Abstract
At sufficiently high temperature and energy density, nuclear matter undergoes a transition to a phase in which quarks and gluons are not confined: the quark–gluon plasma (QGP)1. Such an exotic state of strongly interacting quantum chromodynamics matter is produced in the laboratory in heavy nuclei high-energy collisions, where an enhanced production of strange hadrons is observed2,3,4,5,6. Strangeness enhancement, originally proposed as a signature of QGP formation in nuclear collisions7, is more pronounced for multi-strange baryons. Several effects typical of heavy-ion phenomenology have been observed in high-multiplicity proton–proton (pp) collisions8,9, but the enhanced production of multi-strange particles has not been reported so far. Here we present the first observation of strangeness enhancement in high-multiplicity proton–proton collisions. We find that the integrated yields of strange and multi-strange particles, relative to pions, increases significantly with the event charged-particle multiplicity. The measurements are in remarkable agreement with the p–Pb collision results10,11, indicating that the phenomenon is related to the final system created in the collision. In high-multiplicity events strangeness production reaches values similar to those observed in Pb–Pb collisions, where a QGP is formed.
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The production of strange hadrons in high-energy hadronic interactions provides a way to investigate the properties of quantum chromodynamics (QCD), the theory of strongly interacting matter. Unlike up (u) and down (d) quarks, which form ordinary matter, strange (s) quarks are not present as valence quarks in the initial state, yet they are sufficiently light to be abundantly created during the course of the collisions. In the early stages of high-energy collisions, strangeness is produced in hard (perturbative) 2 → 2 partonic scattering processes by flavour creation (, ) and flavour excitation (gs → gs,qs → qs). Strangeness is also created during the subsequent partonic evolution via gluon splittings (). These processes tend to dominate the production of high transverse momentum (pT) strange hadrons. At low pT, non-perturbative processes dominate the production of strange hadrons. In string fragmentation models the production of strange hadrons is generally suppressed relative to hadrons containing only light quarks, as the strange quark is heavier than up and down quarks. The amount of strangeness suppression in elementary (e+e− and pp) collisions is an important parameter in Monte Carlo (MC) models. For this reason, measurements of strange hadron production place constraints on these models.
The abundances of strange particles relative to pions in heavy-ion collisions from top RHIC (Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider) to LHC (Large Hadron Collider) energies do not show a significant dependence on either the initial volume (collision centrality) or the initial energy density (collision energy). With the exception of the most peripheral collisions, particle ratios are found to be compatible with those of a hadron gas in thermal and chemical equilibrium and can be described using a grand-canonical statistical model12,13. In peripheral collisions, where the overlap of the colliding nuclei becomes very small, the relative yields of strange particles to pions decrease and tend toward those observed in pp collisions, for which a statistical-mechanics approach can also be applied14,15. Extensions of a pure grand-canonical description of particle production, such as statistical models implementing strangeness canonical suppression16 and core–corona superposition17,18 models, can effectively produce a suppression of strangeness production in small systems. However, the microscopic origin of enhanced strangeness production is not known, and the measurements presented in this Letter may contribute to its understanding. Several effects, such as azimuthal correlations and mass-dependent hardening of pT distributions, which in nuclear collisions are typically attributed to the formation of a strongly interacting quark–gluon medium, have been observed in high-multiplicity pp and proton–nucleus collisions at the LHC8,9,10,11,19,20,21,22,23,24,25. Yet, enhanced production of strange particles as a function of the charged-particle multiplicity density (dNch/dη) has so far not been observed in pp collisions. The study of pp collisions at high multiplicity is thus of considerable interest as it opens the exciting possibility of a microscopic understanding of phenomena known from nuclear reactions.
