297 research outputs found
Analyzing Correlation Functions with Tesseral and Cartesian Spherical Harmonics
The dependence of inter-particle correlations on the orientation of particle
relative-momentum can yield unique information on the space-time features of
emission in reactions with multiparticle final states. In the present paper,
the benefits of a representation and analysis of the three-dimensional
correlation information in terms of surface spherical harmonics is presented.
The harmonics include the standard complex tesseral harmonics and the real
cartesian harmonics. Mathematical properties of the lesser-known cartesian
harmonics are illuminated. The physical content of different angular harmonic
components in a correlation is described. The resolving power of different
final-state effects with regarding to determining angular features of emission
regions is investigated. The considered final-state effects include identity
interference and strong and Coulomb interactions. The correlation analysis in
terms of spherical harmonics is illustrated with the cases of gaussian and
blast-wave sources for proton-charged meson and baryon-baryon pairs.Comment: 32 pages 10 figure
Photonic measurements of the longitudinal expansion dynamics in Heavy-Ion collisions
Due to the smallness of the electromagnetic coupling, photons escape from the
hot and dense matter created in an heavy-ion collision at all times, in
contrast to hadrons which are predominantly emitted in the final freeze-out
phase of the evolving system. Thus, the thermal photon yield carries an imprint
from the early evolution. We suggest how this fact can be used to gain
information about where between the two limiting cases of Bjorken
(boost-invariant expansion) and Landau (complete initial stopping and
re-expansion) hydrodynamics the actual evolution can be found. We argue that
both the rapidity dependence of the photon yield and photonic HBT radii are
capable of answering this question.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Intensity interferometry of thermal photons from relativistic heavy ion collisions
Intensity interferometry of thermal photons, having transverse momenta 0.1 -- 2.0 GeV, produced in relativistic collision of heavy nuclei is
studied. It is seen to provide an accurate information about the temporal and
spatial structure of the interacting system. The source dimensions and their
dependence revealed by the photon interferometry, display a richness not
seen in pion interferometry. We attribute this to difference in the source
functions, the fact that photons come out from every stage of the collision and
from every point in the system, and the fact that the rate of production of
photons is different for the quark-gluon plasma, which dominates the early hot
stage, and the hadronic matter which populates the last phase of the collision
dynamics. The usefulness of this procedure is demonstrated by an application to
collision of lead nuclei at the CERN SPS. Prediction for the transverse
momentum dependence of the sizes for SPS, RHIC, and LHC energies are given.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures. Added discussions and references. To appear in
Phys. Rev.
Transport model analysis of particle correlations in relativistic heavy ion collisions at femtometer scales
The pion source as seen through HBT correlations at RHIC energies is
investigated within the UrQMD approach. We find that the calculated transverse
momentum, centrality, and system size dependence of the Pratt-HBT radii
and are reasonably well in line with experimental data. The predicted
values in central heavy ion collisions are larger as compared to
experimental data. The corresponding quantity of the
pion emission source is somewhat larger than experimental estimates.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, to be published in PR
Quantum Opacity, the RHIC HBT Puzzle, and the Chiral Phase Transition
We present a relativistic quantum mechanical treatment of opacity and
refractive effects that allows reproduction of observables measured in two-pion
(HBT) interferometry and pion spectra at RHIC. The inferred emission duration
is substantial. The results are consistent with the emission of pions from a
system that has a restored chiral symmetry.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. This version mentions shows the STAR 200 GeV
data, and includes some technical improvements. The agreement with experiment
is improved slightly, and the parameters of the model are changed slightl
A comprehensive description of multiple observables in heavy-ion collisions at SPS
Combining and expanding on work from previous publications, a model for the
evolution of ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions at the CERN SPS for 158
AGeV beam energy is presented. Based on the assumption of thermalization and a
parametrization of the space-time expansion of the produced matter, this model
is able to describe a large set of observables including hadronic momentum
spectra, correlations and abundancies, the emission of real photons, dilepton
radiation and the suppression pattern of charmonia. Each of these obervables
provides unique capabilities to study the reaction dynamics and taken together
they form a strong and consistent picture of the evolving system. Based on the
emission of hard photons, we argue that a strongly interacting, hot and dense
system with temperatures above 250 MeV has to be created early in the reaction.
Such a system is bound to be different from hadronic matter and likely to be a
quark-gluon plasma, and we find that this assumption is in line with the
subsequent evolution of the system that is reflected in other observables.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, submitted to J. Phys.
HBT: A (mostly) experimental overview
I will present a review of the field of Hanbury Brown-Twiss interferometry in
relativistic heavy-ion collisions. The "HBT puzzle" is explored in detail,
emphasizing recent theoretical attempts to understand the persisting puzzle. I
also present recent experimental results on azimuthally sensitive HBT, HBT of
direct photons, and some surprises in the comparison of HBT results from p+p
and Au+Au collisions at RHIC.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Proceedings of the Quark Matter 2004 conference
(Oalkland, CA, USA, January 2004
Transport model analysis of the transverse momentum and rapidity dependence of pion interferometry at SPS energies
Based on the UrQMD transport model, the transverse momentum and the rapidity
dependence of the Hanbury-Brown-Twiss (HBT) radii , , as well
as the cross term at SPS energies are investigated and compared with
the experimental NA49 and CERES data. The rapidity dependence of the ,
, is weak while the is significantly increased at large
rapidities and small transverse momenta. The HBT "life-time" issue (the
phenomenon that the calculated value is larger than
the correspondingly extracted experimental data) is also present at SPS
energies.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figure
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