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Laboratory for Nuclear Physics Division of Experimental Physics Ruđer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia Zoran Basrak 11th International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions May 28 – June 1st, 2011, San Antonio, TX–USA Philippe Eudes, Maja Zorić, and François Sébille In collaboration with
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Landau-Vlasov simulation Transport equation of the Boltzmann type H = T+U, U = V nucl +V Coul, V nucl – Gogny G1-D1 non-local potential K=228 MeV, m*/m=0.67 f = f(r,p;t) - distribution function Collision term Phenomenological, isotropic σ = σ(E, iso) [Chen et al.] An approach adequate for bulk (one-body) properties of nuclear dynamics, in particular for an early and compact reaction phase
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Dynamical emission component P. Eudes, Z. Basrak and F. Sebille, Phys. Rev. C56 (1997) 2003. Landau-Vlasov model simulation Ar ( 65 MeV / u ) Al A similar two-stages process in 1A GeV range by EOS Coll J.A. Hauger et al. PRL 77 (1996) 235. A similar conclusion valid for any reaction below 100A MeV
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Early reaction phase
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Early energy transformation E tot = E collect + E intrin E intrin = E excit + E potent Decompression followed by abundant emission and fast system cooling. A sys = ~60 - ~400 nucl A proj :A targ = 1:1 – 1:5 SystemIncident energy (MeV/u) 40 Ar+ 27 Al25, 41, 53, 65, 77, 99 36 Ar+ 58 Ni52, 74, 95 40 Ar+ 107 Ag20, 30, 40, 45, 50, 75, 100 40 Ar+ 197 Au50, 75, 100 36 Ar+ 36 Ar32, 40, 52, 74 58 Ni+ 58 Ni52, 74, 90 12O Xe+ 129 Sn25, 32, 39, 45, 50, 75, 100 197 Au+ 197 Au20, 30, 40, 60, 80, 100
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Evolution of excitation energy – Regular rise & fall with time at each E IN – Width & height regularly behave as a f(E IN )
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Evolution of excitation energy – Regular rise & fall with time at each E IN – Width & height regularly behave as a f(E IN ) – Maxima reflect the total energy deposited in the reaction system
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Excitation energy maxima E proj A proj E avail = A targ A proj (A targ +A proj ) 2
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E x as a fraction of E AVAIL – Fraction is almost constant over a wide energy range – Large variety of systems
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Experimental excitation energy
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All available data on E x /A in central HI collisions in the last 20 years Experimental excitation energy
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All available data on E x /A in central HI collisions in the last 20 years – Strong spread of the data points – Connected data points of the same measurement – Close to linear dependence on E IN
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Data for E IN > 100A MeV W. Reisdorf et al., Nucl. Phys. A848 (2010) 366. – Radial flow of light reaction products deduced on two manners – Some correction relative to FOPI PHASE 1 but still a linear function of E IN Radial flow deduced by blast model. Remaining energy is taken as thermal. W. Reisdorf et al., Nucl. Phys. A612 (1997) 493.
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All available data on E x /A in central HI collisions in the last 20 years – Strong spread of the data points – Connected data points of the same measurement – Close to linear dependence on E IN Experimental excitation energy
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All available data on E x /A in central HI collisions in the last 20 years – Strong spread of the data points – Connected data points of the same measurement – Close to linear dependence on E IN – Data within 35 % and 95 % of E AVAIL
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E x as a fraction of E AVAIL – The same system for the central collisions and the same E IN displays different features
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– The same system for the central collisions and the same E IN displays different features – Different leading assumption used in various analysis E x as a fraction of E AVAIL
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D. Dore et al. (INDRA Collaboration), Phys. Lett. B491 (2000) 15. Ar (95A MeV) + Ni INDRA experiment analyzed in the 3 sources assumption QP emission in BDCs QP mass QP excitation experiment 3 sources analyses Proton reduced rapidity distribution Reaction dominantly of binary nature with a strong mid-rapidity contribution.
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– The same system for the central collisions and the same E IN displays different features – Different leading assumption used in various analysis – Group data by the approach used E x as a fraction of E AVAIL
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Neglected dynamical emission (?)
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Pure kinematical considerations
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Accounted dynamical emission
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Added FOPI thermal energy
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Summary
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Laboratory for Nuclear Physics Division of Experimental Physics Ruđer Bošković Institute, Zagreb, Croatia Zoran Basrak 11th International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions May 28 – June 1st, 2011, San Antonio, TX–USA Philippe Eudes, Maja Zorić, and François Sébille In collaboration with
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Backup slides
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Central collisions 30 fm/c = 1∙10 -21 s E x ≈E AVAIL full stopping E in = 10A MeV At E Fermi (≈ 35A MeV) “hard” NN collisions E in = 35A MeV 129 Xe + 120 Sn BDC > 95 % REAC ≈ 5 % σ REAC b = 3 fm ≈ 0.2 b max E in = 50A MeV E in = 125A MeV
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Mid-rapidity emission in BDCs ≈ pre-scission emissionMid-rapidity emission max. compression local equilibration Configuration space Impulse space pre-scissionpost-scission P. Eudes, Z. Basrak and F. Sebille, Phys. Rev. C56 (1997) 2003.
