Comparison of chemical freeze-out criteria in heavy-ion collisions

J. Cleymans, H. Oeschler, K. Redlich, and S. Wheaton
Phys. Rev. C 73, 034905 – Published 13 March 2006

Abstract

One of the most remarkable results to emerge from heavy-ion collisions over the past two decades is the striking regularity shown by particle yields at all energies. This has led to several very successful proposals describing particle yields over a very wide range of beam energies, reaching from 1A GeV up to 200A GeV, using only one or two parameters. A systematic comparison of these proposals is presented here. The conditions of fixed energy per particle, baryon+anti-baryon density, normalized entropy density as well as percolation model are investigated. The results are compared with the most recent chemical freeze-out parameters obtained in the thermal-statistical analysis of particle yields. The sensitivity and dependence of the results on parameters is analyzed and discussed. It is shown that in the energy range above the top energy of the BNL Alternating Gradient Synchrotron within present accuracies, all chemical freeze-out criteria give a fairly good description of the particle yields. However, the low energy heavy-ion data favor the constant energy per particle as a unified condition of chemical particle freeze-out. This condition also shows the weakest sensitivity on model assumptions and parameters.

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  • Received 18 November 2005

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.73.034905

©2006 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

J. Cleymans

  • UCT-CERN Research Centre and Department of Physics, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa

H. Oeschler

  • Darmstadt University of Technology, D-64289 Darmstadt, Germany and UCT-CERN Research Centre and Department of Physics, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa

K. Redlich

  • Institute of Theoretical Physics, University of Wrocław, Pl. Maksa Borna 9, 50-204 Wrocław, Poland and CERN TH, CH 1211 Geneva 23, Switzerland

S. Wheaton

  • UCT-CERN Research Centre and Department of Physics, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa and Darmstadt University of Technology, D-64289 Darmstadt, Germany

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Vol. 73, Iss. 3 — March 2006

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