Energy Dependence of Intermittency for Charged Hadrons in Au+Au Collisions at RHIC
Abstract
Density fluctuations near the QCD critical point can be probed via an intermittency analysis in relativistic heavy-ion collisions. We report the first measurement of intermittency in Au+Au collisions at s_NN = 7.7-200 GeV measured by the STAR experiment at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). The scaled factorial moments of identified charged hadrons are analyzed at mid-rapidity and within the transverse momentum phase space. We observe a power-law behavior of scaled factorial moments in Au+Au collisions and a decrease in the extracted scaling exponent () from peripheral to central collisions. The is consistent with a constant for different collisions energies in the mid-central (10-40\%) collisions. Moreover, the in the 0-5\% most central Au+Au collisions exhibits a non-monotonic energy dependence that reaches a possible minimum around s_NN = 27 GeV. The physics implications on the QCD phase structure are discussed.
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