Abstract
A detailed study of multi-particle azimuthal correlations is presented using $pp$ data at $\sqrt{s}=5.02$ and 13 TeV, and $p$+Pb data at $\sqrt{s_{\rm{NN}}}=5.02$ TeV, recorded with the ATLAS detector at the LHC. The azimuthal correlations are probed using four-particle cumulants $c_{n}\{4\}$ and flow coefficients $v_n\{4\}=(-c_{n}\{4\})^{1/4}$ for $n=2$ and 3, with the goal of extracting long-range multi-particle azimuthal correlation signals and suppressing the short-range correlations. The values of $c_{n}\{4\}$ are obtained as a function of the average number of charged particles per event, $\left\langle N_{\rm{ch}} \right\rangle$, using the recently proposed two-subevent and three-subevent cumulant methods, and compared with results obtained with the standard cumulant method. The three-subevent method is found to be least sensitive to short-range correlations, which originate mostly from jets with a positive contribution to $c_{n}\{4\}$. The three-subevent method gives a negative $c_{2}\{4\}$, and therefore a well-defined $v_2\{4\}$, nearly independent of $\left\langle N_{\rm{ch}} \right\rangle$, which provides direct evidence that the long-range multi-particle azimuthal correlations persist to events with low multiplicity. Furthermore, $v_2\{4\}$ is found to be smaller than the $v_2\{2\}$ measured using the two-particle correlation method, as expected for long-range collective behavior. Finally, the measured values of $v_2\{4\}$ and $v_2\{2\}$ are used to estimate the number of sources relevant for the initial eccentricity in the collision geometry.
Highlights
The study of azimuthal correlations in high-energy nuclear collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has been important for understanding the multiparton dynamics of QCD in the strongly coupled nonperturbative regime
The high-level trigger (HLT) reconstructs charged-particle tracks using methods similar to those applied in the offline analysis, allowing high-multiplicity track (HMT) triggers that select events based on the number of tracks with pT > 0.4 GeV associated with the vertex with the largest number of tracks
The different HMT triggers apply additional requirements on either the transverse energy (ET) in the calorimeters or on the number of hits in the minimum-bias trigger scintillators (MBTS) at L1, and on the number of charged-particle tracks reconstructed by the HLT
Summary
The study of azimuthal correlations in high-energy nuclear collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has been important for understanding the multiparton dynamics of QCD in the strongly coupled nonperturbative regime. The magnitude of c2{4} and the Nch value at which the sign change occurs are found to depend sensitively on the exact definition of Nch used to categorize the events These observations suggest that the standard cumulant method, on which several previous measurements in small systems are based, is strongly contaminated by nonflow correlations [11,19,21,22], especially in pp collisions and low Nch region. An improved cumulant method based on the correlation between particles from different subevents separated in η has been proposed to further reduce the nonflow correlations [23].
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