532 research outputs found
Dissipative effects from transport and viscous hydrodynamics
We compare 2->2 covariant transport theory and causal Israel-Stewart
hydrodynamics in 2+1D longitudinally boost invariant geometry with RHIC-like
initial conditions and a conformal e = 3p equation of state. The pressure
evolution in the center of the collision zone and the final differential
elliptic flow v2(pT) from the two theories agree remarkably well for a small
shear viscosity to entropy density ratio eta/s ~ 1/(4 pi), and also for a large
cross section sigma ~ 50 mb. A key to this agreement is keeping ALL terms in
the Israel-Stewart equations of motion. Our results indicate promising
prospects for the applicability of Israel-Stewart dissipative hydrodynamics at
RHIC, provided the shear viscosity of hot and dense quark-gluon matter is
indeed very small for the relevant temperatures T ~ 200-500 MeV.Comment: Presentation at Quark Matter 2008. 4 pages, 3 figure
The applicability of causal dissipative hydrodynamics to relativistic heavy ion collisions
We utilize nonequilibrium covariant transport theory to determine the region
of validity of causal Israel-Stewart dissipative hydrodynamics (IS) and
Navier-Stokes theory (NS) for relativistic heavy ion physics applications. A
massless ideal gas with 2->2 interactions is considered in a 0+1D Bjorken
scenario, appropriate for the early longitudinal expansion stage of the
collision. In the scale invariant case of a constant shear viscosity to entropy
density ratio eta/s ~ const, we find that Israel-Stewart theory is 10% accurate
in calculating dissipative effects if initially the expansion timescale exceeds
half the transport mean free path tau0/lambda0 > ~2. The same accuracy with
Navier-Stokes requires three times larger tau0/lambda0 > ~6. For dynamics
driven by a constant cross section, on the other hand, about 50% larger
tau0/lambda0 > ~3 (IS) and ~9 (NS) are needed. For typical applications at RHIC
energies s_{NN}**(1/2) ~ 100-200 GeV, these limits imply that even the
Israel-Stewart approach becomes marginal when eta/s > ~0.15. In addition, we
find that the 'naive' approximation to Israel-Stewart theory, which neglects
products of gradients and dissipative quantities, has an even smaller range of
applicability than Navier-Stokes. We also obtain analytic Israel-Stewart and
Navier-Stokes solutions in 0+1D, and present further tests for numerical
dissipative hydrodynamics codes in 1+1, 2+1, and 3+1D based on generalized
conservation laws.Comment: 30 pages, 26 EPS figures, revtex stylefil
Results from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
We describe the current status of the heavy ion research program at the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). The new suite of experiments and the
collider energies have opened up new probes of the medium created in the
collisions. Our review focuses on the experimental discoveries to date at RHIC
and their interpretation in the light of our present theoretical understanding
of the dynamics of relativistic heavy ion collisions and of the structure of
strongly interacting matter at high energy density.Comment: 47 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Annual Review of Nuclear and
Particle Science. The authors invite and appreciate feedback about possible
errors and/or inconsistencies in the manuscrip
A Co-moving Coordinate System for Relativistic Hydrodynamics
The equations of relativistic hydrodynamics are transformed so that steps
forward in time preserves local simultaneity. In these variables, the
space-time coordinates of neighboring points on the mesh are simultaneous
according to co-moving observers. Aside from the time step varying as a
function of the location on the mesh, the local velocity gradient and the local
density then evolve according to non-relativistic equations of motion. Analytic
solutions are found for two one-dimensional cases with constant speed of sound.
One solution has a Gaussian density profile when mapped into the new
coordinates. That solution is analyzed for the effects of longitudinal
acceleration in relativistic heavy ion collisions at RHIC, especially in
regards to two-particle correlation measurements of the longitudinal size
Chemical freeze-out temperature in hydrodynamical description of Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 200 GeV
We study the effect of separate chemical and kinetic freeze-outs to the ideal
hydrodynamical flow in Au+Au collisions at RHIC (sqrt(s_NN) = 200 GeV energy).