In this Letter, we present the multiplicity dependence of the production of primary strange () and multi-strange () hadrons in pp collisions at the centre-of-mass energy of . Primary particles are defined as all particles created in the collisions, except those coming from weak decays of light-flavour hadrons and of muons. The measurements have been performed at midrapidity (the particle rapidity is defined as y = (1/2)ln((E + pzc)/(E − pzc)), where E is the energy and pz is the component of momentum along the beam axis), |y| < 0.5, with the ALICE detector26 at the LHC. Similar measurements of the multiplicity and centrality dependence of strange and multi-strange hadron production have been performed by ALICE in proton–lead (p–Pb) collisions at a centre-of-mass energy per nucleon pair (refs 10,11) and in lead–lead (Pb–Pb) collisions at (refs 6,27). The measurements reported here have been obtained in pp collisions at for events having at least one charged particle produced in the pseudorapidity (the particle pseudorapidity is defined as η = −ln(tan(θ/2)), where θ is the angle with respect to the beam axis) interval |η| < 1 (INEL > 0), corresponding to about 75% of the total inelastic cross-section. To study the multiplicity dependence of strange and multi-strange hadron production, the sample is divided into event classes based on the total ionization energy deposited in the forward detectors, covering the pseudorapidity regions 2.8 < η < 5.1 and −3.7 < η < −1.7.
Particle/antiparticle production yields are identical within uncertainties. The pT distributions of , and (in the following denoted as KS0, Λ, Ξ and Ω) are shown in Fig. 1 for a selection of event classes with progressively decreasing 〈dNch/dη〉. The mean pseudorapidity densities of primary charged particles 〈dNch/dη〉 are measured at midrapidity, |η| < 0.5. The pT spectra become harder as the multiplicity increases, with the hardening being more pronounced for higher-mass particles. A similar observation was reported for p–Pb collisions10, where this and several other features common with Pb–Pb collisions are consistent with the appearance of collective behaviour at high multiplicity8,11,19,20,21,22,23. In heavy-ion collisions these observations are successfully described by models based on relativistic hydrodynamics. In this framework, the pT distributions are determined by particle emission from a collectively expanding thermal source28. The blast-wave model29 is employed to analyse the spectral shapes of KS0, Λ and Ξ in the common highest multiplicity class (class I). A simultaneous fit to all particles is performed following the approach discussed in ref. 10 in the pT ranges 0–1.5, 0.6–2.9 and 0.6–2.9 GeV/c, for KS0, Λ and Ξ, respectively. The best fit describes the data to better than 5% in the respective fit ranges, consistent with particle production from a thermal source at temperature Tfo expanding with a common transverse velocity 〈βT〉. The resulting parameters, Tfo = 163 ± 10 MeV and 〈βT〉 = 0.49 ± 0.02, are remarkably similar to the ones obtained in p–Pb collisions for an event class with comparable 〈dNch/dη〉 (ref. 10).
The pT-integrated yields are computed from the data in the measured ranges and using extrapolations to the unmeasured regions. To extrapolate to the unmeasured region, the data were fitted with a Tsallis–Lévy10 parametrization, which gives the best description of the individual spectra for all particles and all event classes over the full pT range (Fig. 1). Several other fit functions (Boltzmann,mT-exponential, pT-exponential, blast wave, Fermi–Dirac, Bose–Einstein) are employed to estimate the corresponding systematic uncertainties. The fraction of the extrapolated yield for the highest(lowest) multiplicity event class is about 10(25)%, 16(36)%, 27(47)% for Λ, Ξ and Ω, respectively, and is negligible for KS0. The uncertainty on the extrapolation amounts to about 2(6)%, 3(10)%, 4(13)% of the total yield for Λ, Ξ and Ω, respectively, and it is negligible for KS0. The total systematic uncertainty on the pT-integrated yields amounts to 5(9)%, 7(12)%, 6(14)% and 9(18)% for KS0, Λ, Ξ and Ω, respectively. A significant fraction of this uncertainty is common to all multiplicity classes and it is estimated to be about 5%, 6%, 6% and 9% for KS0, Λ, Ξ and Ω, respectively. In Fig. 2, the ratios of the yields of KS0, Λ, Ξ and Ω to the pion (π+ + π−) yield as a function of 〈dNch/dη〉 are compared to p–Pb and Pb–Pb results at the LHC6,10,11. A significant enhancement of strange to non-strange hadron production is observed with increasing particle multiplicity in pp collisions. The behaviour observed in pp collisions resembles that of p–Pb collisions at a slightly lower centre-of-mass energy11, in terms of both the values of the ratios and their evolution with multiplicity. As no significant dependence on the centre-of-mass energy is observed at the LHC for inclusive inelastic collisions, the origin of strangeness production in hadronic collisions is apparently driven by the characteristics of the final state rather than by the collision system or energy. At high multiplicity, the yield ratios reach values