1 Introduction
Hanbury-Brown-Twiss (HBT) interferometry has been widely used in in high energy heavy ion collisions to explore the space-time structure of the particle-emitting sources [1-5]. In Refs. [6] and [7], we systematically investigated the pion HBT interferometry, as well as the pion transverse-momentum spectrum and elliptic flow, in the granular source model of quark-gluon plasma (QGP) droplets [8-11]. The investigations [6, 7] indicate that the granular source model can reproduce the experimental data of pion HBT radii, transverse-momentum spectrum, and elliptic flow in the heavy ion collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) concurrently and consistently. Recently, the PHENIX collaboration measured the kaon HBT correlations in the Au+Au collisions at
In this work, we perform the HBT interferometry analyses of pion and kaon for the granular sources for the central and approximately central Au+Au collisions at
2 Granular source model
The granular sources are assumed to be formed at a later time of the QGP expansion in relativistic heavy ion collisions. The lumps of the QGP after this time are considered to be spherical droplets for simplicity, and evolve in hydrodynamics separately [6-11]. The strong interactions of the QGP matter before forming the granular source are assumed to lead to the anisotropic initial velocities of the QGP droplets in the granular source model [6-11].
In this work, we adopt all the ingredients of the granular source model used in Refs. [6] and [7]. The initial energy density distribution of single droplet is assumed with a Woods-Saxon distribution [7], and the QGP droplets distribute initially within a cylinder along the beam direction (z-axis) by [6, 7]
where
where r0i is x0, y0, or z0 for i= 1, 2, or 3, and sign(r0i) denotes the signal of r0i, which ensures an outward droplet velocity. In Eq. (2),
In the granular source model, the droplets evolve in relativistic hydrodynamics and with the equation of state (EOS) of the S95p-PCE-v0 [15]. The final identical pions and kaons are considered to be emitted from the surfaces of the droplets with the momenta obeying Bose-Einstein distribution in the local frame at freeze-out temperature, Tf. To include the resonance decayed particles later as well as the directly produced pions at chemical freeze out early, a wide region of Tf is considered with the probability [6, 7]
where fdir is the fraction of the direct emission around the chemical freeze out temperature Tchem, ΔTdir, and ΔTdec are the temperature widths for the direct and decay emissions, respectively. In the calculations, we take ΔTdir=10 MeV, and ΔTdec=90 MeV as in Refs. [6, 7]. The value of Tchem is taken to be 165 MeV as in the EOS of S95p-PCE-v0 [15]. The parameter fdir is taken to be 0.75 for pion as in Refs. [6, 7], and taken to be 1 for kaon for its early freeze out.
Unlike a continuous source which emitting particles from source surface, the particles are freezed out on the droplet surfaces for the granular source, and the particle emitted from a droplet may also be absorbed by other droplets in the granular source. Because the particle emitted early (or at high Tf) from a droplet in the granular source is more possible to meet the other droplets with higher temperatures and be absorbed when propagating inwards in the granular source, we apply simply the cut,
to forbid the particle which freezes out at the higher temperatures
In Fig. 1, we show the transverse-momentum spectra of pion and kaon for the granular sources for the Au+Au collisions at
-201606/1001-8042-27-06-022/alternativeImage/1001-8042-27-06-022-F001.jpg)
3 Pion and kaon interferometry analyses
Two particle HBT correlation function is defined as the ratio of the two identical particle momentum spectrum P(p1,p2) to the product of the two single particle momentum spectra P(p1)P(p2). In the interferometry analyses in high energy heavy ion collisions, the two particle correlation functions are usually fitted by the Gaussian parameterized formula
where qout, qside, and qlong are the Bertsch-Pratt variables [18-20], which denote the components of the relative momentum q=p1-p2 in transverse "out" (parallel to the transverse momentum of the pion pair kT), transverse "side" (in transverse plane and perpendicular to kT), and longitudinal ("long") directions, respectively. In Eq.(4), λ is chaoticity parameter, and Rout, Rside, and Rlong are the HBT radii in the out, side, and long directions.
In Fig. 2 we show the results of the two-pion interferometry for the granular sources for the central and approximately central Au+Au collisions at
-201606/1001-8042-27-06-022/alternativeImage/1001-8042-27-06-022-F002.jpg)
We plot in Fig. 3 the two-kaon interferometry results for the granular sources for the Au+Au collisions at
-201606/1001-8042-27-06-022/alternativeImage/1001-8042-27-06-022-F003.jpg)
4 Summary and conclusions
We have performed pion and kaon interferometry analyses in the granular source model of QGP droplets [6, 7]. The effect of particle absorption on the HBT radii of pion and kaon is investigated based on a consideration of forbidding inward emission for the particles freezed out earlier (or at higher temperature). This absorption effect is important in the kaon interferometry analyses. It leads to the decreases of the kaon HBT radii. In our analyses, the particle-emitting sources of pion and kaon have the same initial source parameters but different freeze-out temperature region. Although it is only a simple consideration for the particle absorption, the HBT radii of pion and kaon of the granular sources are in better agreement with the experimental data of the Au+Au collisions at
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