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Pion Opacity, Chiral Symmetry Restoration, and RHIC HBT John G. Cramer (with Gerald A. Miller) University of Washington Seattle, Washington, USA WPCF 2005 Kromeriz, Czech Republic August 16, 2005 Primer 1: The Nuclear Optical Model 1. Divide the pions into “channels” and focus on pions (Channel 1) that participate in the BE correlation (about 60% of the spectrum pions). Omit “halo” and “resonance” pions and those converted to other particles (Channels 2, 3, etc.). 2. Solve the time-independent Klein-Gordon equation for the wave functions of Channel 1 pions, using a complex potential U. Im(U) accounts for those pions removed from Channel 1. 3. The complex optical potential U does several things: (a) absorbs pions (opacity); (b) deflects pion trajectories (refraction, demagnification); (c) steals kinetic energy from the emerging pions; (d) produces Ramsauer-type resonances in the well, which can modulate apparent source size and emission intensity. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 2 Optical Wave Functions [|y|2r(b)] Imaginary Only Full Calculation Eikonal Approx. Observer KT = 25 MeV/c KT = 197 MeV/c KT = 592 MeV/c August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 3 The DWEF Formalism Note: assumes chaotic pion sources. We use the Wigner distribution of the pion source current density matrix S0(x,K) (“the emission function”). The pions interact with the dense medium, producing S(x,K), the distorted wave emission function (DWEF): Distorted Waves 4 d x ' iK 'x ' ( ) 1 1 ( )* S ( x, K ) d K ' S0 ( x, K ') e ( x x ') ( x x ') p1 p2 4 2 2 (2 ) Gyulassy et al., ‘79 The s are distorted (not plane) wave solutions of: ( m2 U ) J , where U is the optical potential. 4 2 d x S ( x, K , q ) Correlation C ( K , q) 1 4 4 function: d x S ( x , p ) d x S ( x , p2 ) 1 4 August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 4 The “Hydro-Inspired” Emission Function S0 ( x, k ) S0 ( , ) B (b, KT ) /(2 )3 2 2 ( 0 ) cosh S 0 ( , ) exp 2 2 2 2 2 ( ) 2 (Space-time function) 1 B (b, KT ) M T r (b) K u (medium density) exp 1 T 2 2 2 (Bose-Einstein thermal function) t z tz 1 2 ln tz August 11, 2005 K particle momentum 4-vector u flow 4-vector ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 5 Primer 2: Chiral Symmetry Question 1: The up and down “current” quarks have masses of 5 to 10 MeV. The (a down + anti-up combination) has a mass of ~140 MeV. Where does the observed mass come from? Answer 1: The quarks are more massive in vacuum due to “dressing”. Also the pair is tightly bound by the color force into a particle so small that quantum-uncertainty zitterbewegung gives both quarks large average momenta. Part of the mass comes from the kinetic energy of the constituent quarks . Question 2: What happens when a pion is placed in a hot, dense medium? Answer 2: Two things happen: 1. The binding is reduced and the pion system expands because of external color forces, reducing the zitterbewegung and the pion mass. 2. The quarks that were “dressed” in vacuum become “undressed” in medium, causing up, down, and strange quarks to become more similar and closer to massless particles, an effect called “chiral symmetry restoration”. In many theoretical scenarios, chiral symmetry restoration and the quark-gluon plasma phase usually go together. Question 3: How can a pion regain its mass when it goes from medium to vacuum? Answer 3: It must do work against an average attractive force, losing kinetic energy while gaining mass. In effect, it must climb out of a potential well that may be 140 MeV deep. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz vacuum medium 6 A Chiral Symmetry Potential; [Son & Stephanov, (2002)] 2 2 ˆ v [ p m (T )] 2 2 Dispersion relation for pions in nuclear matter. Both v2 and v2m2(T) 0 near T=Tc. “velocity” “screening mass” 2 ˆ U (m v m (T )) (1 v ) p 2 2 2 2 Both terms of U are negative (attractive) U(b) = (w0+w2p2)r(b), w0 is real, w2 is complex. