1 Introduction
Understanding the nucleon force is one of the main goals in nuclear physics [1, 2], which is a necessary step to understand the structure of nuclei. In addition, behaviors of antiparticles or antiparticle induced reactions are always of interest [3-5]. So far the large body of knowledge on nuclear force was derived from studies made on nucleons or nuclei, and not much is known about the nuclear force between anti-nucleons. The knowledge of interaction among two anti-protons, the simplest system of anti-nucleons (nuclei), is a fundamental ingredient for understanding the structure of more sophisticated anti-nuclei and their properties. The important parameters to describe the strong interaction between two particles are the scattering length (f0) and the effective range of the interaction (d0). The parameter f0 is related to the scattering cross section. At low energy limit, the scattering cross section is given by
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Although the existence and production rates of antimatter nuclei [6, 7] include antideuterons, antitritons, antihelium-3, antihypertriton [8-10], and antihelium-4 [8, 11, 12], offer indirect information about interactions between antinucleons. The interaction between two antinucleons, which is the basic interaction that binds the antinucleons into antinuclei, has not been directly measured in previous experiments. On the other hand, the measurement between antiprotons offers us a test of matter-antimatter symmetry, which is known as charge conjugation-parity transformation-time reversal (CPT) symmetry. Different CPT tests were conducted in other experiments. For example, one of which is the precious mass difference measurement for light nuclei and light anti-nuclei, such as deuteron and anti-deuteron, there is 3He and anti-3He by the ALICE collaboration [13]. Another example is a high-precision comparison of the antiproton-to-proton charge-to-mass ratio carried out in a Penning trap system [14]. In this work we would test the CPT from strong interaction aspect which is the nuclear force [15].
Relativistic heavy-ion collision provides a unique environment for not only the formation of quark-gluon plasma (QGP) [16-18], but also the production of antimatter nuclei [8]. With abundantly produced antiprotons, we can for the first time measure the scattering length (f0) and the effective range (d0) of the strong interaction between antinucleons. To do that, we use the technique that involves momentum correlation for probing the antiproton-antiproton interaction. It resembles the space-time correlation technique used in Hanbury-Brown and Twiss (HBT) intensity interferometry. Since it was first used in astronomy by Hanbury-Brown and Twiss in the 1950’s [19], this technique [20-22] has been used in many areas of physics, including the study of the quantum state of Bose-Einstein condensates [23], the correlation among electrons [24], and among atoms in cold Fermi gases [25]. In the late 1950’s, the Bose-Einstein enhancement, which is an enhanced number of pairs of identical pions produced with small opening angles, was first observed (GGLP effect) [26]. Later on, Kopylov and Podgoretsky devised the basics of the momentum correlation interferometry technique. In this technique, they defined the correlation functions (CFs) as ratios of the momentum distributions of correlated and uncorrelated particles,
with C=1 for no correlations. One can apply the mixing technique to construct the uncorrelated distribution by using particles from different collisions and extracting the space-time structure of the particle emission from the correlation function. So far the method of momentum correlation has been widely used by the nuclear physics community [27-33]. In particular, the same technique can even be applied for the complete kinematically three body decay of the nuclei very recently, which is very powerful to investigate the proton emission mechanism [34, 35].
2 STAR experiment
The process of two-particle correlation can be illustrated in Fig. 2 at RHIC-STAR detector. Colorful tracks display the different charged particles which are recorded by the Time Projection Chamber (TPC) at STAR. Assuming both correlated two (anti-)protons (red and yellow curves) are emitted from the source, they will interfere each other and finally produce intensity interferometry spectra, i.e. momentum correlation function. For each correlation function, in addition to quantum statistics effects, final state interactions (FSI) play an important role in the formation of correlations between particles. FSI includes the formation of resonances, the Coulomb repulsion, and the nuclear interactions between two particles, etc [27, 28, 36, 37]. They allows for (see Ref. [29, 38] and references therein) coalescence femtoscopy, correlation femtoscopy with non-identical particles, including access to the relative space-time production asymmetries, and a measurement of the strong interaction between specific particles. The latter measurement is often difficult to access by other means and is the focus of this proceeding paper (for recent studies see Refs. [39, 40]).
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The data used in this analysis are Au + Au minimum bias events taken by the STAR experiment at RHIC during year 2011 at center of mass energies
Cut paramter | Value |
---|---|
NHitsFit | ge;15 |
NhitsFit/NHitsPoss | > 0.52 |
pT | > 0.4 GeV/c |
pT | < 2.0 GeV/c |
Rapidity | < 0.7 |
nSigma Proton | < 1.5 |
Mass square | < 0 .8 |
Mass square | < 1.0 |
Global dca | < 2.0 cm |
-201606/1001-8042-27-06-027/alternativeImage/1001-8042-27-06-027-F003.jpg)
3 Method
In this experiment, two particle correlation function is defined as
where PairPurity(k*) is the product of the purities for the two particles and CFmeasured(k*) and CFcorrected(k*) are respectively the corrected and measured correlation functions.