similar to the ones observed in Pb–Pb collisions, where no significant change with multiplicity is observed beyond an initial slight rise. Note that the final-state average charged-particle density 〈dNch/dη〉, which changes by over three orders of magnitude from low-multiplicity pp to central Pb–Pb, will in general be related to different underlying physics in the various reaction systems. For example, under the assumption that the initial reaction volume in both pp and p–Pb is determined mostly by the size of the proton, 〈dNch/dη〉 could be used as a proxy for the initial energy density. In Pb–Pb collisions, on the other hand, both the overlap area as well as the energy density could increase with 〈dNch/dη〉. Nonetheless, it is a non-trivial observation that particle ratios in pp and p–Pb are identical at the same dNch/dη, representing an indication that the final-state particle density might indeed be a good scaling variable between these two systems.
Figure 3 shows that the yield ratios and do not change significantly with multiplicity, demonstrating that the observed enhanced production rates of strange hadrons with respect to pions is not due to the difference in the hadron masses. The results in Figs 2 and 3 are compared to calculations from MC models commonly used for pp collisions at the LHC: PYTHIA830, EPOS LHC31 and DIPSY32. The kinematic domain and the multiplicity selections are the same for MC and data, namely, dividing the INEL > 0 sample into event classes based on the total charged-particle multiplicity in the forward region. The observation of a multiplicity-dependent enhancement of the production of strange hadrons along with the constant production of protons relative to pions cannot be simultaneously reproduced by any of the MC models commonly used at the LHC. The model which describes the data best, DIPSY, is a model where interaction between gluonic strings is allowed to form ‘colour ropes’ which are expected to produce more strange particles and baryons.
To illustrate the evolution of the production of strange hadrons with multiplicity, Fig. 4 presents the yield ratios to pions divided by the values measured in the inclusive INEL > 0 pp sample, both for pp and p–Pb collisions. The observed multiplicity-dependent enhancement with respect to the INEL > 0 sample follows a hierarchy determined by the hadron strangeness. We have attempted to describe the observed strangeness hierarchy by fitting the data presented in Fig. 4 and the empirical function of the form
where S is the number of strange or anti-strange valence quarks in the hadron, (h/π)INEL>0pp and 〈dNch/dη〉INEL>0pp are the measured hadron-to-pion ratio and the charged-particle multiplicity density in INEL > 0 pp collisions, respectively, and a and b are free parameters. The fit describes the data well, yielding a = 0.083 ± 0.006, b = 1.67 ± 0.09, with a χ2/ndf of 0.66.
In summary, we have presented the multiplicity dependence of the production of primary strange (KS0, Λ, ) and multi-strange (Ξ−, , Ω−, ) hadrons in pp collisions at . The results are obtained as a function of 〈dNch/dη〉 measured at midrapidity for event classes selected on the basis of the total charge deposited in the forward region. The pT spectra become harder as the multiplicity increases. The mass and multiplicity dependences of the spectral shapes are reminiscent of the patterns seen in p–Pb and Pb–Pb collisions at the LHC, which can be understood assuming a collective expansion of the system in the final state. The data show for the first time in pp collisions that the pT-integrated yields of strange and multi-strange particles relative to pions increase significantly with multiplicity. These particle ratios are similar to those found in p–Pb collisions at the same multiplicity densities11. The observed enhancement increases with strangeness content rather than with mass or baryon number of the hadron. Such behaviour cannot be reproduced by any of the MC models commonly used, suggesting that further developments are needed to obtain a complete microscopic understanding of strangeness production, and indicating the presence of a phenomenon novel in high-multiplicity pp collisions. The evolution of strangeness enhancement seen at the LHC steadily increases as a function of 〈dNch/dη〉 from low-multiplicity pp to high multiplicity p–Pb and reaches the values observed in Pb–Pb collisions. This may point towards a common underlying physics mechanism which gradually compensates the strangeness suppression in fragmentation. Further studies extending to higher multiplicity in small systems are essential, as they would demonstrate whether strangeness production saturates at the thermal equilibrium values predicted by the grand-canonical statistical model12,13 or continues to increase. The remarkable similarity of strange particle production in pp, p–Pb and Pb–Pb collisions adds to previous measurements in pp, which also exhibit characteristic features known from high-energy heavy-ion collisions8,9,10,11,19,20,21,22,23,25 and are understood to be connected to the formation of a deconfined QCD phase at high temperature and energy density.
