The measurement of charged particle spectra in heavy ion collisions is a way to study properties of hot and dense matter created in these interactions. The centrality dependence of the spectral shape is an important tool to understand the energy loss mechanism.
The ATLAS detector at the LHC accumulated integrated luminosity equal to 0.15 nb(-1) of lead-lead data at 2.76 TeV per nucleon-nucleon pair. Due to the excellent capabilities of the ATLAS detector, and its stable operation in 2010 and 2011 heavy ion physics runs, these data allow measurements of the charged particle spectra and their ratios in different centrality bins over a wide range of transverse momenta (0.5-150 GeV) and pseudorapidity (broken vertical bar eta broken vertical bar < 2.5).
The measured ratio central to peripheral events shows a suppresion by a factor of 5 at p(T) = 7 GeV. At higher p(T) the ratio increases.