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 7 Parameters of the Model Thermal: Space: Time: Flow: Optical Pot.: Wave Eqn.: T0 (MeV), (MeV) RWS (fm), aWS (fm) Varied for the 0 (MeV/c), (MeV/c) Cu+Cu prediction. f (#), (#) Re(w0) (fm-2), Re(w2) (#), Im(w2) (#) e (#)1 (Kisslinger turned off for now) Total number of parameters: 11 (+1) August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 8 DWEF Fits to STAR Data We have calculated pion wave functions in a partial wave expansion, applied them to a “hydro-inspired” pion source function, and calculated the HBT radii and spectrum. The correlation function C is calculated at q=30 MeV/c, about half way down the BE bump. (We do not use the 2nd moment of C, which is unreliable.) We have fitted STAR data at sNN=200 GeV, simultaneously fitting Ro, Rs, Rl, and dNp/dy (fitting both magnitude and shape) at 8 momentum values (i.e., 32 data points), using a LevenbergMarquardt fitting algorithm. In the resulting fit, the c2 per data point is ~2.2 and the c2 per degree of freedom is ~3.3. Only statistical (not systematic) errors are used in calculating c2. We remove long-lived “halo” resonance contributions to the spectrum (which are not included in the model) by multiplying the uncorrected spectrum by l½ (the HBT parameter) before fitting, then “un-correcting” the predicted spectrum with l½. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 9 DWEF Fits to STAR 200 GeV Pion HBT Radii Full Calculation U=0 Boltzmann Re[U]=0 Non-solid curves show the effects of turning off various parts of the calculation. No flow August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 10 DWEF Fit to STAR 200 GeV Pion Spectrum Raw Fit Non-solid curves show the effects of turning off various parts of the calculation Full Calculation U=0 Boltzmann Re[U]=0 No flow August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 11 Meaning of the Parameters Temperature: 222 MeV; Chiral PT predicted at ~ 193 MeV Transverse flow rapidity: 1.6 vmax= 0.93 c, vav= 0.66 c Mean expansion time: 8.1 fm/c system expansion at ~ 0.5 c Pion emission between 5.5 fm/c and 10.8 fm/c soft EOS . WS radius: 12.0 fm = R(Au) + 4.6 fm > R @ SPS WS diffuseness: 0.72 fm (similar to Low Energy NP experience) Re(U): 0.113 + 0.725 p2 deep well strong attraction. Im(U): 0.128 p2 lmfp 8 fm @ KT=1 fm-1 strong absorption high density Pion chemical potential: m=124 MeV, slightly less than mass() We have evidence suggesting a CHIRAL PHASE TRANSITION! August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 12 Potential-Off Radius Re-Fits Full Calculation Out Side No Real Non-solid curves show the effects of refitting. STAR Blast Wave RO/RS Ratio Long No Optical No Chemical or Optical Pot. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 13 Potential-Off Spectrum Re-Fits Model No Optical No Real Chi^2 Full Calculation Chi^2/#data Chi^2/#dof 69.19 2.16 3.29 905.09 28.28 43.10 No Optical Potential 1003.44 31.36 47.78 No Opt/ Chem Potential 1416.66 44.27 67.46 No Real Potential Raw Fit Non-solid curves show the effects of potentialoff refits. Full Calculation STAR Blast Wave No Chemical or Optical Pot. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 14 Low pT Ramsauer Resonances 14 16 12 14 RS 12 (fm) 10 RO 8 (fm) No flow 10 6 Boltzmann 8 4 2 6 KT (MeV/c) 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 KT (MeV/c) 10 20 30 40 50 Re[U]=0 70 Pion Spectrum Full Calculation |y(q, b)|2 r(b) at KT = 49.3 MeV/c 60 U=0 1.5 1 0.5 1 0 1 0.5 Raw Fit 0.5 0 For fit, would need l=0.41 KT (MeV/c) 0 -0.5 -0.5 -1 August 11, 2005 Phobos 0-6% (preliminary) -1 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 15 200 GeV Cu+Cu Predictions Scale RWS, by Relect Scale RWS, by Scale RWS, AWS, , by Relect A1/3 Scale RWS, AWS, , by A1/3 Conclusion: the 4 space-time parameters scale as A1/3. STAR (preliminary) August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 16 Correlation Functions (Linear) Long 100 MeV/c Calculation Gaussian Fit k=0 WS Fit R from 28 MeV/c R from 2nd moment August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 17 Correlation Functions (Linear) Out Side Long KT = 100 MeV/c KT = 200 MeV/c KT = 400 MeV/c KT = 600 MeV/c August 11, 2005 Calculation Gaussian Fit k=0 WS Fit R from 28 MeV/c R from 2nd moment ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 18 Correlation Functions (Log) 1 0.1 0.01 0.001 Calculation Gaussian Fit k=0 WS Fit R from 28 MeV/c R from 2nd moment 0.0001 0.00001 1. 