Transverse Momentum Distributions and Nuclear Modification Factors in Heavy-Ion Collisions with ALICE at the Large Hadron Collider
In this work, Pb-Pb collisions measured in 2010 during the first data taking period (Run 1) at a centre-of-mass energy of √snn = 2.76 TeV and data taken in 2015 during Run 2 at √snn = 5.02 TeV are analysed. In November 2017, the LHC brought xenon ions to collision for the first time; this data set that was taken at √snn = 5.44 TeV is also analysed. Transverse momentum pt distributions at high pt of charged particles have shown that particle yields in heavy-ion (AA) collisions are suppressed compared to a superposition of independent nucleon-nucleon collisions (binary collision scaling). This observation is related to parton energy loss in the Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP). To obtain the charged-particle yield as a function of pt, corrections are made for tracking efficiency and acceptance, for contamination by secondary particles from weak decays or secondary interactions and for the pt resolution. To circumvent differences in the particle composition of event generators and data, the charged-particle reconstruction efficiency is calculated from the particle-dependent efficiencies weighted by the relative abundances of each particle measured during Run 1. The correction for contamination with secondary particles is usually obtained from Monte-Carlo (MC) simulations. The abundances of secondary particles in data and MC is estimated by analysing the distance of closest approach of tracks to the event vertex. It is found that the contamination correction from MC has to be scaled up by ~50% to match the data. The improvement of the analysis methods resulted in a reduction of the total relative systematic uncertainties by about 50% compared to previous analyses due to an improved reconstruction and calibration procedure in Run 2, as well as to improved track selection methods. The transverse momentum distribution of charged particles from Pb-Pb and Xe-Xe collisions were measured for nine classes of centrality. The measurement was performed for particles within -0.8 to 0.8 in pseudo-rapidity and for a transverse-momentum range of 0.15