Collectivity from interference
Abstract
In hadronic collisions, interference between different production channels affects momentum distributions of multi-particle final states. As this QCD interference does not depend on the strong coupling constant, it is part of the no-interaction baseline that needs to be controlled prior to searching for other manifestations of collective dynamics. Here, we introduce a model that is based on the QCD theory of multi-parton interactions and that allows one to study interference effects in the production of particles in hadronic collisions with parton-parton interactions ("sources"). In an expansion in powers of and to leading order in the number of sources , we calculate interference effects in the -particle spectra and we determine from them the second and fourth order cumulant momentum anisotropies . Without invoking any azimuthal asymmetry and any density dependent non-linear dynamics in the incoming state, and without invoking any interaction in the final state, we find that QCD interference alone can give rise to values for and , even, that persist unattenuated for increasing number of sources, that may increase with increasing multiplicity and that agree with measurements in proton-proton (pp) collisions in terms of the order of magnitude of the signal and the approximate shape of the transverse momentum dependence. We further find that the non-abelian features of QCD interference can give rise to odd harmonic anisotropies. These findings indicate that the no-interaction baseline including QCD interference effects can make a sizeable if not dominant contribution to the measured coefficients in pp collisions. Prospects for analyzing QCD interference contributions further and their possible relevance for proton-nucleus and nucleus-nucleus collisions are discussed shortly.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1708.08241,
title = {Collectivity from interference},
author = {Boris Blok and Christian D. Jäkel and Mark Strikman and Urs Achim Wiedemann},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1708.08241},
year = {2018}
}
Comments
49 pages, 15 figures, revised version to appear in JHEP