under extreme conditions. The LHC has been the leading facility in high energy physics with major discoveries, such as the Higgs boson and assisting with discovering t...

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Autor principal: Martinez, Jacobb Lee
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2825467
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author Martinez, Jacobb Lee
author_facet Martinez, Jacobb Lee
author_sort Martinez, Jacobb Lee
collection CERN
description The primary objective of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland is to collide nuclear matter to study its properties under extreme conditions. The LHC has been the leading facility in high energy physics with major discoveries, such as the Higgs boson and assisting with discovering the Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP), which is an extremely hot, dense soup of free quarks and gluons. The transition from the QGP phase to the hadronic phase sees free quarks and gluons transition into bound states of quarks and gluons. The typical hadron formation is to a $q\bar{q}$ meson state or to a $qqq$ baryon state.\\ \indent Multiquark states with more than three quarks had not been confirmed until 2015, when LHCb announced the discovery of several hidden charm pentaquarks $\rm{P_{c}(4312)^{+}, P_{c}(4440)^{+},}$ and $\rm P_{c}(4457)^{+}$. These hidden-charm pentaquark states were observed as a peak in the $J/\psi p$ invariant mass spectrum. This discovery has reopened the question of whether any pentaquarks are able to exist in the strange sector. Past searches for pentaquarks with strangeness have yielded results that have not been replicated or resulted in no new states at all. Strangeness enhancement, measured by ALICE as a function of increasing charged particle multiplicity even in pp collisions, further adds to the likelihood of observing a strange pentaquark state. Following analogous decay channels for the $\rm P_{c}^{+}$ states into the strange sector, results for $\rm{P_{s}}\rightarrow\phi\rm{p}$, $\rm{P_{s}}\rightarrow\Lambda{K}$, $\rm{P_{s}}\rightarrow\Lambda{K}^{*}$, and $\rm{P_{s}}\rightarrow\Sigma^{*}{K}$ through invariant mass analysis in minimum bias pp collisions at $\rm\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV at ALICE are presented.\\ \indent No pentaquark signal is observed for any decay channels in this analysis. Thermal model predictions for the yield of the P$_s$ are obtained and compared to upper limit calculations produced from the ALICE data. Significant upper limits are set for the P$_s$ for most of the decay channels that were analyzed.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2022
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spelling cern-28254672022-09-19T09:35:04Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2825467engMartinez, Jacobb LeePentaquark Search in the Strange Sector at ALICE at the LHCNuclear Physics - ExperimentParticle Physics - ExperimentThe primary objective of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland is to collide nuclear matter to study its properties under extreme conditions. The LHC has been the leading facility in high energy physics with major discoveries, such as the Higgs boson and assisting with discovering the Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP), which is an extremely hot, dense soup of free quarks and gluons. The transition from the QGP phase to the hadronic phase sees free quarks and gluons transition into bound states of quarks and gluons. The typical hadron formation is to a $q\bar{q}$ meson state or to a $qqq$ baryon state.\\ \indent Multiquark states with more than three quarks had not been confirmed until 2015, when LHCb announced the discovery of several hidden charm pentaquarks $\rm{P_{c}(4312)^{+}, P_{c}(4440)^{+},}$ and $\rm P_{c}(4457)^{+}$. These hidden-charm pentaquark states were observed as a peak in the $J/\psi p$ invariant mass spectrum. This discovery has reopened the question of whether any pentaquarks are able to exist in the strange sector. Past searches for pentaquarks with strangeness have yielded results that have not been replicated or resulted in no new states at all. Strangeness enhancement, measured by ALICE as a function of increasing charged particle multiplicity even in pp collisions, further adds to the likelihood of observing a strange pentaquark state. Following analogous decay channels for the $\rm P_{c}^{+}$ states into the strange sector, results for $\rm{P_{s}}\rightarrow\phi\rm{p}$, $\rm{P_{s}}\rightarrow\Lambda{K}$, $\rm{P_{s}}\rightarrow\Lambda{K}^{*}$, and $\rm{P_{s}}\rightarrow\Sigma^{*}{K}$ through invariant mass analysis in minimum bias pp collisions at $\rm\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV at ALICE are presented.\\ \indent No pentaquark signal is observed for any decay channels in this analysis. Thermal model predictions for the yield of the P$_s$ are obtained and compared to upper limit calculations produced from the ALICE data. Significant upper limits are set for the P$_s$ for most of the decay channels that were analyzed.CERN-THESIS-2022-112oai:cds.cern.ch:28254672022-08-27T02:36:46Z
spellingShingle Nuclear Physics - Experiment
Particle Physics - Experiment
Martinez, Jacobb Lee
Pentaquark Search in the Strange Sector at ALICE at the LHC
title Pentaquark Search in the Strange Sector at ALICE at the LHC
title_full Pentaquark Search in the Strange Sector at ALICE at the LHC
title_fullStr Pentaquark Search in the Strange Sector at ALICE at the LHC
title_full_unstemmed Pentaquark Search in the Strange Sector at ALICE at the LHC
title_short Pentaquark Search in the Strange Sector at ALICE at the LHC
title_sort pentaquark search in the strange sector at alice at the lhc
topic Nuclear Physics - Experiment
Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2825467
work_keys_str_mv AT martinezjacobblee pentaquarksearchinthestrangesectorataliceatthelhc