Publication | Open Access
Beam-energy and system-size dependence of the space-time extent of the pion emission source produced in heavy ion collisions
15
Citations
0
References
2014
Year
EngineeringNuclear PhysicsHeavy Ion CollisionsHeavy Ion PhysicMedium Expansion VelocityHeavy-ion PhysicsIon BeamTwo-pion Interferometry MeasurementsLepton-nucleon ScatteringSpace-time ExtentHigh-energy Nuclear ReactionPhysicsNuclear TheoryPhase DiagramExperimental Nuclear PhysicsNatural SciencesParticle PhysicsPion Emission SourceShort-range CorrelationsMeson Spectroscopy
Two-pion interferometry measurements are used to extract the Gaussian radii $R_{\rm out}$, $R_{\rm side}$, and $R_{\rm long}$, of the pion emission sources produced in Cu$+$Cu and Au$+$Au collisions at several beam collision energies $\sqrt{s_{_{NN}}}$ at PHENIX. The extracted radii, which are compared to recent STAR and ALICE data, show characteristic scaling patterns as a function of the initial transverse size $\bar{R}$ of the collision systems and the transverse mass $m_T$ of the emitted pion pairs, consistent with hydrodynamiclike expansion. Specific combinations of the three-dimensional radii that are sensitive to the medium expansion velocity and lifetime, and the pion emission time duration show nonmonotonic $\sqrt{s_{_{NN}}}$ dependencies. The nonmonotonic behaviors exhibited by these quantities point to a softening of the equation of state that may coincide with the critical end point in the phase diagram for nuclear matter.