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R. Lednicky: Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Dubna, Russia I.P. Lokhtin, A.M. Snigirev, L.V. Malinina: Moscow State University, Institute of Nuclear Physics, Russia Iu.A. Karpenko, Yu.M. Sinyukov : Bogolyubov Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kiev, Ukraine (PRC 74 064901(2006)) http://uhkm.jinr.ru Correlation radii from A FAST HADRON FREEZE-OUT GENERATOR ( FASTMC ) The predictions for correlation radii in the central Pb+Pb collisions for LHC GeV
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Outline 1. Introduction- motivation. 2. Model parameters. 3. Physical framework of the model. 4. Predictions for LHC
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- LHC very high hadron multiplicities fairly fast MC- generators for event simulation required - FASTMC- fast Monte Carlo procedure of hadron generation: We avoid straightforward 6-dimentional integration ~100% efficiency of generation procedure - Matter is thermally equilibrated. Particle multiplicities are determined by the temperature and chemical potentials. Statistical model. Chemical freeze-out. - Particles can be generated on the chemical (T th =T ch ) or thermal freeze-out hypersurface is represented by a parameterization (or a numerical solution of the relativistic hydrodynamics). Introduction-Motivation - Decays of hadronic resonances (from u,d and s quarks) are included - The C++ generator code is written under the ROOT framework. - Various parameterizations of the hadron freeze-out hypersurface and flow velocity
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Model parameters for central collisions: 1. Thermodynamic parameters at chemical freeze-out: T ch, { µ B, µ S, µ Q } 2. If thermal freeze-out is considered: T th, µ π-normalisation constant 3. As an option, strangeness suppression γ S < 1 4. Volume parameters: τ -the freeze-out proper time and its standard deviation Δτ (emission duration) R- firebal transverse radius 5. -maximal transverse flow rapidity for Bjorken-like parametrization 6.η max -maximal space-time longitudinal rapidity which determines the rapidity interval [- η max, η max ] in the collision center-of-mass system. 7.To account for the violation of the boost invariance, an option corresponding to the substitution of the uniform distribution of the space-time longitudinal rapidity by a Gaussian distribution in η. 8. Option to calculate T, µ B using phenomenological parametrizations
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1. We consider the hadronic matter created in heavy-ion collisions as a hydrodynamically expanding fireball with the EOS of an ideal hadron gas. 2. “concept of effective volume” T=const and µ=const the total yield of particle species is:, total co-moving volume, ρ-particle number density 3. Chemical freeze-out : T, µ i = µ B B i + µ S S i + µ Q Q i ; T, µ B –can be fixed by particle ratios, or by phenomenological formulas 4. Chemical freeze-out: all macroscopic characteristics of particle system are determined via a set of equilibrium distribution functions in the fluid element rest frame: Physical framework of the model: Hadron multiplicities
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Physical framework of the model: Thermal freeze-out Particles (stable, resonances) are generated on the thermal freeze-out hypersurface, the hadronic composition at this stage is defined by the parameters of the system at chemical freeze-out 1.The particle densities at the chemical freeze-out stage are too high to consider particles as free streaming and to associate this stage with the thermal freeze-out 2. Assumption of the conservation of the particle number ratios in between the chemical and thermal freeze-out : 3. In the Boltzmann approximation:
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We suppose that a hydrodynamic expansion of the fireball ends by a sudden system breakup at given T and chemical potentials. Momentum distribution of produced hadrons keeps the thermal character of the equilibrium distribution. Physical framework of the model: Hadron momentum distribution Cooper-Frye formula: Freeze-out surface parameterizations 1. The Bjorken model with hypersurface 2. Linear transverse flow rapidity profile: 3. The total effective volume for particle production at
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We considered the naive ``scaling'' of the existing physical picture of heavy ion interactions over two order of magnitude in to the maximal LHC energy GeV We performed: - FASTMC fitting of the existing experimental data on mt-spectra, particle ratios, rapidity density dN/dy, kt-dependence of the correlation radii from SPS ( = 8.7 - 17.3 GeV) to RHIC ( = 200 GeV) For LHC energies we have fixed the thermodynamic parameters at chemical freeze-out as the asymptotic ones:Tch=170 MeV, µ B =0, µ S =0, µ Q =0 MeV. Predictions for LHC -The linear extrapolation of the model parameters in to LHC GeV
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SPS ( = 8.7 - 17.3 GeV) ▲ RHIC ( = 200 GeV) LHC ( = 5500 GeV) Predictions for LHC ○ ■
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The extrapolated values : R ~ 11 fm, τ ~ 10 fm/c, Δτ~ 3.0 fm/c, ~ 1.0, T th ~ 130 MeV. T ch =170 MeV, µ B =0, µ S =0, µ Q =0 MeV dN/dy ~ 1400 twice larger than at RHIC = 200 GeV in coincidence with the naive extrapolation of dN/dy. These parameters yield only a small increase of the correlation radii Rout, Rside, Rlong Predictions for LHC: Conclusions
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