Title: Nonequilibrium dilepton production from hot hadronic matter
1Nonequilibrium dilepton production from hot
hadronic matter
- Björn Schenke and Carsten Greiner
- 22nd Winter Workshop on Nuclear Dynamics
- La Jolla
Phys.Rev.C (in print) hep-ph/0509026
2Outline
- Motivation NA60 off-shell transport
- Realtime formalism for dilepton production in
nonequilibrium - Vector mesons in the medium
- Timescales for medium modifications
- Fireball model and resulting yields
- Brown-Rho-scaling
RESULTS
3Motivation CERES, NA60
Fig.1 J.P.Wessels et al. Nucl.Phys. A715,
262-271 (2003)
4Motivation off-shell transport
medium modifications
thermal equilibrium
(adiabaticity hypothesis)
Time evolution (memory effects) of the spectral
function? Do the full dynamics affect the yields?
We ask
5Greens functions and spectral function
spectral function
Example ?-mesons vacuum spectral function
Mass m770 MeV Width G150 MeV
6Realtime formalism Kadanoff-Baym equations
- Evaluation along Schwinger-Keldysh time contour
- nonequilibrium Dyson-Schwinger equation
with
- Kadanoff-Baym equations are non-local in time ?
memory - effects
7Principal understanding
- Wigner transformation ? phase space distribution
? quantum transport, Boltzmann equation
- noninteracting, homogeneous situation
- interacting, homogeneous equilibrium situation
8Nonequilibrium dilepton rate
This memory integral contains the dynamic
infomation
- From the KB-eq. follows the Fluct. Dissip. Rel.
surface term ? initial conditions
- The retarded / advanced propagators follow
9What we do
?
?
(FDR)
?
(VMD)
?
(FDR)
put in by hand
10In-medium self energy S
- We use a Breit-Wigner to investigate mass-shifts
and broadening - And for coupling to resonance-hole pairs
M. Post et al.
- Spectral function for the
- coupling to the N(1520) resonance
k0
(no broadening)
11History of the rate
- Contribution to rate for fixed energy at
different relative times - From what times in the past do the contributions
come?
12Time evolution - timescales
- Introduce time dependence like
- Fourier transformation leads to
(set and (causal
choice))
e.g. from these differences we retrieve a
timescale
At this point compare
We find a proportionality of the timescale
like , with c2-3.5
?-meson retardation of about 3 fm/c
The behavior of the ? becomes adiabatic on
timescales significantly larger than 3 fm/c
13Quantum effects
- Oscillations and negative rates occur when
changing the self energy quickly compared to the
introduced timescale - For slow and small changes the spectral function
moves rather smoothly into its new shape - Interferences occur
- But yield stays positive
14Dilepton yields mass shifts
Fireball model expanding volume, entropy
conservation ? temperature
m 400 MeV
2x
?t7.5 fm/c
m 770 MeV
T175 MeV ? 120 MeV ?t 7.5 fm/c
15Dilepton yields - resonances
Fireball model expanding volume, entropy
conservation ? temperature
coupling on
?t7.2 fm/c
no coupling
T175 MeV ? 120 MeV ?t 7.2 fm/c
16Dropping mass scenario Brown Rho scaling
- Expanding Firecylinder model for NA60 scenario
- Brown-Rho scaling using
- Yield integrated over momentum
- Modified coupling
TTc ? 120 MeV ?t 6.4 fm/c
3x
B. Schenke and C. Greiner in preparation
17NA60 data
m ? 0 MeV
m 770 MeV
18The ?-meson
m 682 MeV G 40 MeV
?t7.5 fm/c
m 782 MeV G 8.49 MeV
T175 MeV ? 120 MeV ?t 7.5 fm/c
19Summary and Conclusions
- Timescales of retardation are with
c2-3.5 - Quantum mechanical interference-effects,
- yields stay positive
- Differences between yields calculated with full
quantum transport and those calculated assuming
adiabatic behavior. - Memory effects play a crucial role for the exact
treatment of in-medium effects
-