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Christoph Blume University of Heidelberg
International School on: Quark-Gluon Plasma and Heavy Ion Collisions: Past, Present, Future Villa Gualino, Turino, Italy Soft Probes II Christoph Blume University of Heidelberg
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Observables Temperature Strangeness Resonances Femtoscopy Fluctuations
Chemical Freeze-Out Kinetic Freeze-Out Temperature Femtoscopy Fluctuations Flow Jets + Heavy Flavor Photons Strangeness Resonances
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Strangeness
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Strangeness in Heavy Ion Physics
Strangeness enhancement as a QGP signature J. Rafelski and B. Müller, PRL48, (1982) P. Koch, B. Müller, and J. Rafelski, Phys. Rep. 142, 167 (1986) Strangeness has to be produced (no s-Quarks in nucleons) Thresholds are high in hadronic reactions, e.g..: N + N N + K+ + (Ethres 700 MeV) Fast equilibration in a QGP via partonic processes, e.g. gluon-fusion ⇒ Enhancement of strange particle production in A+A relative to p+p expected (in particular multi-strange particles)
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Statistical Models Multiplicities determined by statistical weights
(⇒ chemical equilibrium) Grand-canonical partition function: ⇒ Parameters: V, T, μB, γS Details: see F. Becattini’s lecture A.Andronic et al. PLB673, 142 (2009) F.Becattini et al., PRC69, (2004)
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Hadronic Transport Models
Microscopic approach Hadronic degrees of freedom Non-equilibrium Production mechanisms: Measured and parameterized cross sections String-excitation and fragmentation Medium effects, Multi-meson fusion, Mass shifts, ... √sNN = 17.3 GeV UrQMD Examples: UrQMD HSD NEXUS (AMPT) (EPOS) ...
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Strange Particles
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Major Strangeness Carriers: Kaons and Lambdas
Strangeness Conservation = Isospin Symmetry K0 (ds) K+ (us) K- (us) (uds) >> If baryon density is high
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Measurement of Charged Kaons via dE/dx
Bethe-Bloch function:
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Combination of dE/dx and Time-Of-Flight (TOF)
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Weak Decay Topologies V0 Topology (K0s, Λ): Ξ- (Cascade) Ω- Topology:
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Strangeness Production in a Pion-Proton Event
- K0 p + Associated production:
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Strangeness Production in a Heavy Ion Event
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Reconstruction via Decay Topology
NA49 NA57 NA57
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Armenteros-Podolanski Plot
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Strangeness Enhancement (SPS)
NA57: JPG32, 427 (2006)
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Strangeness Enhancement (RHIC)
STAR: PRC77, (2008)
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Enhancement Towards Lower Energies
√sNN (GeV) Contrary to naive expectation Same behavior for multi-strange particles?
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Particle Ratios in p+p: RHIC and LHC
Increase of relative strangeness production in p+p with √s ALICE: arXiv:
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Ξ at Threshold Energies
Expectation for statistical model (Andronic et al.) HADES: PRL103, (2009)
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Strangeness Enhancement as QGP Signature ?
Is it a dominantly partonic effect or can hadronic processes lead to the same fast equilibration? Multi-meson fusion processes C. Greiner and S. Leupold, J. Phys. G 27, L95 (2001) Dynamic equilibration at the phase boundary? P. Braun-Munzinger, J. Stachel, and C. Wetterich, Phys. Lett. B 596, 61 (2004) Hadronization generally a statistical phenomenon? U. Heinz, Nucl. Phys. A 638, 357c (1998), R. Stock, Phys. Lett. B 456, 277 (1999)
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Energy Dependence of K/π Ratios
Quite sharp maximum in K+/π+ ratio Indication for phase transition (?) PRC77, (2008) arXiv:
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Energy Dependence of Hyperon/π Ratios
/ − -/ +/ = 1.5 (+ + -) PRC78, (2008)
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Maximum of Relative Strangeness Production
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Chemical Freeze-Out Curve
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Chemical Freeze-Out in the QCD Phase Diagram
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Spectra
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Rapidity Distributions ...
