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Forward–backward multiplicity correlation can be expressed as Pearson's correlation coefficient of forward multiplicity
$ N_{\rm f} $ and backward multiplicity$ N_{\rm b} $ ,$ b_{\rm corr} = \frac{\left \langle N_{\rm b}N_{\rm f} \right \rangle-\left \langle N_{\rm b} \right \rangle\left \langle N_{\rm f} \right \rangle}{\sqrt{\left \langle N_{\rm b}^{2} \right \rangle-\left \langle N_{\rm b} \right \rangle^{2}}{\sqrt{\left \langle N_{\rm f}^{2} \right \rangle-\left \langle N_{\rm f} \right \rangle^{2}}}} = \frac{D_{\rm bf}^2}{D_{\rm bb} D_{\rm ff}}, $
(1) where
$ N_{\rm f} $ and$ N_{\rm b} $ are the numbers of charged particles falling into the forward and backward pseudorapidity intervals$ \delta \eta $ respectively and$ D_{\rm bf} $ ,$ D_{\rm bb} $ , and$ D_{\rm ff} $ represent the backward–forward, backward–backward, and forward–forward dispersions. This definition has been applied in some data analyses and model simulations [34, 46-48, 78]. In the present study, we follow this equation to investigate the system and centrality dependence, especially for the study of α-clustering nuclei.Here two intervals separated symmetrically around
$ \eta = 0 $ with variable width$ \delta \eta $ ranging from 0.2 to 0.8 are defined as “forward” ($ \eta >0 $ ) and “backward” ($ \eta <0 $ ). Correlations between multiplicities of charged particles are studied as a function of the gap between the windows$ \eta _\text{gap} $ , namely the distance between lower and upper boundary of forward and backward η windows.Reference multiplicities are used here to reduce the influence of centrality selection on forward–backward multiplicity correlations. The parameters are set as (a)
$ \delta \eta = 0.2 $ , and$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8, 1.0, 1.2, 1.4 and 1.6. For$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0, 0.2 and 0.4, reference multiplicity is set in$ 0.5<\left | \eta \right |<1.0 $ . For$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0.6 and 0.8, the reference multiplicity is the sum of multiplicities in$ \left | \eta \right |<0.3 $ and$ 0.8<\left | \eta \right |<1.0 $ . For$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 1.0, 1.2, 1.4 and 1.6, reference multiplicity is obtained from$ \left | \eta \right |<0.5 $ . A similar approach can be found in [34, 47, 48]; (b)$ \delta \eta = 0.4 $ , and$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8, 1.0 and 1.2. For$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0, 0.2 and 0.4, reference multiplicity is set in$ 0.7<\left | \eta \right |<1.2 $ . For$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0.6 and 0.8, the reference multiplicity is the sum of multiplicities in$ \left | \eta \right |<0.3 $ and$ 1.0<\left | \eta \right |<1.2 $ . For$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 1.0 and 1.2, reference multiplicity is obtained from$ \left | \eta \right |<0.5 $ ; (c)$ \delta \eta = 0.6 $ , and$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, and 0.8. For$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0, 0.2 and 0.4, reference multiplicity is set in$ 0.9<\left | \eta \right |<1.4 $ . For$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0.6 and 0.8, the reference multiplicity is the sum of multiplicities in$ \left | \eta \right |<0.3 $ and$ 1.2<\left | \eta \right |<1.4 $ ; (d)$ \delta \eta = 0.8 $ , and$ \eta _\text{gap} $ = 0, 0.2 and 0.4. The reference multiplicity is set in$ 1.1<\left | \eta \right |<1.6 $ . -
Generally speaking, collisions at higher energies give increasing values of mean multiplicity, leading to relatively larger correlation strengths
$ b_\text{corr} $ [78]. In order to obtain the relationship between correlation coefficient$ b_\text{corr} $ and$ \eta _\text{gap} $ , it is natural to check the pseudorapidity distribution first. We present the AMPT results of the$ {\rm d}N_{\text{ch}}/{\rm d}\eta $ with the experimental results for a range of collision centralities. The centrality of collisions is characterized by the number of final-state charged particles ($ N_{\rm ch} $ ). Figure 1 shows the pseudorapidity distributions of the charged particles including$ \pi ^{\pm } $ ,$ K^{\pm } $ , p and$ \bar{p} $ in Au + Au minibias collisions (impact parameter$ b = 0 -13.96 $ fm) at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 200 GeV for different centrality bins for$ -5.4< $ $ \eta <5.4 $ . To compare with the experimental results, we do not give the transverse momentum cut here. We can see that the first two centrality bins (namely 0%–6%, 6%–15%) are a bit lower and the last three centrality bins (namely 25%–35%, 35%–45%, and 45%–55%) are a bit higher than those of Au + Au collision experimental data [79]. The difference in pseudorapidity distribution will, to some extent, explain the following calculation results we obtain.Figure 1. AMPT results of pseudorapidity distribution