Methods
A detailed description of the ALICE detector and of its performance can be found in refs 26,33. We briefly outline the main detectors utilized for this analysis. The V0 detectors are two scintillator hodoscopes employed for triggering, background suppression and event-class determination. They are placed on either side of the interaction region at z = 3.3 m and z = −0.9 m, covering the pseudorapidity regions 2.8 < η < 5.1 and −3.7 < η < −1.7, respectively. Vertex reconstruction, central-barrel tracking and charged-hadron identification are performed with the Inner Tracking System (ITS) and the Time-Projection Chamber (TPC), which are located inside a solenoidal magnet providing a 0.5 T magnetic field. The ITS is composed of six cylindrical layers of high-resolution silicon tracking detectors. The innermost layers consist of two arrays of hybrid silicon pixel detectors (SPD) located at average radii 3.9 and 7.6 cm from the beam axis and covering |η| < 2.0 and |η| < 1.4, respectively. The TPC is a large cylindrical drift detector of radial and longitudinal size of about 85 < r < 250 cm and −250 < z < 250 cm, respectively. It provides charged-hadron identification information via ionization energy loss in the fill gas.
The data were collected in 2010 using a minimum-bias trigger requiring a hit in either the V0 scintillators or in the SPD detector, in coincidence with the arrival of proton bunches from both directions. The contamination from beam-induced background is removed offline by using the timing information and correlations in the V0 and SPD detectors, as discussed in detail in ref. 33. Events used for the data analysis are further required to have a reconstructed vertex within |z| < 10 cm. Events containing more than one distinct vertex are tagged as pileup and are discarded. The remaining pileup fraction is estimated to be negligible, ranging from about 10−4 to 10−2 for the lowest and highest multiplicity classes, respectively. A total of about 100 million events has been utilized for the analysis.
The mean pseudorapidity densities of primary charged particles 〈dNch/dη〉 are measured at midrapidity, |η| < 0.5, for each event class using the technique described in ref. 34. The 〈dNch/dη〉 values, corrected for acceptance and efficiency, as well as for contamination from secondary particles and combinatorial background, are listed in Table 1. The relative RMS width of the corresponding multiplicity distributions ranges from 68% to 30% for the lowest and highest multiplicity classes, respectively. The corresponding fractions of the INEL > 0 cross-section are also summarized inTable 1.
Strange KS0, Λ and and multi-strange Ξ−, , Ω− and candidates are reconstructed via topological selection criteria and invariant-mass analysis of their characteristic weak decays35 (BR is branching ratio):
Details on the analysis technique are described in refs 10,36,37. The results are corrected for detector acceptance and reconstruction efficiency calculated using events from the PYTHIA6 (tune Perugia 0) MC generator38 with particle transport performed via a GEANT3 (ref. 39) simulation of the ALICE detector. The contamination to Λ () yields from weak decays of charged and neutral Ξ baryons (feed-down) is subtracted using a data-driven approach10. The study of systematic uncertainties follows the analysis described in refs 10,36,37. Contributions common to all event classes (Nch-independent) are estimated and removed to determine the remaining uncertainties which are uncorrelated across different multiplicity intervals. The main sources of systematic uncertainty and their corresponding values are summarized in Table 2. The results on pion and proton production have been obtained following the analysis method discussed in ref. 40.