Inside our (anti)proton sample, there are secondary (anti)protons that are indistinguishable from primordial ones. When considering resonances, one should distinct the short-lived ones (like Delta) from the long-lived ones (decaying electromagnetically or weakly, like Lambda). The latter give rise to the effect of residual correlations (due to small decay momenta) as discussed in the paper. Their decay lengths are huge and do not affect the measured invariant radius Rpp; they reveal themselves only through the suppression parameter, xpp, and through the residual correlation contributions. The short-lived resonances do not contribute to residual correlations (not only due to substantial decay momenta, but also due to short decay times comparable with the production time, thus not allowing for the FSI to be developed). The residual correlations are mainly from the p-Λ and Λ-Λ correlations or their antiparticle pairs. We need to consider the corresponding contributions when we fit our CF. Taking the two-proton correlation function as an example [44],
where Cinclusive(k*) is the inclusive CF, and Cpp(k*;Rpp) is the true proton-proton CF, which can be described by the Lednický and Lyuboshitz analytical model [37]. In this model, for given s-wave scattering parameters, the correlation function with FSI is calculated as the square of the properly symmetrized wave function averaged over the total pair spin and the distribution of relative distances of particle emission points in the pair rest frame. CpΛ(k*;RpΛ) is the p-Λ CF from a theoretical calculation [37] which has explained experimental data well [39]. CΛΛ(k*) is from an experimental measurement corrected for misidentified Λ’s [40]. Rpp and RpΛ are the invariant Gaussian radii [39] from the proton-proton correlation and the proton-Λ correlation, respectively. Here they are assumed numerically to be the same. xpp, xpΛ, and xΛΛ represent the relative contributions from pairs with both daughters from the primary collision, pairs with one daughter from the primary collision and the other one from a Λ decay, and pairs with both daughters from a Λ decay, respectively. THERMINATOR2 model can give such parameters [45].
The proton-proton correlation function, Cpp(k*;Rpp) in Eq. 3, can be described by the Lednický and Lyuboshitz analytical model [37]. In this model, the correlation function is calculated as the square of the properly symmetrized wave function averaged over the total pair spin, S, and the distribution of relative distances (r*) of particle emission points in the pair rest frame, assuming 1/4 of the singlet and 3/4 of triplet states and a simple Gaussian distribution
where
where η=(k* ac)-1, ac= (57.5 fm) is the Bohr radius for two protons, ρ= k* r*, ξ= k*r*+ρ, Ac(η) is the Coulomb penetration factor given by Ac(η)=2πη[exp(2πη)-1]-1, F is the confluent hypergeometric function,
is the s-wave scattering amplitude renormalized by the Coulomb interaction, and
4 Results and discussion
When we fit the proton-proton correlation function, only the radius is the free parameter, and we fixed f0 = 7.82 fm and d0 = 2.78 fm as they are well determined (from proton-proton elastic-scattering experiments [49]). While when we fit the antiproton-antiproton correlation function, the radius R, f0, and d0 are treated as free parameters. In Fig. 4, we present the PID purity corrected CF for proton-proton pairs (Fig. 4a) and antiproton-antiproton pairs (Fig. 4b), for 30-80% centrality of Au + Au collisions at centre-of-mass energy of 200 GeV. The fit to the data is plotted as red solid lines, shown for Cinclusive, while the CF of pp contribution is shown as dashed lines. For proton-proton CF, Rpp = 2.75 ± 0.01 fm; χ2/NDF = 1.66. For antiproton-antiproton CF,
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Table 2 presents strong interaction parameters f0 and d0 of the antiproton-antiproton interaction as well as prior measurements for nucleon-nucleon interactions [49, 50]. It is found that the f0 and d0 for the antiproton-antiproton interaction are consistent with the proton-proton interaction within errors.
Proton-proton | Antiproton-antiproton | Proton-neutron (triplet) | Neutron-neutron | Proton-neutron (singlet) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
f0 (fm) | 7.82±0.003 | 7.41 ± 0.19(stat) ± 0.36(sys) | -5.425±0.018 | 16.7±0.38 | 23.721±0.02 |
d0 (fm) | 2.78±0.006 | 2.14 ± 0.27(stat) ± 1.34(sys) | 1.711±0.053 | 2.78±0.13 | 2.658±0.062 |
5 Summary and Outlook
Our STAR measurements on momentum correlation function of antiproton-antiproton pair from the RHIC-STAR detector provide quantitative parameters of scattering length and effective range for antiproton-antiproton interaction [51]. These parameters illustrate the strong interaction between antiprotons is attractive, which is the basis of the formation of complex antinuclei. The parameters also provide input for describing the interaction among cold-trapped gases of antimatter ions, as in an ultra-cold environment, where s-wave scattering dominates and effective-range theory shows that the scattering length and effective range are parameters that suffice to describe elastic collisions [52]. The result provides a new quantitative verification of matter-antimatter symmetry in the important and ubiquitous context of the forces responsible for the binding of (anti)nuclei.
Finally, considering the relatively large error of the current data, possible future improvement on the measurement can be made by reducing the uncertainty from the Λ-Λ CF (CΛ-Λ(k*)), which dominates our systematical error, with further accumulation of data. In addition, a similar effort of extracting f0 and d0 could also be repeated with (anti)proton CF [53] measured at the Large Hadron Collider, where the yield ratio of antiproton to proton is close to unity. In an additional way, the interaction between antiprotons could be also measured by antiproton-antiproton scattering, which could be realised in the future, by which f0 and d0 can be extracted by studying the s-wave scattering phase shift versus energy.
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