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Studying the impact of the nucleon size in relativistic heavy-ion collisions (2210.03186v1)

Published 6 Oct 2022 in nucl-th and hep-ph

Abstract: The hydrodynamic stage of relativistic heavy-ion collisions simulations requires an energy density profile of the system as an initial condition. In the process of converting the two colliding nuclei into such an energy distribution, some specification about the $\textit{size}$ of their constituent nucleons inevitably has to be made. Nucleons are commonly modeled as bidimensional Gaussians, and the Gaussian width (the nucleon-width) is a free parameter of the simulation. A best-fit value of the nucleon-width can be inferred by Bayesian Analyses, where the model is confronted with experimental data. Some of the most recent analyses have obtained surprisingly large values for the nucleon width parameter, exceeding in over 50 % the current value for the proton charged radius. This motivates the development of a better understanding of the role played by this parameter inside the simulation. In this work, we perform simulations of Pb-Pb collisions at $\sqrt{s_{\text{NN}}}$ = 2.76 TeV using a state-of-the-art hybrid simulation chain, using three different values of the nucleon width inside the initial condition generator T${\text{R}}$ENTo, and systematically investigate its effects on the initial condition characteristics and observables. The nucleon-width strongly affects the eccentricity harmonics and the gradients in the initial condition. The $\langle p{T} \rangle$ of particles in the simulation using $w$ = 0.5 fm is much larger than experimental data. We associate this to the combination of stronger gradients in the initial condition and the coupling of a conformal pre-equilibrium dynamics to the hydrodynamic simulation. Our findings suggest that the large values of the nucleon width returned by recent Bayesian Analyses were necessary to lower the mean transverse momentum, by damping the gradients in the initial condition.

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