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Freeze-out and thermalization in relativistic heavy ion collisions

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arxiv 2004.04681 v1 pith:6VBW2NDG submitted 2020-04-09 hep-ph nucl-exnucl-th

Freeze-out and thermalization in relativistic heavy ion collisions

classification hep-ph nucl-exnucl-th
keywords collisionsequilibriumsystemthermaltimeattainsheavy-ionhigh
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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High energy heavy-ion collisions in laboratory produce a form of matter that can test Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), the theory of strong interactions, at high temperatures. One of the exciting possibilities is the existence of thermodynamically distinct states of QCD, particularly a phase of de-confined quarks and gluons. An important step in establishing this new state of QCD is to demonstrate that the system has attained thermal equilibrium. We present a test of thermal equilibrium by checking that the mean hadron yields produced in the small impact parameter collisions as well as grand canonical fluctuations of conserved quantities give consistent temperature and baryon chemical potential for the last scattering surface. This consistency for moments up to third order of the net-baryon number, charge, and strangeness is a key step in the proof that the QCD matter produced in heavy-ion collision attains thermal equilibrium. It is a clear indication for the first time, using fluctuation observables, that a femto-scale system attains thermalization. The study also indicates that the relaxation time scales for the system are comparable to or smaller than the life time of the fireball.

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