Abstract

In this paper, we investigate various ways of defining the initial source eccentricity using the Monte Carlo Glauber (MCG) approach. In particular, we examine the participant eccentricity, which quantifies the eccentricity of the initial source shape by the major axes of the ellipse formed by the interaction points of the participating nucleons. We show that reasonable variation of the density parameters in the Glauber calculation, as well as variations in how matter production is modeled, do not significantly modify the already established behavior of the participant eccentricity as a function of collision centrality. Focusing on event-by-event fluctuations and correlations of the distributions of participating nucleons we demonstrate that, depending on the achieved event-plane resolution, fluctuations in the elliptic flow magnitude $v_2$ lead to most measurements being sensitive to the root-mean-square, rather than the mean of the $v_2$ distribution. Neglecting correlations among participants, we derive analytical expressions for the participant eccentricity cumulants as a function of the number of participating nucleons, $\Npart$,keeping non-negligible contributions up to $\ordof{1/\Npart^3}$. We find that the derived expressions yield the same results as obtained from mixed-event MCG calculations which remove the correlations stemming from the nuclear collision process. Most importantly, we conclude from the comparison with MCG calculations that the fourth order participant eccentricity cumulant does not approach the spatial anisotropy obtained assuming a smooth nuclear matter distribution. In particular, for the Cu+Cu system, these quantities deviate from each other by almost a factor of two over a wide range in centrality.

Highlights

  • One of the strongest pieces of evidence for the formation of a thermalized dense state of unconventional strongly interacting matter in ultrarelativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) [1,2,3,4] stems from the strong anisotropic collective flow measured in noncentral collision events [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]

  • The interpretation of the anisotropic flow data measured in nucleus-nucleus collisions at high energy requires a detailed understanding of the initial source anisotropy, which is typically quantified by the eccentricity of the shape of the nuclear overlap area

  • We find that variations in the Glauber parameters have only small effects on the participant eccentricity for both the Au+Au and Cu+Cu collision systems, while the reaction-plane eccentricity shows variations on the 10% level (Fig. 2)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

One of the strongest pieces of evidence for the formation of a thermalized dense state of unconventional strongly interacting matter in ultrarelativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) [1,2,3,4] stems from the strong anisotropic collective flow measured in noncentral collision events [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. It has been numerically established that, for not too large impact parameters, the final magnitude of the elliptic flow is proportional to the initial eccentricity used to characterize the spatial anisotropy in the transverse plane of the matter created in the overlap region of the colliding nuclei [15,20]. If one scales the measured v2 by this eccentricity, using its conventional definition in terms of the spatial deformation of the average transverse distribution of participating nucleons at a given impact parameter, one is led to the paradoxical finding that the smaller Cu+Cu system translates the initial spatial deformation more efficiently into a final momentum anisotropy than the larger Au+Au system [27,28]. By comparing with the numerical MCG model, we show that the analytical expressions are misleading, as they neglect important effects arising from spatial correlations between the participating nucleons

MONTE CARLO GLAUBER MODEL
ROBUSTNESS OF THE ECCENTRICITY
Variation of density parameters
Binary collisions vs participants
Effects of smeared matter distributions
Sensitivity of the event-plane method to underlying flow fluctuations
Participant-eccentricity-scaled elliptic flow
Cumulants and correlations
Correlations of nucleons in the initial state
Uncorrelated Glauber Monte Carlo
CONCLUSIONS
Standard eccentricity
Reaction-plane eccentricity
Participant eccentricity
Findings
NevN 2
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