Non Identical strange particle correlations in Au-Au collisions at sNN= 200 GeV from the STAR experiment

Abstract

Information about the space-time evolution of colliding nuclei can be extracted correlating particles emitted from nuclear collisions. The high density of particles produced in the STAR experiment allows the measurement of non-identical strange particle correlations. Due to the absence of Coulomb interaction, p- and p- systems are more sensitive to the source size than p-p pairs. Strong interaction potential has been studied using p-, and for the first time, p- pairs. The experimental correlation functions have been described in the frame of a model based on the p-n interaction. The first preliminary measurement of π - correlations has been performed, allowing to extract information about the freeze-out time and the space-time asymmetries in particle emission closely related to the transverse radial expansion and decay of resonances.

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