147 research outputs found
Particle production at energies available at the CERN Large Hadron Collider within evolutionary model
The particle yields and particle number ratios in Pb+Pb collisions at the LHC
energy TeV are described within the integrated
hydrokinetic model (iHKM) at the two different equations of state (EoS) for the
quark-gluon matter and the two corresponding hadronization temperatures,
MeV and MeV. The role of particle interactions at the final
afterburner stage of the collision in the particle production is investigated
by means of comparison of the results of full iHKM simulations with those where
the annihilation and other inelastic processes (except for resonance decays)
are switched off after hadronization/particlization, similarly as in the
thermal models. An analysis supports the picture of continuous chemical
freeze-out in the sense that the corrections to the sudden chemical freeze-out
results, which arise because of the inelastic reactions at the subsequent
evolution times, are noticeable and improve the description of particle and
number ratios. An important observation is that although the particle number
ratios with switched-off inelastic reactions are quite different at different
particlization temperatures which are adopted for different equations of state
to reproduce experimental data, the complete iHKM calculations bring very close
results in both cases.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Photon spectra and anisotropic flow in heavy ion collisions at the top RHIC energy within the integrated hydrokinetic model with photon hadronization emission
The integrated HydroKinetic Model (iHKM) is applied to analyse the results of
direct photon spectra as well as elliptic and triangular flow measurements in
200A GeV Au+Au collisions at RHIC for different centrality bins. Experiments
detect the strong centrality dependence of photon elliptic and triangular flow
as increasing -coefficients towards peripheral collisions. The photon
production in the model is accumulated from the different sources along with
the process of relativistic heavy ion collision developing. Those include the
primary hard photons from the parton collisions at the very early stage of the
process, the photons generated at the pre-thermal phase of dense matter
evolution, then thermal photons at partially equilibrated hydrodynamic
quark-gluon stage, together with radiation displaying a confinement and,
finally, from the hadron gas phase. Along the way a hadronic medium evolution
is treated in two distinct, in a sense opposite, approaches: chemically
equilibrium and chemically non-equilibrium, namely, chemically frozen
expansion. We find the description of direct photon spectra, elliptic and
triangular flow are significantly improved, similar to that found in iHKM for
the LHC energies, if an additional portion of photon radiation associated with
the confinement processes, the "hadronization photons", is included into
consideration.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1812.0276
Direct photon spectrum and elliptic flow produced from Pb+Pb collisions at TeV at the CERN Large Hadron Collider within an integrated hydrokinetic model
The photon transverse momentum spectrum and its anisotropy from Pb+Pb
collisions at the CERN Large Hadron Collider energy TeV
are investigated within the integrated hydrokinetic model (iHKM). Photon
production is accumulated from the different processes at the various stages of
relativistic heavy ion collisions: from the primary hard photons of very early
stage of parton collisions to the thermal photons from equilibrated quark-gluon
and hadron gas stages. Along the way a hadronic medium evolution is treated in
two distinct, in a sense opposite, approaches: chemically equilibrated and
chemically frozen system expansion. Studying the centrality dependence of the
results obtained allows us to conclude that a relatively strong transverse
momentum anisotropy of thermal radiation is suppressed by prompt photon
emission which is an isotropic. We find out that this effect is getting
stronger as centrality increases because of the simultaneous increase in the
relative contribution of prompt photons in the soft part of the spectra. The
substantial results obtained in iHKM with nonzero viscosity () for
photon spectra and coefficients are mostly within the error bars of
experimental data, but there is some systematic underestimation of both
observables for the near central events. We claim that a situation could be
significantly improved if an additional photon radiation that accompanies the
presence of a deconfined environment is included. Since a matter of a
space-time layer where hadronization takes place is actively involved in
anisotropic transverse flow, both positive contributions to the spectra and
are considerable, albeit such an argument needs further research and
elaboration.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figure
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