Lectures on Landau Hydrodynamics
Abstract
Landau hydrodynamics is a plausible description for the evolution of the dense hot matter produced in high-energy heavy-ion collisions. We review the formulation of Landau hydrodynamics to pave the way for its application in high-energy heavy-ion collisions. It is found that Landau's rapidity distribution needs to be modified to provide a better quantitative description. In particular, the rapidity distribution in the center-of-mass system should be more appropriately given as dN/dy \exp{\sqrt{y_b^2-y^2}}, where y_b=\ln{\sqrt{s_NN}/m_p} is the beam nucleon rapidity, instead of Landau's original result of dN/dy({Landau}) \exp{\sqrt{L^2-y^2}} where L=\ln{\sqrt{s_NN}/2m_p}. The modified distribution is compared with the Landau distribution and experimental data. It is found that the modified distribution agrees better with experimental data than the Landau distribution and it differs only slightly from the Landau Gaussian distribution dN/dy(Landau-Gaussian) \exp{-y^2/2L}. Past successes of the Gaussian distribution in explaining experimental rapidity data arises, not because it is an approximation of the original Landau distribution, but because it is in fact a close representation of the modified distribution.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0809.0517,
title = {Lectures on Landau Hydrodynamics},
author = {Cheuk-Yin Wong},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.0517},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
Lectures presented at the Helmholtz International Summer School, Bogoliubov Laboratory of Theoretical Physics, JINR, Dubna, July 14-26, 2008