Unlike in earlier studies we explore how these effects can be counteracted by
changes in the initial state of the hydrodynamical evolution. We conclude that
the reproduction of pion, proton and antiproton yields necessitates a chemical
freeze-out temperature of T = 150 MeV instead of T = 160 - 170 MeV motivated by
thermal models. Unlike previously reported, this lower temperature makes it
possible to reproduce the p_T-spectra of hadrons if one assumes very small
initial time, tau_0 = 0.2 fm/c. However, the p_T-differential elliptic flow,
v_2(p_T) remains badly reproduced. This points to the need to include
dissipative effects (viscosity) or some other refinement to the model.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures; Accepted for publication in European Physical
Journal A; Added discussion about the effect of weak decays to chemical
freeze-out temperature and a figure showing isentropic curves in T-mu plan
Transverse hydrodynamics with sudden hadronization -- production of strangeness
We consider a physical scenario for ultra-relativistic heavy-ion collisions
where, at the early stage, only transverse degrees of freedom of partons are
thermalized, while the longitudinal motion is described by free streaming. When
the energy density of the partonic system drops to a certain critical value,
the partons hadronize and the newly formed hadronic system freezes out. This
sudden change is described with the help of the Landau matching conditions
followed by the simulations done with THERMINATOR. The proposed scenario
reproduces well the transverse-momentum spectra, the elliptic flow coefficient
v2, and the HBT radii of pions and kaons studied at RHIC (Au+Au collisions at
the top beam energy). It also reproduces quite well the transverse-momentum
spectra of hyperons.Comment: talk presented by WF at the Strangeness in Quark Matter Conference,
Buzios, Brazil, Sept. 27 - oct. 2, 200
v4: A small, but sensitive observable for heavy ion collisions
Higher order Fourier coefficients of the azimuthally dependent single
particle spectra resulting from noncentral heavy ion collisions are
investigated. For intermediate to large transverse momenta, these anisotropies
are expected to become as large as 5 %, and should be clearly measurable. The
physics content of these observables is discussed from two different extreme
but complementary viewpoints, hydrodynamics and the geometric limit with
extreme energy loss.Comment: as published: typos corrected, Fig. 3 slightly improved in numerics
and presentatio
Measurements of Heavy Flavor and Di-electron Production at STAR
Heavy quarks are produced early in the relativistic heavy ion collisions, and
provide an excellent probe into the hot and dense nuclear matter created at
RHIC. In these proceedings, we will discuss recent STAR measurements of heavy
flavor production, to investigate the heavy quark interaction with the medium.
Electromagnetic probes, such as electrons, provide information on the various
stages of the medium evolution without modification by final stage
interactions. Di-electron production measurements by STAR will also be
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, proceedings for CPOD201
Elliptic flow of thermal photons and dileptons
In this talk we describe the recently discovered rich phenomenology of
elliptic flow of electromagnetic probes of the hot matter created in
relativistic heavy-ion collisions. Using a hydrodynamic model for the
space-time dynamics of the collision fireball created in Au+Au collisions at
RHIC, we compute the transverse momentum spectra and elliptic flow of thermal
photons and dileptons. These observables are shown to provide differential
windows into various stages of the fireball expansion.Comment: 8 pages, including 9 figures. Invited talk at the Hard Probes 2006
Conference (Asilomar, June 9-16, 2006), to appear in the Proceedings
(Elsevier
Space-time evolution of bulk QCD matter
We introduce a combined fully three-dimensional macroscopic/microscopic
transport approach employing relativistic 3D-hydrodynamics for the early,
dense, deconfined stage of the reaction and a microscopic non-equilibrium model
for the later hadronic stage where the equilibrium assumptions are not valid
anymore. Within this approach we study the dynamics of hot, bulk QCD matter,
which is being created in ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions at RHIC. Our
approach is capable of self-consistently calculating the freezeout of the
hadronic system, while accounting for the collective flow on the hadronization
hypersurface generated by the QGP expansion. In particular, we perform a
detailed analysis of the reaction dynamics, hadronic freezeout, and transverse
flow.Comment: 24 pages, 27 figure
- …