English

Dilepton Radiation at the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron

High Energy Physics - Phenomenology 2011-02-15 v3 Nuclear Experiment Nuclear Theory

Abstract

A quantitative evaluation of dilepton sources in heavy-ion reactions is performed taking into account both thermal and non-thermal production mechanisms. The hadronic thermal emission rate is based on an electromagnetic current-correlation function with a low-mass region (LMR, M \lsim 1 GeV) dominated by vector mesons (\rho, \omega, \phi) and an intermediate-mass region (IMR, 1 GeV \le M \le 3 GeV) characterized by (the onset of) a multi-meson continuum. A convolution of the emission rates over a thermal fireball expansion results in good agreement with experiment in the low-mass spectra, confirming the predicted broadening of the \rho meson in hadronic matter in connection with the prevalence of baryon-induced medium effects. The absolute magnitude of the LMR excess is mostly controlled by the fireball lifetime, which in turn leads to a consistent explanation of the dilepton excess in the IMR in terms of thermal radiation. The analysis of experimental transverse-momentum (q_T) spectra reveals discrepancies with thermal emission for q_T \gsim 1 GeV in noncentral In-In collisions, which we address by extending our calculations by: (i) a refined treatment of \rho decays at thermal freezeout, (ii) primordially produced \rho's subject to energy-loss, (iii) Drell-Yan annihilation, and (iv) thermal radiation from t-channel meson exchange processes. We investigate the sensitivity of dilepton spectra to the critical temperature and hadro-chemical freezeout of the fireball. The \rho broadening in the LMR turns out to be robust, while in the IMR Quark-Gluon Plasma radiation is moderate unless the critical temperature is rather low.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0711.3444,
  title  = {Dilepton Radiation at the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron},
  author = {Hendrik van Hees and Ralf Rapp},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0711.3444},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

29 pages, 22 figures; v2: comments added in Sec. III, reference corrected; v3: version accepted for publication in Nucl. Phys. A

R2 v1 2026-06-21T09:45:58.810Z