February 2025
·
2 Citations
Physical Review C
This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.
February 2025
·
2 Citations
Physical Review C
January 2025
·
6 Reads
Event-by-event mean transverse momentum fluctuations () serve as a sensitive probe of initial state overlap geometry and energy density fluctuations in relativistic heavy-ion collisions. We present a systematic investigation of fluctuations in \auau collisions at 3.0-19.6 GeV, examining their centrality and energy dependence with the framework of an improved multiphase transport (AMPT) model. The centrality dependence of the cumulants up to fourth order deviates significantly from simple powering-law scaling. Scaled cumulants are performed, with variances aligning well with the trends observed in the experimental data. Employing a two-subevent method, short-range correlations are slightly suppressed compared to the standard approach. Furthermore, baryons exhibit more pronounced fluctuations than mesons, potentially attributable to the effect of radial flow. These results provide referenced insights into the role of initial state fluctuations across different energies in heavy-ion collisions.
... In Fig. 2 panel (b), the regions labeled ePIC-I, ePIC-II, and ePIC-III correspond to the acceptance ranges of the three primary subsystems anticipated for the eP IC detector [23], which are the focus of this study. Beyond these intrinsic capabilities of the EIC, we propose utilizing event-by-event fluctuations in the mean transverse momentum (M (p T )) as a measurement to constrain the τ f effect in e+A collisions [28][29][30]. Specifically, M (p T ) fluctuations encode information about the origin of emitted particles: the de-excitation stage tends to yield more thermal-like, isotropic, and statistically narrow momentum distributions, whereas the intranuclear cascade phase leads to broader and more irregular distributions due to the stochastic and non-thermal character of secondary particle interactions. Thus, M (p T ) fluctuations are expected to serve as a sensitive probe of the underlying particle production mechanism, which is anticipated to depend on τ f . ...
February 2025
Physical Review C