Two-particle correlation functions of negatively charged hadrons from Pb-Pb collisions at 158 GeV/c per nucleon have been measured by the WA97 experiment at the CERN SPS. A Coulomb correction procedure that assumes an expanding source has been implemented. Within the framework of an expanding thermalized source model the size and dynamical state of the collision fireball at freeze-out have been reconstructed as a function of the centrality of the collision. Less central collisions exhibit a different dynamics than central ones: both transverse and longitudinal expansion velocities are slower, the expansion duration is shorter and the system freezes out showing smaller dimensions and higher temperature.
The procedure employed by the WA97 and NA57 experiments to determine
the number of wounded nucleons in different Pb + Pb centrality classes is
discussed. We will also compare different centrality scales and their
influence on the measurement of the centrality dependence of strange
particle yields.
The NA57 experiment aims to investigate the production of strange and
multi-strange particles in nucleus-nucleus collisions at CERN SPS. NA57
has been
specifically designed to extend the study of Λ, Ξ and
Ω as well as
the Kos (and their antiparticles) production
pattern in ultra-relativistic nuclear collisions, as a function of the centre-of-mass energy and in a wider centrality range than its predecessor WA97.
In this paper we recall the main features of the NA57 set-up and we
report on the status of the processing and analysis of data samples
collected in 1998 with
a lead beam at 158 A GeV c-1 and in 1999 with
lead and proton beams at 40 A GeV c-1.
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