TY - JOUR
T1 - Symmetry energy investigation with pion production from Sn+Sn systems
AU - the SπRIT Collaboration
AU - the TMEP collaboration
AU - Jhang, G.
AU - Estee, J.
AU - Barney, J.
AU - Cerizza, G.
AU - Kaneko, M.
AU - Lee, J. W.
AU - Lynch, W. G.
AU - Isobe, T.
AU - Kurata-Nishimura, M.
AU - Murakami, T.
AU - Tsang, C. Y.
AU - Tsang, M. B.
AU - Wang, R.
AU - Ahn, D. S.
AU - Atar, L.
AU - Aumann, T.
AU - Baba, H.
AU - Boretzky, K.
AU - Brzychczyk, J.
AU - Chiga, N.
AU - Fukuda, N.
AU - Gasparic, I.
AU - Hong, B.
AU - Horvat, A.
AU - Ieki, K.
AU - Inabe, N.
AU - Kim, Y. J.
AU - Kobayashi, T.
AU - Kondo, Y.
AU - Lasko, P.
AU - Lee, H. S.
AU - Leifels, Y.
AU - Łukasik, J.
AU - Manfredi, J.
AU - McIntosh, A. B.
AU - Morfouace, P.
AU - Nakamura, T.
AU - Nakatsuka, N.
AU - Nishimura, S.
AU - Olsen, R.
AU - Otsu, H.
AU - Pawłowski, P.
AU - Pelczar, K.
AU - Rossi, D.
AU - Sakurai, H.
AU - Santamaria, C.
AU - Sato, H.
AU - Scheit, H.
AU - Shane, R.
AU - Ono, Akira
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank the operation staff of the RIBF for producing high intensity 238U and 124Xe primary beams in order to produce the 132Sn, 124Sn, 108Sn and 112Sn secondary beams necessary for this study. This work was supported by The U.S. Department of Energy, USA under Grant Nos. DE-SC0014530, DE-NA0002923, DE-FG02-93ER40773, DE-SC0019209, DE-SC0015266, DE-AC02-05CH11231, US National Science Foundation, United States Grant No. PHY-1565546, the Robert A. Welch Foundation, United States (A-1266 and A-1358), the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI) grant Nos. JP24105004, JP18H05404, JP17K05432, JP16H02179 and JP19K14709, the National Research Foundation of Korea under grant Nos. 2016K1A3A7A09005578, 2018R1A5A1025563, 2013M7A1A1075764, the Polish National Science Centre (NCN), Poland, under contract Nos. UMO-2013/09/B/ST2/04064, UMO-2013/-10/M/ST2/00624, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy – EXC-2094–390783311 (ORIGINS), SFB1245, the BMBF via Project No. 05P15RDFN1, EXC-2094-390783311, National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grants Nos. 11375094, 11079025, 11847315, 11875125, 11505, 11947410, 11922514, Croatian Science Foundation under projects Nos. 1257 and 7194. The computing resources for data analysis are provided by the HOKUSAI-GreatWave system at RIKEN, the Institute for Cyber-Enabled Research (ICER) at Michigan State University, and the EMBER cluster at the NSCL.
Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank the operation staff of the RIBF for producing high intensity 238 U and 124 Xe primary beams in order to produce the 132 Sn, 124 Sn, 108 Sn and 112 Sn secondary beams necessary for this study. This work was supported by The U.S. Department of Energy , USA under Grant Nos. DE-SC0014530 , DE-NA0002923 , DE-FG02-93ER40773 , DE-SC0019209 , DE-SC0015266 , DE-AC02-05CH11231 , US National Science Foundation , United States Grant No. PHY-1565546 , the Robert A. Welch Foundation , United States ( A-1266 and A-1358 ), the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI) grant Nos. JP24105004 , JP18H05404 , JP17K05432 , JP16H02179 and JP19K14709 , the National Research Foundation of Korea under grant Nos. 2016K1A3A7A09005578 , 2018R1A5A1025563 , 2013M7A1A1075764 , the Polish National Science Centre (NCN), Poland, under contract Nos. UMO-2013/09/B/ST2/04064 , UMO-2013/-10/M/ST2/00624 , the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy – EXC-2094–390783311 (ORIGINS), SFB1245 , the BMBF via Project No. 05P15RDFN1 , EXC-2094-390783311 , National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grants Nos. 11375094 , 11079025 , 11847315 , 11875125 , 11505 , 11947410 , 11922514 , Croatian Science Foundation under projects Nos. 1257 and 7194 . The computing resources for data analysis are provided by the HOKUSAI-GreatWave system at RIKEN, the Institute for Cyber-Enabled Research (ICER) at Michigan State University, and the EMBER cluster at the NSCL.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s)
PY - 2021/2/10
Y1 - 2021/2/10
N2 - In the past two decades, pions created in the high density regions of heavy ion collisions have been predicted to be sensitive at high densities to the symmetry energy term in the nuclear equation of state, a property that is key to our understanding of neutron stars. In a new experiment designed to study the symmetry energy, the multiplicities of negatively and positively charged pions have been measured with high accuracy for central 132Sn+124Sn, 112Sn+124Sn, and 108Sn+112Sn collisions at E/A=270 MeV with the SπRIT Time Projection Chamber. While individual pion multiplicities are measured to 4% accuracy, those of the charged pion multiplicity ratios are measured to 2% accuracy. We compare these data to predictions from seven major transport models. The calculations reproduce qualitatively the dependence of the multiplicities and their ratios on the total neutron and proton number in the colliding systems. However, the predictions of the transport models from different codes differ too much to allow extraction of reliable constraints on the symmetry energy from the data. This finding may explain previous contradictory conclusions on symmetry energy constraints obtained from pion data in Au+Au system. These new results call for still better understanding of the differences among transport codes, and new observables that are more sensitive to the density dependence of the symmetry energy.
AB - In the past two decades, pions created in the high density regions of heavy ion collisions have been predicted to be sensitive at high densities to the symmetry energy term in the nuclear equation of state, a property that is key to our understanding of neutron stars. In a new experiment designed to study the symmetry energy, the multiplicities of negatively and positively charged pions have been measured with high accuracy for central 132Sn+124Sn, 112Sn+124Sn, and 108Sn+112Sn collisions at E/A=270 MeV with the SπRIT Time Projection Chamber. While individual pion multiplicities are measured to 4% accuracy, those of the charged pion multiplicity ratios are measured to 2% accuracy. We compare these data to predictions from seven major transport models. The calculations reproduce qualitatively the dependence of the multiplicities and their ratios on the total neutron and proton number in the colliding systems. However, the predictions of the transport models from different codes differ too much to allow extraction of reliable constraints on the symmetry energy from the data. This finding may explain previous contradictory conclusions on symmetry energy constraints obtained from pion data in Au+Au system. These new results call for still better understanding of the differences among transport codes, and new observables that are more sensitive to the density dependence of the symmetry energy.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.physletb.2020.136016
DO - 10.1016/j.physletb.2020.136016
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85099502225
SN - 0370-2693
VL - 813
JO - Physics Letters, Section B: Nuclear, Elementary Particle and High-Energy Physics
JF - Physics Letters, Section B: Nuclear, Elementary Particle and High-Energy Physics
M1 - 136016
ER -