3,519 research outputs found
Evolution of pion HBT radii from RHIC to LHC -- Predictions from ideal hydrodynamics
We present hydrodynamic predictions for the charged pion HBT radii for a
range of initial conditions covering those presumably reached in Pb+Pb
collisions at the LHC. We study central (b=0) and semi-central (b=7fm)
collisions and show the expected increase of the HBT radii and their azimuthal
oscillations. The predicted trends in the oscillation amplitudes reflect a
change of the final source shape from out-of-plane to in-plane deformation as
the initial entropy density is increased.Comment: 6 pages, incl. 5 figures. Contribution to the CERN Theory Institute
Workshop "Heavy Ion Collisions at the LHC -- Last Call for Predictions",
CERN, 14 May - 8 June 2007, to appear in J. Phys.
Hard-Loop Dynamics of Non-Abelian Plasma Instabilities
Non-Abelian plasma instabilities may be responsible for the fast apparent
quark-gluon thermalization in relativistic heavy-ion collisions if their
exponential growth is not hindered by nonlinearities. We study the real-time
evolution of instabilities in an anisotropic non-Abelian plasma with an SU(2)
gauge group in the hard-loop approximation. We find exponential growth of
non-Abelian plasma instabilities both in the linear and in the strongly
nonlinear regime, with only a brief phase of subexponential behavior in
between.Comment: 4 pages REVTEX4, 3 figures; updated to match version published in
Phys. Rev. Lett. (shorter introduction, added details on quality of numerical
simulation
Whitening of the Quark-Gluon Plasma
Parton-parton collisions do not neutralize local color charges in the
quark-gluon plasma as they only redistribute the charges among momentum modes.
We discuss color diffusion and color conductivity as the processes responsible
for the neutralization of the plasma. For this purpose, we first compute the
conductivity and diffusion coefficients in the plasma that is significantly
colorful. Then, the time evolution of the color density due to the conductivity
and diffusion is studied. The conductivity is shown to be much more efficient
than the diffusion in neutralizing the plasma at the scale longer than the
screening length. Estimates of the characteristic time scales, which are based
on close to global equilibrium computations, suggest that first the plasma
becomes white and then the momentum degrees of freedom thermalize.Comment: 9 pages, revised, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Turbulent thermalization of weakly coupled non-abelian plasmas
We study the dynamics of weakly coupled non-abelian plasmas within the
frameworks of classical-statistical lattice gauge-theory and kinetic theory. We
focus on a class of systems which are highly occupied, isotropic at all times
and initially characterized by a single momentum scale. These represent an
idealized version of the situation in relativistic heavy ion-collisions in the
color-glass condensate picture, where on a time scale after the
collision of heavy nuclei a longitudinally expanding plasma characterized by
the saturation scale is formed. Our results indicate that the system
evolves according to a turbulent Kolmogorov cascade in the classical regime.
Taking this into account, the kinetic description is able to reproduce
characteristic features of the evolution correctly.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Photon HBT interferometry for non-central heavy-ion collisions
Currently, the only known way to obtain experimental information about the
space-time structure of a heavy-ion collision is through 2-particle momentum
correlations. Azimuthally sensitive HBT interferometry (Hanbury Brown-Twiss
intensity interferometry) can complement elliptic flow measurements by
constraining the spatial deformation of the source and its time evolution.
