1 / 15

BEYOND GAUSSIAN APPROXIMATION (EXPERIMENTAL)

BEYOND GAUSSIAN APPROXIMATION (EXPERIMENTAL). W. KITTEL Radboud University Nijmegen. Some History A.Wr óblewski (ISMD’77): BEC does not depend on energy BEC does not depend on type of particle (except AB) However:

fern
Download Presentation

BEYOND GAUSSIAN APPROXIMATION (EXPERIMENTAL)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BEYONDGAUSSIAN APPROXIMATION (EXPERIMENTAL) W. KITTEL Radboud University Nijmegen

  2. Some History A.Wróblewski (ISMD’77): BEC does not depend on energy BEC does not depend on type of particle (except AB) However: BEC does depend on statistics of experiment! (R increases with increasing Nev) G.Thomas (PRD77), P.Grassberger (NP77): ρ-decay will make it steeper J.Masarik, A.Nogová, J.Pišút, N.Pišútova (ZP97): more resonances even power-like

  3. Some More History • B.Andersson + W.Hofmann(PLB’86): • string makes it steeper than Gaussian • (approximately exponential) • Białas (NPA’92, APPB’92): • power law • if size of source fluctuates from event to event • and/or the source itself is a self-similar (fractal-type) • object (see also previous talk)

  4. NA22 (1993) UA1 (1994) Power law, indeed!

  5. Higher Orders NA22 (ZPC’93): multi-Gaussian fits according to M.Biyajima et al. (’90, ’92) as a function of Q2 : “reasonable” fits As a function of –lnQ2 : steeper than Gaussian

  6. UA1 (ZPC’93, Eggers, Lipa, Buschbeck PRL’97) compared to Andreev, Plümer, Weiner (1993) Gaussian clearly excluded => power law

  7. Edgeworth and Laguerre Expansion Csörgő + Hegyi(PLB 2000): Edgeworth: R2(Q) = γ ( 1 + λ*exp(-Q2r2) [ 1 + κ3H3(2½Qr)/3! + · · · ] with κ3= third-order cumulant moment H3=third-order Hermite polynomial Laguerre: Replace Gaussian by exponential and Hermite by Laguerre

  8. fits by Csörgő and Hegyi: dashed = Gauss full = Edgeworth

  9. fits again by Csörgő and Hegyi: dashed = exponential full = Laguerre but:low-Q points still systematically above and power law equally good (with fewer parameters)

  10. Higher Dimensionality L3 (PLB 1999): Bertsch-Pratt parametrization (QL, Qside, Qout) Gaussian : CL = 3% Edgeworth : = 30%

  11. Lévy-stable Distributions Csörgő, Hegyi , Zajc (EPJC 2004): (see also Brax and Peschanski 91) Lévy-stable distributions describe functions with non-finite variance which behave as f(r)= |r| -1- for |r| ∞ ( 0 µ 2) Particularly useful feature: “characteristic function” (i.e. the Fourier transform) of a symmetric stable distribution is F(Q) = exp(iQδ - |γQ|μ)  R2(Q) = 1 + exp(-|rQ|μ) with r = 21/μγ (see following talks )

  12. Conclude Correlation functions at small Q in general steeper than Gaussian Edgeworth (and Laguerre) better, but what is the physics? Power law not excluded Lévy-stable functions allow to interpolate. Are they a solution?

  13. Questions • Elongation ( rside/rL < 1) • Qinv versus directional dependence • rout  rside • Boost invariance • mT dependence (also in e+e-) factor 0.5 from mπ to 1GeV. • Space-momentum correlation • non-Gaussian behavior • Edgeworth, power law, Lévy-stability • Connection to intermittency • 3-particle correlations • Phase versus higher-order suppression • Strength parameter λ

  14. Source image reconstruction • Overlapping systems (WW, 3-jet, nuclei) • HBT versus string • Dependence on type of collision • (no, except for heavy nuclei) • Energy (virtuality) dependence • (no, except for rL) • Multiplicity Dependence • r increases • λ decreases • effect on multiplicity and single-particle distribution

More Related