${\rm d}N_{\rm ch}/{\rm d}\eta$ for charged particles including$\pi ^{\pm }$ ,$K^{\pm }$ , p and$\bar{p}$ , of Au + Au collisions (impact parameter$b = 0 -13.96$ fm) at$\sqrt{s_{NN}}$ = 200 GeV.Figure 2 shows the distributions of the Au + Au minibias collision events on the
$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ plane at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 200 GeV for centrality bins of 0%–10%, 10%–20%, 20%–30%, 30%–40%, 40%–50% and 50%–60%. We select the charged hadrons with transverse momentum cut ($ 0.2<p_{\rm T}<3 $ ) GeV/c, pseudorapidity cut$ 0.8<\eta <1 $ for the forward window and$ -1<\eta <-0.8 $ for the backward window. The dashed lines guide eyes for the equal values of$ N_{\rm b} $ and$ N_{\rm f} $ .Figure 2. (color online) Distributions of Au + Au minibias collision events on the
$N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f}$ plane at$\sqrt{s_{NN}}$ = 200 GeV for different centrality bins. Red text inside the contours show the value of “eccentricity”$\varepsilon_2$ of the corresponding 2-dimensional$N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f}$ plots. -
Figure 3 shows the FB multiplicity correlation coefficient
$ b_\text{corr} $ as a function of$ \eta _\text{gap} $ and for different widths of the η windows ($ \delta \eta $ ) in Au + Au collisions with different centralities at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 200 GeV. It is observed that the magnitude of FB correlation strength drops with the increase of centrality, i.e. from central to peripheral collisions, which is consistent with the previous experimental observation in Ref. [34].Figure 3. (color online) FB multiplicity correlation coefficient
$ b_\text{corr} $ through AMPT model as a function of$ \eta _\text{gap} $ and for different widths of the η windows ($ \delta \eta $ ) in$ ^{197} {\rm{Au}}$ +$ ^{197} {\rm{Au}}$ collisions at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 200 GeV for centralities of (a) 0%-10%, (b) 30%-40%, and (c) 60%-70%.Providing that there is a two-dimensional Gaussian distribution in the
$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ plane with standard deviation$ \sigma _{x} = \sigma _{y} $ , which corresponds to the situation that the centrality bin width goes to zero, this simplified assumption gives$ b_\text{corr} = 0 $ . When the centrality bin width is larger, the situation can be simply understood as putting multiple Gaussian distributions one after another with gradually decreasing σ along the axis of$ N_{\rm b} = N_{\rm f} $ , giving a gradually increasing$ b_\text{corr} $ . If we look back at the charged-particle multiplicity distribution in Ref. [80], where in each centrality bin there are the same number of events, but the wider the$ N_{\rm ch} $ distribution the higher the centrality bin (more central collision). That is to say, there is a longer projection on the axis of$ N_{\rm b} = N_{\rm f} $ , which gives relatively bigger$ b_\text{corr} $ . Related discussion can be found in Ref. [48] by roughly treating the distributions in$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ as a two-dimensional Gaussian.For those distributions of events where different centrality bins in the
$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ plane are similar in shape, we can also use the “eccentricity”$ \varepsilon_2 $ to describe the$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ event distribution, where$ \varepsilon _{2}{\rm e}^{{\rm i}2\Phi_{2}} = -\left \langle n^{2}{\rm e}^{{\rm i}2\phi_{\rm bf}} \right \rangle/\left \langle n^{2} \right \rangle $ . Here$ n = \sqrt{N_{\rm b}'^2+N_{\rm f}'^2} $ and$ \phi_{\rm bf} = \tan^{-1}\left({N_{\rm f}'}/{N_{\rm b}'}\right) $ , where$ (N_{\rm b}', N_{\rm f}') = $ $ (N_{\rm b} -\bar{N}_{\rm b}, N_{\rm f} -\bar{N}_{\rm f}) $ for each event, and$ (\bar{N}_{\rm b},\bar{N}_{\rm f}) $ is the mean value of$ (N_{\rm b}, N_{\rm f}) $ . Note that the “eccentricity” is not the initial anisotropy in the transverse coordinate plane which is often used in heavy-ion collisions. We just use this definition to describe the event distribution in the$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ plane. When “eccentricity”$ \varepsilon_2 $ tends to 0, the spread of events on the$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ plane is close to