BRAHMS: Au+Au, √sNN = 200 GeV
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Landau ... p+p Data Prediction: dN/dy is Gaussian of a width given by:
Pion production ~ Entropy Isentropic expansion Description of the pion gas as a 3D relativistic fluid Prediction: dN/dy is Gaussian of a width given by: L. D. Landau, Izv. Akad. Nauk. SSSR 17 (1953) 52 P. Carruthers and M. Duong-Van, PRD8 (1973) 859
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Landau ... works also for Heavy Ions
BRAHMS: PRL94, (2005)
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Width of the Φ Rapidity Distribution
Expectation for kaon coalescence K+ + K- → Φ PRC78, (2008)
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Radial Expansion and Transverse Momentum Spectra
mT 1/mT dN/dmT mT 1/mT dN/dmT No radial flow: exponential spectrum (p+p collisions) With radial flow: add. boost by expansion (vT) ⇒ blue shifted spectrum
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Blast Wave Analysis of Particle Spectra
Central Pb+Pb 158A GeV E. Schnedermann and U. Heinz, PRC50, 1675 (1994)
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Energy Dependence of Kinetic Freeze-Out
arXiv:
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Energy Dependence of 〈mT〉
NA49: PRC77, (2008)
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Radial Expansion of Strange Particles
What about heavy particles (Ξ, Ω, J/ψ) ? NA57: JPG32, 2065 (2006)
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Radial Expansion of Strange Particles
Particles with low hadronic cross sections: Ξ, Ω, J/ψ ⇒ Not sensitive to flow in hadronic, but maybe to partonic phase N. Xu and M. Kaneta, NPA698, 306 (2002) 306.
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Radial Expansion of Strange Particles
Multi-strange particles sensitive to the partonic flow contribution (?) STAR: PRL92, (2004)
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Resonances
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Resonances Strong decays ⇒ short lifetimes that can be in the
order of the fireball lifetime Examples: K(892) → K+ + π - : cτ = 3.91 fm Φ(1020) → K+ + K- : cτ = 46.5 fm Σ-(1385) → Λ + π - : cτ = 5.08 fm Λ(1520) → p + K- : cτ = 12.7 fm Should be sensitive to the late phase of the hadronic fireball Regeneration Rescattering of decay products ⇒ Provide information on the time span between chemical and kinetic freeze-out
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Recombination and Rescattering of Resonances
Hot and dense medium Particle yields Particle spectra Time K* π K Picture adapted from C. Markert and P. Fachini
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Measurement of Resonances: Σ(1385) and Λ(1520)
STAR: PRC71, (2005)
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Rescattering after Chemical Freeze-Out
STAR: PRC71, (2005)
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Comparison to Chemical Equilibrium Expectation
Pb+Pb, √sNN = 17.3 GeV Pb+Pb, √sNN = 17.3 GeV NA49: pub. in preparation HGM: F. Becattini et al.
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Scaling Properties of the Φ Meson
No scaling with K+ × K- (coalescence picture) Scaling with (s-Quarks)2 Φ = ss K ∝ s-Quarks K- + Λ ∝ s-Quarks _
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K+/π + and Λ/π – Compared to Statistical Model
A. Andronic et al., PLB676, 142 (2009)
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Energy Dependence of K/π Ratios
Quite sharp maximum in K+/π+ ratio Indication for phase transition (?) PRC77, (2008)
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Antibaryon-Baryon Ratios
NA49: PRC78, (2008)
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Baryon-Meson-Ratios
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Baryon-Meson Ratio: Λ/K0s
Λ/K0s > 1: Cannot be understood in string fragmentation picture
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Hadronization Mechanisms
Fragmentation (Lund model) String fragments via qq creation Original parton momentum is divided among resulting partons _ Quark coalescence Hadrons form by combining quarks from quark soup (QGP) Would be dominating at intermediate pt
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Fragmentation vs Coalescence
Hadron from fragmentation: ph = z p, z < 1 coalescence: ph = p1 + p2 Production of baryons favored relative to mesons in coalescence picture
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Baryon-Meson Ratio: Ω(sss)/Φ(ss)
_ Baryon-Meson Ratio: Ω(sss)/Φ(ss)
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