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Central collisions Above Coulomb barrier an adiabatic system rearrangement with full stopping and full E dissipation; fusion process E DISSIP = E AVAIL Increasing E: incomplete fusion E DISSIP < E AVAIL From about the Fermi energy E Fermi BDC BDC > 95 % REAC irrespectively of - event centrality - system size - system asymmetry Increasing contribution of hard NN collisions
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F. Haddad et al., Phys. Rev. C60 (1999) 031603. Z dynam emiss Z targ + Z proj = 100 Dynamical emission component D em (%) = System Incident energy (MeV/u) 40 Ar+ 27 Al41, 65 40 Ar+ 107 Ag50, 75, 100 107 Ag+ 40 Ar50 36 Ar+ 58 Ni52, 74, 95 12O Xe+ 129 Sn50, 75, 100
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Excitation energy maxima E proj A proj E avail = A targ A proj (A targ +A proj ) 2
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E x as a fraction of E AVAIL – Fraction almost constant over a wide energy range – For symmetric systems break below E Fermi – Large variety of systems
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Fraction for experimental E x
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Binary Dissipative Collisions (BDC) – BDC opens around the Fermi energy – σ BDC > 95% σ REAC Irrespectively of - event centrality - system size - system mass asymmetry V.Metivier et al. (INDRA Collaboration), Nucl. Phys. A672 (2000) 357.
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QP emission in BDCs J. Peter et al., Nucl. Phys. A593 (1995) 95. Reconstructed primary QP mass approxim.. equal to the projectile mass Thus obtained primary QP extremely hot Y.-G. Ma et al., Phys. Lett. B390 (1997) 41. Ar (95 MeV/u) Ni
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Statistical emission component Ph. Eudes and Z. Basrak, Eur. Phys. J. A 9 (2000) 207. Landau-Vlasov model simulation Ar ( 65 MeV / u ) Al The geniune primary QP emission Ar (65 MeV/u) Al D. Cussol et al., Nucl. Phys. A561 (1993) 298. J. Peter et al., Nucl. Phys. A593 (1995) 95.
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Heat & compression – Maximal compression at ~25 fm/c – In each volume cell a local equilibration at ~35 fm/c – System scission at ~55 fm/c Despite of the establishment of a local equi- librium throughout the compact system the (E th /A) sys and (A th /A) proj differ substantially: Global equilibrium is far from being reached I. Novosel et al., Phys. Lett. B625 (2005) 26.
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Head-on collisions A universal linear proportionality law proves the eminent role of “hard” NN collisions. A targ (A targ + A proj ) 2 E avail = c.m. E proj A proj Dependence on available energy I. Novosel et al., Phys. Lett. B625 (2005) 26.
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Dependence of relative sub-systems E th /A on incident energy for head-on collisions I. Novosel et al., Phys. Lett. B625 (2005) 26. Projectile ratio = (E th /A) proj Target ratio = (E th /A) sys (E th /A) tar g (E th /A) sys Ratio of thermal energy maxima
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Dependence of relative sub-systems E th /A on incident energy for head-on collisions I. Novosel et al., Phys. Lett. B625 (2005) 26. Projectile ratio = (E th /A) proj Target ratio = (E th /A) sys (E th /A) tar g (E th /A) sys A symmetric system Ratio of thermal energy maxima
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Dependence of relative sub-systems E th /A on incident energy for head-on collisions I. Novosel et al., Phys. Lett. B625 (2005) 26. Projectile ratio = (E th /A) proj Target ratio = (E th /A) sys (E th /A) tar g (E th /A) sys An asymmetric system Ratio of thermal energy maxima
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Dependence of relative sub-systems E th /A on incident energy for head-on collisions I. Novosel et al., Phys. Lett. B625 (2005) 26. Projectile ratio = (E th /A) proj Target ratio = (E th /A) sys (E th /A) tar g (E th /A) sys Increasingly asymmetric systems Ratio of thermal energy maxima
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Dependence of relative sub-systems E th /A on incident energy for head-on collisions I. Novosel et al., Phys. Lett. B625 (2005) 26. Projectile ratio = (E th /A) proj Target ratio = (E th /A) sys (E th /A) tar g (E th /A) sys Ratio of thermal energy maxima
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Dependence of relative sub-systems E th /A on incident energy for head-on collisions I. Novosel et al., Phys. Lett. B625 (2005) 26. tal change from the fusion-deep inelastic into the BDC – partic.-spect,(fireball)-like behavior. The reaction geo- metry is important in intermediate E HIC. The Fermi energy is a transient region where the main reac- tion mechanism un- dergoes a fundamen- Ratio of thermal energy maxima
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