Data availability.
All data shown in histograms and plots are publicly available from HEPdata (https://hepdata.net).
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Acknowledgements
The ALICE Collaboration would like to thank all its engineers and technicians for their invaluable contributions to the construction of the experiment and the CERN accelerator teams for the outstanding performance of the LHC complex. The ALICE Collaboration gratefully acknowledges the resources and support provided by all Grid centres and the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid (WLCG) collaboration. The ALICE Collaboration acknowledges the following funding agencies for their support in building and running the ALICE detector: State Committee of Science, World Federation of Scientists (WFS) and Swiss Fonds Kidagan, Armenia; Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq), Financiadora de Estudos e Projetos (FINEP), Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP); Ministry of Science & Technology of China (MSTC), National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) and Ministry of Education of China (MOEC)”; Ministry of Science, Education and Sports of Croatia and Unity through Knowledge Fund, Croatia; Ministry of Education and Youth of the Czech Republic; Danish Natural Science Research Council, the Carlsberg Foundation and the Danish National Research Foundation; The European Research Council under the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme; Helsinki Institute of Physics and the Academy of Finland; French CNRS-IN2P3, the ‘Region Pays de Loire’, ‘Region Alsace’, ‘Region Auvergne’ and CEA, France; German Bundesministerium fur Bildung, Wissenschaft, Forschung und Technologie (BMBF) and the Helmholtz Association; General Secretariat for Research and Technology, Ministry of Development, Greece; National Research, Development and Innovation Office (NKFIH), Hungary; Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), New Delhi; Department of Atomic Energy and Department of Science and Technology of the Government of India; Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN) and Centro Fermi - Museo Storico della Fisica e Centro Studi e Ricerche ‘Enrico Fermi’, Italy; Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI and MEXT, Japan; National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF); Consejo Nacional de Cienca y Tecnologia (CONACYT), Direccion General de Asuntos del Personal Academico(DGAPA), México, Amerique Latine Formation academique - European Commission (ALFA-EC) and the EPLANET Program (European Particle Physics Latin American Network); Stichting voor Fundamenteel Onderzoek der Materie (FOM) and the Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO), Netherlands; Research Council of Norway (NFR); Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú; National Science Centre, Poland; Ministry of National Education/Institute for Atomic Physics and National Council of Scientific Research in Higher Education (CNCSI-UEFISCDI), Romania; Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Dubna; Ministry of Education and Science of Russian Federation, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russian Federal Agency of Atomic Energy, Russian Federal Agency for Science and Innovations and The Russian Foundation for Basic Research; Ministry of Education of Slovakia; Department of Science and Technology, South Africa; Centro de Investigaciones Energeticas, Medioambientales y Tecnologicas (CIEMAT), E-Infrastructure shared between Europe and Latin America (EELA), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO) of Spain, Xunta de Galicia (Consellería de Educación), Centro de Aplicaciones Tecnolgicas y Desarrollo Nuclear (CEADEN), Cubaenergía, Cuba, and IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency); Swedish Research Council (VR) and Knut & Alice Wallenberg Foundation (KAW); National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSDTA), Suranaree University of Technology (SUT) and Office of the Higher Education Commission under NRU project of Thailand; Ukraine Ministry of Education and Science; United Kingdom Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC); The United States Department of Energy, the United States National Science Foundation, the State of Texas, and the State of Ohio.
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All authors have contributed to the publication, being variously involved in the design and the construction of the detectors, in writing software, calibrating subsystems, operating the detectors and acquiring data, and finally analysing the processed data. The ALICE Collaboration members discussed and approved the scientific results. The manuscript was prepared by a subgroup of authors appointed by the collaboration and subject to an internal collaboration-wide review process. All authors reviewed and approved the final version of the manuscript.
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ALICE Collaboration. Enhanced production of multi-strange hadrons in high-multiplicity proton–proton collisions. Nature Phys 13, 535–539 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys4111
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nphys4111
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