circular, and in the language of correlation coefficient$ b_\text{corr} $ ,$ N_{\rm b} $ and$ N_{\rm f} $ are not related. On the contrary, a large$ \varepsilon_2 $ represents strong positive linear correlation between$ N_{\rm f} $ and$ N_{\rm b} $ . Correlation coefficient$ b_\text{corr} $ or “eccentricity”$ \varepsilon_2 $ , or the$ e\equiv \sqrt{1-\sigma _{b}^{2}/\sigma _{a}^{2}} $ used in Ref. [48] are equivalent as long as we are talking about symmetric systems, where events on the$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ plane are distributed diagonally. The corresponding “eccentricity” coefficient$ \varepsilon_2 $ is also marked in Fig. 2 and it is obvious from the figure, from central to peripheral collisions, the shadow region gradually changes from a slender ellipse to a circle and the corresponding “eccentricity” coefficient$ \varepsilon_2 $ decreases continuously.Ref. [47] shows a related calculation for Pb + Pb collisions at
$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 2.76 TeV. The discussion above can easily explain its problem that$ b_\text{corr} $ does not follow any regular pattern in terms of centrality selection.Quantitative differences with the experimental results can partly be explained through the difference in
$ N_{\rm ch} $ distribution (Fig. 1) mentioned above. For the centrality bin 0%-10%, the AMPT gives a value of$ b_\text{corr} $ approximately equal to 0.5, which is smaller than the results$ 0.5< $ $ b_\text{corr}<0.6 $ obtained in the experiment. This is expected because in that centrality range the AMPT gives a relatively lower$ {\rm d}N_{\text{\rm ch}}/{\rm d}\eta $ than that of RHIC experiments, therefore the event distribution on the$ N_{\rm b}-N_{\rm f} $ plane along the diagonal should also be shorter than in the RHIC experiments. Similarly, for the centrality bin 30%–40% and 60%–70%, we give values of$ b_\text{corr} $ approximately equal to 0.35 and 0.3, which are larger than the experimental results 0.2 and 0.1, respectively. It can also be explained by the AMPT model giving a relatively higher$ {\rm d}N_{\text{\rm ch}}/{\rm d}\eta $ . However, we do not see the sharply decreasing behavior with$ \eta _\text{gap} $ for the 60%-70% centrality bin.Figure 4 shows the FB multiplicity correlation coefficient
$ b_\text{corr} $ as a function of$ \eta _\text{gap} $ and for different widths of the η windows in pp collisions at three collision energies$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 10, 200, and 5020 GeV. At each collision energy,$ b_\text{corr} $ is found to decrease slowly with the increase of$ \eta _\text{gap} $ . Our calculations are in good agreement with those of Ref. [78] in quantity: Fig. 4(b) shows that the result of 200 GeV is slightly smaller than that of 0.9 TeV, and Fig. 4(c) displays that the value$ b_\text{corr} $ of 5020 GeV is between that of 2.76 TeV and 7 TeV. It is found that the pedestal value of$ b_\text{corr} $ increases with the collision energy, while the slope of the$ b_\text{corr} $ stays approximately constant, which indicates that the short-range correlation is similar at three energies, while the long-range correlation has stronger energy dependence.Figure 4. (color online) Forward–backward correlation strength
$ b_\text{corr} $ as a function of$ \eta _\text{gap} $ and for different window widths$ \delta \eta $ = 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, and 0.8 in pp collisions at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 10 (a), 200 (b), and 5020 (c) GeV. Note that the values of the data points in panel (a) are multiplied by 5.This analysis is extended to correlations between separated regions in the
$ \eta -\phi $ plane. Here ϕ is the azimuthal angle of momenta. The ϕ angle space is split into eight sectors with width$ \delta \phi = \pi /4 $ . This selection is motivated by a compromise between granularity and statistical uncertainty. The variable$ \phi_\text{sep} $ is the relative separation in azimuthal angle between centres of the forward sector and backward sector.The 2-dimensional distribution of
