4.5 Article

Jet wake from linearized hydrodynamics

Journal

JOURNAL OF HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS
Volume -, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/JHEP05(2021)230

Keywords

Heavy Ion Phenomenology; Jets

Funding

  1. European Research Council [ERC-2018-ADG-835105 YoctoLHC]
  2. Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (Portugal) [CERN/FISPAR/0024/2019]
  3. Trond Mohn Foundation [BFS2018REK01]
  4. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics [DE-SC0011090]
  5. [SGR-2017-754]
  6. [FPA2016-76005-C2-1-P]
  7. [PID2019-105614GB-C21]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study explores how to improve the hybrid model description of the particles originating from the wake of a jet in a droplet of quark-gluon plasma produced in heavy ion collisions. Linearized hydrodynamics works better in the viscous case, while adding transverse flow effects leads to a harder transverse momentum spectrum with more particles produced above 2 GeV compared to the hybrid model. The study provides insights on how the jet wake may modify jet observables and highlights the importance of considering transverse flow effects and the broadening of energy-momentum perturbation in spacetime rapidity on particle production.
We explore how to improve the hybrid model description of the particles originating from the wake that a jet produced in a heavy ion collision leaves in the droplet of quark-gluon plasma (QGP) through which it propagates, using linearized hydrodynamics on a background Bjorken flow. Jet energy and momentum loss described by the hybrid model become currents sourcing linearized hydrodynamics. By solving the linearized hydrodynamic equations numerically, we investigate the development of the wake in the dynamically evolving droplet of QGP, study the effect of viscosity, scrutinize energy-momentum conservation, and check the validity of the linear approximation. We find that linearized hydrodynamics works better in the viscous case because diffusive modes damp the energy-momentum perturbation produced by the jet. We calculate the distribution of particles produced from the jet wake by using the Cooper-Frye prescription and find that both the transverse momentum spectrum and the distribution of particles in azimuthal angle are similar in shape in linearized hydrodynamics and in the hybrid model. Their normalizations are different because the momentum-rapidity distribution in the linearized hydrodynamics analysis is more spread out, due to sound modes. Since the Bjorken flow has no transverse expansion, we explore the effect of transverse flow by using local boosts to add it into the Cooper-Frye formula. After including the effects of transverse flow in this way, the transverse momentum spectrum becomes harder: more particles with transverse momenta bigger than 2 GeV are produced than in the hybrid model. Although we defer implementing this analysis in a jet Monte Carlo, as would be needed to make quantitative comparisons to data, we gain a qualitative sense of how the jet wake may modify jet observables by computing proxies for two example observables: the lost energy recovered in a cone of varying open angle, and the fragmentation function. We find that linearized hydrodynamics with transverse flow effects added improves the description of the jet wake in the hybrid model in just the way that comparison to data indicates is needed. Our study illuminates a path to improving the description of the wake in the hybrid model, highlighting the need to take into account the effects of both transverse flow and the broadening of the energy-momentum perturbation in spacetime rapidity on particle production.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available