Abstract

A method to determine the kinetic freeze-out temperature in heavy-ion collisions from measured yields of short-lived resonances is presented. The resonance production is treated in the framework of a thermal model with an evolution between chemical and kinetic freeze-outs. The yields of many short-lived resonances are suppressed at $T={T}_{\mathrm{kin}}<{T}_{\mathrm{ch}}$. We determine the values of ${T}_{\mathrm{kin}}$ and ${T}_{\mathrm{ch}}$ for various centralities in Pb-Pb collisions at $\sqrt{{s}_{{}_{NN}}}=2.76$ TeV by fitting the abundances of both the stable hadrons and the short-lived resonances such as ${\ensuremath{\rho}}^{0}$ and ${\text{K}}^{*0}$, which were measured by the ALICE collaboration. This allows us to extract the kinetic freeze-out temperature from the measured hadron and resonance yields alone, independent of assumptions about the flow velocity profile and the freeze-out hypersurface. The extracted ${T}_{\mathrm{ch}}$ values exhibit a moderate multiplicity dependence whereas ${T}_{\mathrm{kin}}$ drops, from ${T}_{\mathrm{kin}}\ensuremath{\simeq}{T}_{\mathrm{ch}}\ensuremath{\simeq}155\phantom{\rule{4pt}{0ex}}\mathrm{MeV}$ in peripheral collisions to ${T}_{\mathrm{kin}}\ensuremath{\simeq}110\phantom{\rule{4pt}{0ex}}\mathrm{MeV}$ in 0%--20% central collisions. Predictions for other short-lived resonances are presented. A potential (non-)observation of a suppressed ${f}_{0}(980)$ meson yield will allow us to constrain the lifetime of that meson.

Highlights

  • Relativistic heavy-ion experiments at the Schwerionen Synchrotron (SIS), the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS), the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) provide a rich dataset of spectra and abundances of identified particles [1,2]

  • The kinetic freeze-out temperature is determined for 2.76 TeV Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC by performing PCEHRG model fits to the measured yields of pions, kaons, protons, φ, KS0, K∗0, and ρ0, of the ALICE Collaboration, for 0%–20%, 20%–40%, 40%–60%, and 60%– 80% centralities [1,8,9,32,33]

  • We developed a novel method to extract the kinetic freezeout temperature in heavy-ion collisions based on the yields of short-lived resonances

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Relativistic heavy-ion experiments at the Schwerionen Synchrotron (SIS), the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS), the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) provide a rich dataset of spectra and abundances of identified particles [1,2]. This includes both the long-lived and short-lived hadrons. The kinetic freeze-out temperature has often been extracted from blast-wave fits to the pT spectra of stable hadrons This procedure assumes an interplay of a particular flow velocity profile and a kinetic freeze-out hypersurface. The method is independent of assumptions about the flow velocity profile and the freeze-out hypersurface

METHODOLOGY
DATA ANALYSIS
PREDICTIONS
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call