$ b_\text{corr} $ in$ p+p $ collision as a function of$ \eta_\text{gap} $ and$ \phi_\text{sep} $ is shown in Fig. 5 at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 10, 200, and 5020 GeV. In Fig. 5(a),$ b_\text{corr} $ in the$ \eta -\phi $ plane gives an almost zero value. People may think forward–backward multiplicity is irrelevant in pp collisions at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 10 GeV. However, this is not the case. At such a low energy, p+p collisions give almost zero number of charged particles in each forward and backward window, thus it is meaningless to talk about$ b_\text{corr} $ in this case. We can find a peak at the point ($ \eta _\text{gap} $ ,$ \phi_\text{sep} $ ) = (0, π) in Fig. 5(b). This could be the contribution of the final-state particles produced by back-to-back scattering. In Fig. 5(c), we find a ridge at$ \phi_\text{sep} $ = 0 and the value of$ b_\text{corr} $ decreases as the$ \eta _\text{gap} $ increases, which is consistent with the results from the ALICE Collaboration [78]. The azimuthal distribution of particles shows two peaks, centred at zero and at π, which indicates the jet structure. We can see clearly there are two contributions to the correlation coefficient$ b_\text{corr} $ : the SR contribution is concentrated within a rather limited region in the$ \eta -\phi $ plane within one unit of pseudorapidity, while the LR contribution manifests itself as a common pedestal in the whole region of observation. With the increase of collision energy, the number of strings (LR related) increases, which leads to the uplift of the pedestal and the amount of decay (SR related) increases, which leads to the formation of a peak at ($ \eta _\text{gap} $ ,$ \phi _\text{sep} $ ) = (0, 0).Figure 5. (color online) 2D representation of
$ b_\text{corr} $ in pp collisions at (a)$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 10 GeV, (b)$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 200 GeV and (c)$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 5020 GeV for separated$ \eta -\phi $ window pairs with$ \delta \eta = 0.2 $ and$ \delta \phi = \pi /4 $ .$ \phi_\text{sep} $ is the relative separation (number of$ \delta \phi = \pi /4 $ ) in azimuthal angle between centres of the forward sector and backward sector.Figure 6 shows the 2-dimensional distribution of
$ b_\text{corr} $ in the symmetric collision systems from large to small systems, i.e. from$ ^{197} {\rm{Au}}$ +$ ^{197} {\rm{Au}}$ to$ ^{16} {\rm{O}}$ +$ ^{16} {\rm{O}}$ and$ ^{12} {\rm{C}}$ +$ ^{12} {\rm{C}}$ collisions, as a function of$ \eta _\text{gap} $ and$ \phi _\text{sep} $ at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 200 GeV. Two ridges at$ \phi _\text{sep} $ = 0 and$ \phi _\text{sep} $ = π in Au + Au are observed for the most central collisions. In Au + Au peripheral collisions,$ b_\text{corr} $ in the$ \eta -\phi $ plane behaves similar to the$ p+p $ collision in Fig. 5(b) and the most central collision in O + O or C + C systems. In addition, the difference between light nuclei with different initial structures is negligible (for the reason given in the following text), so for brevity we do not show the comparison here. The two-ridge structure might relate to the elliptic flow. As we know the 30%–40% centrality events give the biggest$ v_{2} $ value, and the biggest relative$ b_\text{corr} $ difference between the ridge and valley emerges at the same centrality. Taking a typical elliptic flow event into consideration, there is a greater chance to see final-state particles when rotating$ \phi = 0 $ or$ \phi = \pi $ from the long axis and relatively small probability to see those when rotating$ \phi = {\pi }/{2} $ or$ \phi = {3\pi }/{2} $ , which explains the two ridges seen at$ \phi _\text{sep} $ = 0 and π and the two valleys seen at$ \phi = {\pi }/{2} $ and$ {3\pi }/{2} $ . It is the largest mean multiplicity, or to be more precise it is the longest projection along the axis$ N_{\rm b} = N_{\rm f} $ , that gives the relatively highest pedestal value in Fig. 6(a).Figure 6. (color online) 2D representation of
$ b_\text{corr} $ at$ \sqrt{s_{NN}} $ = 200 GeV in$ ^{197} {\rm{Au}}$ +$ ^{197} {\rm{Au}}$ collision systems for (a) 0%-10%, (b) 30%-40%, and (c) 60%-70% centralities;$ ^{16} {\rm{O}}$ +$ ^{16} {\rm{O}}$ collision systems for (d) 0%-10%, (e) 30%-40%, and (f) 60%-70% centralities;$ ^{12} $ C +$ ^{12} $ C collision systems for (g) 0%-10%, (h) 30%-40%, and (i) 60%-70% centralities for separated$ \eta -\phi $ window pairs with$ \delta \eta = 0.2 $ and$ \delta \phi = \pi /4 $ .
System scan of the multiplicity correlation between forward and backward rapidities in relativistic heavy-ion collisions using a multi-phase transport model
- Received Date: 2021-10-15
- Available Online: 2022-04-15
Abstract: A systematic study on forward–backward (FB) multiplicity correlations from large systems to small ones through a multi-phase transport model (AMPT) has been performed and the phenomenon that correlation strength increases with centrality can be explained by taking the distribution of events as the superposition of a series of Gaussian distributions. It is also found that correlations in the