Performing these measurements on photons allows us to access the fireball
evolution at earlier times than with hadrons. Using ideal hydrodynamics to
model the space-time evolution of the collision fireball, we explore
theoretically various aspects of 2-photon intensity interferometry with
transverse momenta up to 2 GeV, in particular the azimuthal angle dependence of
the HBT radii in non-central collisions. We highlight the dual nature of
thermal photon emission, in both central and non-central collisions, resulting
from the superposition of QGP and hadron resonance gas photon production. This
signature is present in both the thermal photon source function and the HBT
radii extracted from Gaussian fits of the 2-photon correlation function.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
Symmetry constraints on generalizations of Bjorken flow
I explain a generalization of Bjorken flow where the medium has finite
transverse size and expands both radially and along the beam axis. If one
assumes that the equations of viscous hydrodynamics can be used, with
p=epsilon/3 and zero bulk viscosity, then the flow I describe can be developed
into an exact solution of the relativistic Navier-Stokes equations. The local
four-velocity in the flow is entirely determined by the assumption of symmetry
under a subgroup of the conformal group.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures. v2: Minor revisions, a reference adde
Toward parton equilibration with improved parton interaction matrix elements
The Quark-Gluon Plasma can be produced in high energy heavy ion collisions
and how it equilibrates is important for the extraction of the properties of
strongly interacting matter. A radiative transport model can be used to reveal
interesting characteristics of Quark-Gluon Plasma thermalization. For example,
screened parton interactions always lead to partial pressure isotropization.
Systems with different initial pressure anisotropies evolve toward the same
asymptotic evolution. In particular, radiative processes are crucial for the
chemical equilibration of the system. Matrix elements under the soft and
collinear approximation for these processes, as first derived by Gunion and
Bertsch, are widely used. A different approach is to start with the exact
matrix elements for the two to three and its inverse processes. General
features of this approach will be reviewed and the results will be compared
with the Gunion-Bertsch results. We will comment on the possible implications
of the exact matrix element approach on Quark-Gluon Plasma thermalization.Comment: Presented at the 11th International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus
Collisions (NN2012), San Antonio, Texas, USA, 27 May-1 June 201
Effects of fluctuations on the initial eccentricity from the Color Glass Condensate in heavy ion collisions
We introduce a modified form of the Kharzeev-Levin-Nardi (KLN) approach for
nuclear collisions. The new ansatz for the unintegrated gluon distribution
function preserves factorization, and the saturation scale is bound from below
by that for a single nucleon. It also reproduces the correct scaling with the
number of collisions at high transverse momentum. The corresponding Monte Carlo
implementation allows us to account for fluctuations of the hard sources
(nucleons) in the transverse plane. We compute various definitions of the
eccentricity within the new approach, which are relevant for the interpretation
of the elliptic flow. Our approach predicts breaking of the scaling of the
eccentricity with the Glauber eccentricity at the level of about 30%.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, Updated version as accepted by Phys.Rev.
Chemical and kinetic equilibrations via radiative parton transport
A hot and dense partonic system can be produced in the early stage of a
relativistic heavy ion collision. How it equilibrates is important for the
extraction of Quark-Gluon Plasma properties. We study the chemical and kinetic
equilibrations of the Quark-Gluon Plasma using a radiative transport model.
Thermal and Color-Glass-Condensate motivated initial conditions are used. We
observe that screened parton interactions always lead to partial pressure
isotropization. Different initial pressure anisotropies result in the same
asymptotic evolution. Comparison of evolutions with and without radiative
processes shows that chemical equilibration interacts with kinetic
equilibration and radiative processes can contribute significantly to pressure
isotropization.Comment: Presented at 24th International Nuclear Physics Conference
(INPC2010), Vancouver, Canada, 4-9 July 201
Elliptic Flow and Initial Eccentricity in Cu+Cu and Au+Au Collisions at RHIC
We present a systematic study of elliptic flow as a function of centrality,
pseudorapidity, transverse momentum and energy for Cu+Cu and Au+Au collisions
from the PHOBOS experiment. New data on elliptic flow in Cu+Cu collisions at
22.4 GeV are shown. Elliptic flow scaled by participant eccentricity is found
to be similar for both systems when collisions with the same number of
participants or the same average area density are compared. This similarity is
observed over a wide range in pseudorapidity and transverse momentum,
indicating that participant eccentricity is the relevant quantity for
generating the azimuthal asymmetry leading to the observed elliptic flow.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, the 19th International Conference On Ultra
relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (Quark Matter 2006), Shanghai China,
Nov. 14-20, 200
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