Introduction
Recently, the production of light nuclei in heavy-ion collisions has been extensively studied at the collision energies available at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1-10]. The PHENIX and STAR collaborations at RHIC have reported light nuclei production data for Au+Au collisions at
Various scenarios and mechanisms have been proposed to describe the production of light nuclei. Three main approaches are typically used to describe light nuclei production. The first approach is the thermodynamic model [17-21], in which the yields of hadrons and light nuclei are described using a few parameters related to the chemical freeze-out conditions. The production of light nuclei can also be described by the coalescence model, in which it is assumed that light nuclei are formed through the coalescence of protons and neutrons with similar positions and velocities on the kinetic freeze-out surface [22-30]. The third approach is kinetic theory, in which light nuclei are formed and destroyed during the evolution of the collision system [31-33].
In addition to the abovementioned approaches, the blast-wave (BW) model has also been widely used by experimental collaborations to describe the transverse momentum (pT) spectra of light nuclei [3-6]. The BW model is motivated by its similarity to the freeze-out configuration of the hydrodynamic model [34]. Despite being a toy model, the spectra of light nuclei produced in Au+Au collisions at
The Tsallis distribution, which is derived from non-extensive thermodynamics, has been widely applied to describe the final hadron production over a large range of pT in p+p and A+A collisions at RHIC and LHC with great success [35-40]. The stationary Fokker-Planck (FP) solution has also been adopted to describe hadron distributions [39]. To address its inability to fit all the hadron transverse momentum spectra of Pb+Pb collisions that have been identified up to 20 GeV/c, the generalized FP solution was first proposed in Ref. [41]. An excellent fit for the transverse momentum spectra of charged hadrons in Pb + Pb collisions at
The remainder of this paper is organized as follows. In Sect. 2-4, we show our fitting results for the energy and centrality dependence of deuteron and triton (helium-3) production in Au+Au collisions and Pb+Pb collisions obtained using the Tsallis distribution, BW model, and stationary FP solution, respectively. In Sect. 5, a detailed comparison among the three methods and a brief discussion are presented. Finally, a summary is given in Sect. 6.
Tsallis distribution
In our previous works [38-40], we demonstrated that several versions of the Tsallis distribution can describe the pT spectra of hadrons produced in both p+p and A+A collisions at RHIC and LHC equally well [38, 39]. The Tsallis distribution was also adopted by the ALICE collaboration to reproduce the production of deuterons, tritons, helium-3, and their antinuclei in p+p collisions at
We analyze the light nuclei production in Au+Au collisions under the BES program at RHIC and in Pb+Pb collisions at LHC using the Tsallis distribution. Similar results are observed for all the energies. In Fig. 1, we show only the fits to the transverse momentum spectra of deuterons using the Tsallis distribution Eq. (1) in Au+Au collisions at
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We also apply the Tsallis distribution to the transverse momentum spectra of tritons. The fitting results for the triton distributions in Au+Au collisions at
The blast-wave model
Besides the Tsallis distribution, the BW model is also commonly adopted by experimental collaborations [3-5]. This model describes particle production under the assumption that the particles are thermally emitted from an expanding source. The functional form of this model is given by
Similar to the Tsallis distribution, we present only the fitting results obtained using Eq. (2) for Au+Au collisions at
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The Fokker-Planck Solution
Based on the results in Sect. 2 and 3, it can be seen that neither the Tsallis distribution nor the BW model is the optimal universal formula for describing the transverse momentum spectra of light nuclei at RHIC and LHC. Considering the solution of the FP equation to study the rapidity spectra of net proton production at RHIC [45] and the good performance of the generalized FP solution in describing the identified hadron spectra produced in Pb+Pb collisions at
Figures 5 and 6 respectively show the experimental data for the transverse momentum spectra of deuterons and tritons in Au+Au collisions at
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Discussion
From the above results, we have learned that the three different methods, i.e., the Tsallis distribution, BW model, and stationary FP solution, can describe the experimental data in general. To explicitly compare the agreement of the fitting results obtained using the three approaches with the experimental data, we define the relative discrepancy as the ratio
Figure 8 shows the values of the ratio R obtained using Eqs. (1), (2) and (4) for deuterons (solid symbols) and tritons/helium-3 (empty symbols) as functions of pT on a linear scale for central collisions. The largest discrepancy for deutrons occurs for Au+Au collisions at
To perform a comprehensive evaluation, it is also necessary to check the relative discrepancies for tritons, which are shown with empty symbols in Fig. 8. The ratios for tritons obtained using Eqs. (1), (2), and (4) are generally smaller than those for deuterons at the three collision energies. In more detail, the relative discrepancies for Eq. (1) (empty black squares) are generally larger than those for Eq. (2) (empty red circles) and Eq. (4) (empty blue triangles). The results demonstrate that both the BW model and stationary FP solution are better than the Tsallis distribution for reproducing the triton spectra at various collision energies.
Based on the above detailed comparisons, we can conclude that the stationary FP solution is the optimal method for describing the deuteron and triton (helium-3) transverse momentum spectra of central to peripheral collisions at RHIC and LHC across a wide range of collision energies from
Figure 9 shows the energy dependence of the light nuclei yield ratio
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summary
In this paper, we presented a detailed study of the Tsallis distribution, BW model, and stationary FP solution in which fitting was performed on the transverse momentum spectra of light nuclei produced in Au+Au collisions under the BES program at
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