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CMS-FSQ-13-006 ; CERN-PH-EP-2015-210
Measurement of the inelastic cross section in proton-lead collisions at $\sqrt{s_{_\mathrm{NN}}}=$ 5.02 TeV
Phys. Lett. B 759 (2016) 641
Abstract: The inelastic hadronic cross section in proton-lead collisions at a centre-of-mass energy per nucleon pair of 5.02 TeV is measured with the CMS detector at the LHC. The data sample, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of $ \mathcal{L} =$ 12.6 $\pm$ 0.4 nb$^{-1}$, has been collected with an unbiased trigger for inclusive particle production. The cross section is obtained from the measured number of proton-lead collisions with hadronic activity produced in the pseudorapidity ranges $ 3 < \eta < 5 $ and/or $-5 < \eta < -3 $, corrected for photon-induced contributions, experimental acceptance, and other instrumental effects. The inelastic cross section is measured to be $\sigma_{\text{inel}}(\text{pPb})= $ 2061 $\pm$ 3 (stat) $\pm$ 34 (syst) $\pm$ 72 (lumi) mb. Various Monte Carlo generators, commonly used in heavy ion and cosmic ray physics, are found to reproduce the data within uncertainties. The value of $\sigma_{\text{inel}}(\text{pPb})$ is compatible with that expected from the proton-proton cross section at 5.02 TeV scaled up within a simple Glauber approach to account for multiple scatterings in the lead nucleus, indicating that further net nuclear corrections are small.
Figures & Tables Summary References CMS Publications
Figures

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Figure 1:
Distribution of the energy deposited in the HF calorimeter ($ {E_{\mathrm {HF}}} $) for the single-arm (left) and double-arm (right) event selections. The data sample, shown exemplarily for one period with stable run conditions, comprises 1.31 nb$^{-1}$ recorded with an unbiased trigger. The contribution from noise is obtained from a random trigger normalised to the same number of triggers as that in the collision data. The average number of photon-proton processes simulated with STARLIGHT+DPMJET and STARLIGHT+PYTHIA is treated as background and stacked on top. Four hadronic interaction models (EPOS, DPMJET, HIJING, and QGSJETII) are overlaid and normalised to the number of data events with $ {E_{\mathrm {HF}}} > $ 10 GeV, where the contribution from the background is small. The vertical line represents the threshold energy of 8 GeV (4 GeV) for the single-arm (double-arm) selection used in this analysis.

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Figure 1-a:
Distribution of the energy deposited in the HF calorimeter ($ {E_{\mathrm {HF}}} $) for the single-arm event selection. The data sample, shown exemplarily for one period with stable run conditions, comprises 1.31 nb$^{-1}$ recorded with an unbiased trigger. The contribution from noise is obtained from a random trigger normalised to the same number of triggers as that in the collision data. The average number of photon-proton processes simulated with STARLIGHT+DPMJET and STARLIGHT+PYTHIA is treated as background and stacked on top. Four hadronic interaction models (EPOS, DPMJET, HIJING, and QGSJETII) are overlaid and normalised to the number of data events with $ {E_{\mathrm {HF}}} > $ 10 GeV, where the contribution from the background is small. The vertical line represents the threshold energy of 8 GeV (4 GeV) for the single-arm (double-arm) selection used in this analysis.

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Figure 1-b:
Distribution of the energy deposited in the HF calorimeter ($ {E_{\mathrm {HF}}} $) for the double-arm event selection. The data sample, shown exemplarily for one period with stable run conditions, comprises 1.31 nb$^{-1}$ recorded with an unbiased trigger. The contribution from noise is obtained from a random trigger normalised to the same number of triggers as that in the collision data. The average number of photon-proton processes simulated with STARLIGHT+DPMJET and STARLIGHT+PYTHIA is treated as background and stacked on top. Four hadronic interaction models (EPOS, DPMJET, HIJING, and QGSJETII) are overlaid and normalised to the number of data events with $ {E_{\mathrm {HF}}} > $ 10 GeV, where the contribution from the background is small. The vertical line represents the threshold energy of 8 GeV (4 GeV) for the single-arm (double-arm) selection used in this analysis.

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Figure 2:
Acceptance versus purity of the two event selections, as derived from the EPOS and QGSJETII generators. The symbols indicate different values of the ${E_{\mathrm {HF}}}$ thresholds. The chosen thresholds are marked with squares.