10 Out 100 MeV/c Conclusions: (1) R from 28 MeV/c gives a good match to the full Gaussian fit; (2) 2nd moment R’s are unreliable; (3) The k=0 WS gives mixed results in representing the tail region. 6 0 August 11, 2005 20 40 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 60 80 100 19 Correlation Functions (Log) KT = 100 MeV/c Side Out Long KT = 200 MeV/c KT = 400 MeV/c KT = 600 MeV/c August 11, 2005 Calculation Gaussian Fit k=0 WS Fit R from 28 MeV/c R from 2nd moment ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 20 Summary Quantum mechanics has solved the technical problems of applying opacity to HBT. We obtain excellent DWEF fits to STAR sNN=200 GeV data, simultaneously fitting three HBT radii and the pT spectrum. The key ingredient is the deep real potential. The fit parameters are reasonable and indicate strong collective flow, significant opacity, and large attraction. They describe pion emission in hot, highly dense matter with a soft pion equation of state. We have replaced the RHIC HBT Puzzle with evidence suggesting a chiral phase transition in RHIC collisions. We note that in most quark-matter scenarios, the QGP phase transition is usually accompanied by a chiral phase transition at about the same critical temperature. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 21 Outlook We may have a new tool for investigating the presence (or absence) of chiral phase transitions in heavy ion collision systems. Its use requires both high quality pion spectra and high quality HBT analysis over a region that extends to fairly low momenta (KT~150 MeV/c). We are presently attempting to “track” the CPT phenomenon to lower collision energies, where the deep real potential should presumably go away. We note that the DWEF distorted wave method presented here is not limited to the emission function used in this work, and is applicable to any model that is capable of producing an analytic emission function or a multi-dimensional numerical emission function table. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 22 The End A short paper (with erratum) describing this work has been published in Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 102302 (2005); see ArXiv: nucl-th/0411031; A longer paper has been submitted to Phys. Rev. C; see ArXiv: nucl-th/0507004 Backup Slides Kurtosis=0 WS Function 1 0.1 0.8 0.6 0.001 0.4 0.00001 0.2 1. 10 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 7 0 1 2 3 4 5 kurtosis 4 0 / 22 3 0 0.321687 WSFn[ x] (1 exp[1/ ]) /(1 exp[( x R WS ) /( R WS )]) RGaussian 0.808158RWS August 11, 2005 [Note: WSFn(x)=1 at x=0, however, dWSFn(x)/dx 0 at x=0.] ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 25 Time-Independence, Resonances, and Freeze-Out We note that our use of a time-independent optical potential does not invoke the mean field approximation and is formally correct according to quantum scattering theory. (The semi-classical mind-set can be misleading.) While the optical potential is not time-dependent, some timedependent effects can be manifested in the energy-dependence of the potential . (Time and energy are conjugate quantum variables.) An optical potential can implicitly include the effects of resonances, including heavy ones. Therefore, our present treatment implicitly includes resonances produced within the hot, dense medium. We note that more detailed quantum coupled-channels calculations could be done, in which selected resonances were treated as explicit channels coupled through interactions. Describing the present STAR data apparently does not require this kind of elaboration. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 26 Wave Equation Solutions We assume an infinitely long Bjorken tube and azimuthal symmetry, so that the (incoming) waves factorize: 3D 2D(distorted)1D(plane) We solve the reduced Klein-Gordon wave equation: Partial wave expansion ! ordinary diff eq August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 27 The Meaning of U Im (U) : Opacity, Re (U) :Refraction Pions lose energy and flux. -3, 1 mb, r = 1 fm Im[U0]=-p r0, 0 Im[U0] = .15 fm-2, l = 7 fm Re(U) must exist: very strong attraction chiral phase transition August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 28 Compute Correlation Function C ( K , q) 1 d d 4 4 2 x S ( x, K , q ) x S ( x, p1 ) d x S ( x, p2 ) 4 Correlation function is not Gaussian; we evaluate it near the q of experiment. The R2 values are not the moments of the emission function S. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 29 Overview of the DWEF Model The medium is dense and strongly interacting, so the pions must “fight” their way out to the vacuum. This modifies their wave functions, producing the distorted waves used in the model. We explicitly treat the absorption of pions by inelastic processes (e.g., quark exchange and rearrangement) as they pass through the medium, as implemented with the imaginary part of an optical potential. We explicitly treat the mass-change of pions (e.g., due to chiralsymmetry breaking) as they pass from the hot, dense collision medium [m()0]) to the outside vacuum [m()140 MeV]. This is accomplished by solving the Klein-Gordon equation with an optical potential, the real part of which is a deep, attractive, momentumdependent “mass-type” potential. We use relativistic quantum mechanics in a cylindrical geometry partial wave expansion to treat the behavior of pions producing Bose-Einstein correlations. We note that most RHIC theories are semi-classical, even though most HBT analyses use pions in the momentum region (p < 600 MeV/c) where quantum wave-mechanical effects should be important. The model calculates only the spectrum of pions participating in the BE correlation (not those contributions to the spectrum from long-lived “halo” resonances, etc.). August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 30 Semi-Classical Eikonal Opacity b X l + R Heiselberg and Vischer August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 31 Influence of the Real Potential in the Eikonal Approximation Factors of cancel out in the product y (-) ( p1 , b)y *(-) ( p2 , b). Therefore the real part of U, no matter how large, has no influence here. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 32 Source De-magnification by the Real Potential Well Velocity in well n=1.33 n=1.00 Velocity in vacuum Vcsr = (120 MeV)2 Because of the mass loss in the potential well, the pions move faster there (red) than in vacuum (blue). This de-magnifies the image of the source, so that it will appear to be smaller in HBT measurements. This effect is largest at low momentum. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz Rays bend closer to radii A Fly in a Bubble 33 |y(q, b)|2 r(b) at KT = 1.000 fm-1 = 197 MeV/c Observer 1 0.75 0.5 0.25 1 0 1 0.5 0.5 0 0 1 -0.5 0.5 1 -0.5 -1 Imaginary Only -1 0 1 0.5 0.5 0 0 -0.5 -0.5 -1 -1 Wave Function of Full Calculation Eikonal August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 34 Primer 1: HBT Interferometry C(q)-1 1 C(p1,p2) = (p1,p2)/(p1)(p2) 0.8 1. Two identical pions will have 1/R l a Bose-Einstein enhancement BE enhancement when their relative momentum (q) is small. q (MeV/c) 2. The 3-D momentum width of the BE enhancement the 3-D size (R) of the pion “fireball” source. 3. Assuming complete incoherence, the “height” of the BE bump l tells us the fraction (l½) of pions participating in the BE enhancement. 4. The “out” radius of the source requires a pion energy difference E related to (emission duration). 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 50 100 150 35 200 HBT Momentum Geometry Relative momentum q between pions is a vector q p1 p 2 so we can extract 3D shape information. Rlong – along beam direction Rout – along “line of sight”, includes time/energy information. Rside – ^ “line of sight”, no time/energy information. K 12 ( p1 p2 ) p1 q Rside Rout Pre-RHIC expectations: p2 (1) Large Ro,s,l (~12-20 fm) (2) Rout > Rside by ~4 fm. August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 36 The Featureless HBT Landscape The source radii, as inferred from HBT interferometry, are very similar over almost two orders of magnitude in collision energy. AGS CERN RHIC The ratio of Ro/Rs is near 1 at all energies, which naively implies a “hard” equation of state and explosive emission behavior (~0). August 11, 2005 ISMD 2005, Kromeriz 37