Abstract
The heavy quark propagation behavior inside the quark-gluon plasma (QGP), is usually described in terms of the Boltzmann dynamics, which can be reduced to the Langevin approach by assuming a small momentum transfer for the scattering processes between heavy quarks and the QGP constituents. In this work, the temperature and energy dependence of the transport coefficients are calculated in the framework of both Boltzmann and Langevin dynamics. The derived transport coefficients are found to be systematically larger in the Boltzmann approach as compared with the Langevin, in particular in the high temperature and high energy region. Within each of the two theoretical frameworks, we simulate the charm quark production and the subsequent evolution processes in relativistic heavy-ion collisions. We find that the total in-medium energy loss is larger from the Langevin dynamics, resulting in a smaller (larger) $R_{\rm AA}$ at high (low) $p_{\rm T}$, for both the charm quark and heavy-flavor mesons. Meanwhile, the Boltzmann model is found to induce larger $v_{\rm 2}$, in particular at moderate $p_{\rm T}$, as well as stronger broadening behavior for the azimuthal distributions. By comparing the model calculations with available experimental measurements for D-mesons, we find that the Langevin approach is more favored by the $R_{\rm AA}$ data while the Boltzmann approach is more favored favor by the $v_{\rm 2}$ data. A simultaneous description of both observables appear challenging for both models.
Highlights
In ultrarelativistic collisions of heavy nuclei such as Au or Pb, an extreme high temperature and energy density environment can be produced around the collision point, which allows formation of a new state of nuclear matter consisting of the deconfined quarks and gluons, namely the quark-gluon plasma, QGP [1,2]
The jet quenching phenomenon is known [11] as the energy loss of the fast partons traversing the QGP medium, and it can be investigated by measuring the suppression behavior of the cross section of the desired particles produced in nucleus-nucleus collisions to that in binary-scaled nucleon-nucleon collisions at the same energy, which is the so-called nuclear modification factor, RAA, RAA(pT )
While traversing the quark-gluon plasma (QGP), Heavy quark (HQ) suffers frequent but soft momentum kicks from the medium partons, HQ behaves the Brownian motion, which can be described by the Langevin transport equation (LTE) [52]
Summary
In ultrarelativistic collisions of heavy nuclei such as Au or Pb, an extreme high temperature and energy density environment can be produced around the collision point, which allows formation of a new state of nuclear matter consisting of the deconfined quarks and gluons, namely the quark-gluon plasma, QGP [1,2]. Due to large HQ mass and moderate medium temperature, the typical momentum transfers in interactions, q ≈ gT , are assumed small, gT mQ [24], the HQ trajectory will be changed significantly only after receiving lots of soft momentum kicks from the surrounding QGP constituents, resulting in the Brownian motion Based on this assumption, BTE is reduced to the Fokker-Plank transport equation (FPTE), which can be realized stochastically by a Langevin transport equation (LTE). In this work, we focus on the discussion related to the “benefits and limitations for Boltzmann vs Langevin implementations of the heavy-flavor transport in an evolving medium” [43] Both the BTE and LTE will be employed to investigate the temperature and energy dependence of the various transport coefficients, as well as to study the charm quark transport behaviors in the QGP medium.
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