Abstract
Measurements of neutral pion () production at midrapidity in GeV collisions as a function of transverse momentum, , collision centrality, and angle with respect to reaction plane are presented. The data represent the final results from the PHENIX experiment for the first RHIC run at design center-of-mass energy. They include additional data obtained using the PHENIX Level-2 trigger with more than a factor of 3 increase in statistics over previously published results for GeV/. We evaluate the suppression in the yield of high- 's relative to pointlike scaling expectations using the nuclear modification factor . We present the dependence of for nine bins in collision centrality. We separately integrate over larger bins to show more precisely the centrality dependence of the high- suppression. We then evaluate the dependence of the high- suppression on the emission angle of the pions with respect to event reaction plane for seven bins in collision centrality. We show that the yields of high- 's vary strongly with , consistent with prior measurements [1,2]. We show that this variation persists in the most peripheral bin accessible in this analysis. For the peripheral bins we observe no suppression for neutral pions produced aligned with the reaction plane, whereas the yield of 's produced perpendicular to the reaction plane is suppressed by a factor of . We analyze the combined centrality and dependence of the suppression in different bins using different possible descriptions of parton energy loss dependence on jet path-length averages to determine whether a single geometric picture can explain the observed suppression pattern.
14 More- Received 7 November 2006
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.76.034904
©2007 American Physical Society