How does the strong force shape the structure of atomic nuclei? The STAR collaboration at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) demonstrate that ultra-relativistic collision experiments give key insights into this fundamental question. From dedicated measurements in 238U+238U collisions at 100 GeV/nucleon energy, the STAR collaboration determine the deformed shape of the 238U nucleus, showing in particular that the experimental observables probe the elusive ground-state triaxiality of this isotope. These results pave the way to systematic characterizations of ground-state nuclear properties at high-energy colliders.
How do we reveal the microscopic structure of a quantum many-body system? With electromagnetic probes, the method is as old as nuclear physics itself: photons energetic enough are shot through a target to take snapshots of frozen configurations of its inner content. Attosecond laser pulses, for which the Nobel prize in physics was awarded in 2023, enable us today to resolve the motion of electrons at the atomic scale (10-10 m). Going down to nuclear or sub-nuclear scales (10-15 m), things become more challenging, as direct imaging via electromagnetic probes becomes unfeasible. Over many decades, low-energy nuclear structure experiments have characterized the electromagnetic properties of nuclei (charge radii, transition probabilities, ...) with exquisite precision for thousands of states, which can then be used to benchmark theoretical models of nuclear structure. However, a more direct imaging of the nuclear ground state requires gluon-mediated strong interactions, acting on time scales faster than any internal nuclear dynamics: 1 yoctosecond, or 10-24s, to be compared with the typical time scale of few-Mev nuclear excitations, on the order of 10-21s. A new analysis by the STAR collaboration [1] demonstrates in particular that ion-ion collisions at the highest energies achieved at RHIC provide us with a tool to image ground-state nuclear geometries, with an application to the 238U nucleus.
A ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus collision occurs among the protons and the neutrons, collectively referred to as nucleons, within the colliding nuclei. Nucleon-nucleon interactions (between two different nuclei) shape, thus, the density of matter formed in the interaction region, or quark-gluon plasma (QGP). Consider now a head-on collision where the two ions collide via the full overlap of their geometries, such that most of the nucleons are involved in the process. In quantum mechanical terms, this implies that the collisions probe in full the complexity of the wave functions of the incoming nuclei. After averaging over millions of events, the measured observables probe indeed non-trivial expectation values computed with respect to these nuclear states [2]. Due to the fermionic nature of the constituent nucleons, and to the complexity of the strong nuclear force, i.e., the residual of quantum chromodynamics (QCD) through which such nucleons (within a nucleus) interact, nuclei are in general strongly-correlated systems characterized by emergent collective phenomena at various energy scales, including notable long-range many-nucleon correlations. These phenomena impact the geometry of the QGP formed in the high-energy collisions, with important observable implications.
Remarkably, low-energy nuclear structure physics tells us that we can visualize collective correlations of nucleons within a nucleus through the notion of the nuclear shape. A nucleus can indeed be modeled as a density of matter in a fictitious intrinsic nuclear frame which is randomly oriented with respect to the lab frame. Observables measured in the laboratory are then obtained via rigid rotations of the intrinsic density, which effectively correlate nucleons in space. Typically, the shape corresponds to some radial profile associated with a surface deformed through the Bohr expansion:
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The collisions obliterate the incoming nuclei: we only observe hadrons emitted to the final states. How do we reconstruct the nuclear shape from the measured particle distributions? We use the fact that the QGP behaves like a relativistic fluid, such that its motion is controlled by deterministic macroscopic laws. Local conservation of momentum leads in particular to the Euler equation,
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The STAR collaboration analyzes two observables to determine the structure of 238U, namely, the variance of the average transverse momentum, denoted by
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In summary, the STAR collaboration demonstrate that high-energy nuclear smash-ups enable us to infer precise information about the ground-state structure of the collided species. Many applications are expected to follow. One example pertains to the triaxiality of well-deformed nuclei. This information is hardly accessible in low-energy experiments. Especially in the region of rare-earth species, knowledge of the values of γ should yield much insight into the nuclear force and the origin of the nuclear shapes [11]. Further, accessing many-body correlations in the ground state of stable isotopes will aid in the search for neutrinoless double beta decay (0νββ), a conjectured lepton-number-violating process which, if observed, would shake our understanding of fundamental physics. This decay occurs between two isobaric nuclei. Theoretical calculations have demonstrated that the nuclear matrix elements (NME) that govern this transition depend much on the relative difference in low-resolution properties (e.g. deformations) between the two isobars [12, 13]. Therefore, if candidates for 0νββ decay were collided at RHIC or the LHC, one could employ the methods developed by the STAR collaboration to provide new experimental results to benchmark calculations of the NME. All in all, a bright program of nuclear structure investigations at high-energy colliders lies ahead.
Imaging shapes of atomic nuclei in highenergy nuclear collisions
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