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Femtoscopy: Theory. ____________________________________________________ Scott Pratt, Michigan State University. Deriving the Fundamental Formula. Deriving the Fundamental Formula. Step 1: Define the source function. Deriving the Fundamental Formula.
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Femtoscopy: Theory ____________________________________________________ Scott Pratt, Michigan State University Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Deriving the Fundamental Formula Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Deriving the Fundamental Formula Step 1: Define the source function Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Deriving the Fundamental Formula Step 2: Write 2-particle probability = probability relative momentum q and separation x evolves to q asymptotically Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Deriving… Identical particles Smoothness approximation Scott Pratt Michigan State University
With final-state interactions Approximate (in frame of pair), Smoothness approximation Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Deriving… Summary Assumptions • Strong/Coulomb • Independent emission • Ignore time differencefor evolution • Smoothness • Identical Particles • Symmetrize pairwise • Independent emission • Smoothness * * * * Tested Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Femtoscopy – Theory • Measures phase space cloud for fixed velocity • Overall source can be larger • Inversion depends on|f(q,r)|2 Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Hadronic Interferometry – Theory Theories predict SP(r) C(P,q) Correlations provide stringent test of space-time evolution Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Using Identical Particles • Examples: pp, KK, … • Easy to invert • 3-dimensional information • Rout, Rside, Rlongare functions of P Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Identical Particles: Measuring Lifetime • Has been studied for pp, KK, pp, nn • Source function S(p,r,t) is 7-dimensional– requires one dimension of common sense Scott Pratt Michigan State University
d-a Correlations Strong Interactions G. Verde / MSU Miniball Group DE (MeV) • Peak height determined by scattering length or resonance width • Examples: pp, pL, nn, pp, Kp, pa, da, … Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Can be calculated classically for larger fragments Kim et al., PRC45 p. 387 (92) Coulomb Interactions Scott Pratt Michigan State University
S.Panitkin and D.Brown, PRC61 021901 (2000) Proton-protonCorrelations Deconvoluting C(q) provides detailed source shape Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Measuring shape without identical particles Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Example: pK+ correlations Gaussian Sources: Rx=Ry=4, Rz=8 fm Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Simple correspondence! Danielewicz and Brown Detailed Shape Information Standard formalism: Defining, Using identities for Ylms, Scott Pratt Michigan State University
L=0 • L=1, M=1 • L=2, M=0,2 • L=3, M=1,3 Angle-integrated shape Moments Lednicky offsets Shape (Rout/Rside, Rlong/Rside) Boomerang distortion Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Blast Wave Model • (z -z) CL+M=even(q) = 0 • (y -y) Imag CL,M = 0 Scott Pratt Michigan State University S.P. and S.Petriconi, PRC 2003
Liquid-Gas Phase Transition Definition of Gas: “Expands to fill available volume” Liquid = Evaporation Long lifetimes Gas = Explosion Short lifetimes Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Change to Explosive Behavior (GAS) at ~ 50 AMeV Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Experimental Signatures Dramatic change in nn correlations t ~ 50 fm/c t ~ 500 fm/c Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Phase Transition at RHIC • Transparency complicates the problem • For complete stopping, times could be ~ 100 fm/c • For Bjorken, strong first-order EOS leads to t ~ 20 fm/c Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Phase Transition at RHIC? Stiffer EOS -> Smaller source sizes Data demonstrate no latent heat or significant softness Scott Pratt Michigan State University
THE HBT PUZZLE AT RHIC To fit data: a) Stiff (but not too stiff) EOS b) Reduce emissivity from surface c) Not that much different than SPS Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Any method to extract Rinv is sufficient Phase space density Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Phase space density <f> rises until threshold of chemical equilibrium mp ~ 80 MeV at break-up Scott Pratt Michigan State University
HBT and Entropy Entropy can be determined from average Phase space density • <f> determined from: • correlations (pp) • coalescence (KKf,ppd) • thermal models… Scott Pratt Michigan State University
hydro eBjorken Entropy for 130 GeV Au+Au at t = 1 fm/c S.Pal and S.P., PLB 2003 Scott Pratt Michigan State University
Summary • Correlations CRUCIAL for determining • Pressure • Entropy • Reaction Dynamics Scott Pratt Michigan State University