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Figure 3:
Inelastic hadronic cross sections for collisions as a function of the centre-of-mass energy. The measurement described here (circle, with error bars obtained from the quadratic sum of all uncertainties) is compared to lower energy data (squares and triangles) [39,2,40] and to different model predictions (curves).
Tables

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Table 1:
Central values and uncertainties for the two event selections for noise cross section contribution ($ {N_{\text {noise}}} / {\mathcal {L}} $) and the fraction of noise events ($f_{\text {noise}}$) as derived from data. Additionally, the quantities acceptance ($\epsilon _{\text {acc}}$), electromagnetic cross section contribution ($ {N_{\gamma \mathrm{ p } }} / {\mathcal {L}} $), and hadron-level correction factor ($ {c_{\text {vis}}} $) as derived from simulations are listed.

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Table 2:
List of the systematic uncertainties, propagated into the final cross sections, for the two event selections.

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Table 3:
Summary of cross sections obtained from the two different event selections. The acceptance definition for ${\sigma _{\text {vis}}}$ is based on the production of stable particles within $ 3 < {| \eta | } < 5 $ with momentum $ p_{\rm HF} > $ 21.3 GeV/$c$ (11.3 GeV/$c$) for the single-arm (double-arm) event selections.
Summary
The measured cross sections for the single-arm and double-arm event selections are listed in Table 3, compared to the predictions of the hadronic interaction models DPMJET, EPOS, and QGSJETII. Due to the different acceptance, the extrapolations from the hadron-level to the inelastic cross section are of different magnitude, but the models reproduce well the approximately 65 mb difference between the two selections. The values of the inelastic cross sections obtained from the single-arm and double-arm methods agree well within the uncertainties.

The final $\sigma_{\text{inel}}$ value is obtained by taking the weighted average of the measured values in the two event selections. The statistical uncertainties and the uncertainty on the luminosity are correlated between the selections. The degree of correlation among the remaining systematic uncertainties is much smaller and they are taken as uncorrelated. This yields a final result for the inelastic hadronic cross section of

$\sigma_{\text{inel}}(\mathrm{pPb}) =$ 2061 $\pm$ 3 (stat) $\pm$ 34 (syst) $\pm$ 72 (lumi) mb.


This result is shown in Fig. 3 compared to other measurements at different centre-of-mass energies and to various theoretical predictions. A pPb cross section was also measured by the ALICE Collaboration, amounting to 2090?2120mb with an uncertainty of 70mb [41]. A direct comparison of this observed cross section to the one measured in the present analysis is not possible due to the unknown to us ALICE detector acceptance and possible contamination from noise and photon-proton interactions.

The inelastic cross section measured by the CMS experiment is compared to the Glauber-model prediction (solid curve in Fig. 3) obtained using a pp inelastic cross section at $\sqrt{s} = $ 5.02 TeV of 70.0 $\pm$ 1.5 mb, derived from the COMPETE parametrisation [42] including the measurement of the TOTEM Collaboration at $\sqrt{s} =$ 7 TeV [43] (where the assigned uncertainty is that measured by the latter). The Glauber calculation yields 2130 $\pm$ 40 mb and is compatible with the measurement presented here indicating that effects neglected by the calculation (such as nucleon correlations and screening) are either small or approximately cancel out. The experimental result is also consistent with the prediction of the DIPSY model [44, 45] based on a dipole-model approach including parton saturation and multiple-scattering. Among the Gribov?Regge models, the EPOS prediction is compatible with the measurement within uncertainties, whereas DPMJET and QGSJETII predict a value more than 1 standard deviation above the data, with a larger discrepancy appearing for the svis cross sections (Table 3). The EPOS and QGSJETII models are commonly used for cosmic ray air shower simulations. Thus, at the corresponding cosmic ray proton energies of $E_{\text{cr}} = s/(2m_{\mathrm{p}}) = $ 1016.1 eV, where $m_{\mathrm{p}}$ is the mass of the proton, there are no indications for data-model deviations above 5% in the proton-lead collisions studied here. Note, however, that our measurement deals with an ion much heavier than those involved in proton-air interactions. Corrections to the Glauber model are possibly larger in the latter case [3, 13]. In summary, the measurement of the cross sections in pPb collisions presented here is the first such fully corrected measurement at multi-TeV energies and, thus, provides important constraints on hadronic interaction models commonly used in high-energy heavy ion and cosmic ray physics.
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Compact Muon Solenoid
LHC, CERN