24-26 September 2024
Bogolyubov Institute for Theoretical Physics (Section 1-4), Institute of Mathematics (Section 5)
Europe/Kiev timezone

Chemical freeze-out curve in heavy-ion collisions and the QCD critical point

25 Sep 2024, 16:40
20m
322 (Bogolyubov Institute for Theoretical Physics (Section 1-4), Institute of Mathematics (Section 5))

322

Bogolyubov Institute for Theoretical Physics (Section 1-4), Institute of Mathematics (Section 5)

14-b, Metrolohichna Str., Kyiv, 03143, Ukraine 3, Tereschenkivska Str., Kyiv, 01024, Ukraine
Oral HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS AND NUCLEAR MATTER Afternoon Session 2

Speaker

Artemiy Lysenko (Bogolyubov Institute of Theoretical Physics)

Description

The chemical freeze-out curve in heavy-ion collisions is investigated in the context of QCD critical point (CP) search at finite baryon densities. Taking the hadron resonance gas picture at face value, chemical freeze-out points at a given baryochemical potential provide a lower bound on the possible temperature of the QCD CP. We first verify that the freeze-out data in heavy-ion collisions are well described by a constant energy per particle curve, $E/N = \rm const$, under strangeness neutrality conditions ($\mu_S \neq 0$, $\mu_Q \neq 0$). We then evaluate the hypothetical freeze-out curve based on this criterion in the absence of strangeness neutrality ($\mu_S = 0$, $\mu_Q = 0$) and confront it with recent predictions on the CP location. We find that recent estimates based on Yang-Lee edge singularities from lattice QCD data on coarse lattices place the CP significantly below the freeze-out curve and are thus disfavored by the heavy-ion data. On the other hand, predictions based on functional methods and holography place the CP slightly above the freeze-out curve, indicating that the QCD CP may be located very close to the chemical freeze-out in A+A collisions at $\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 3.5\div5$ GeV.

The report is based on a recently published article: https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.06473

Primary author

Artemiy Lysenko (Bogolyubov Institute of Theoretical Physics)

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