16 August 2010 to 10 September 2010
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone

Triangular flow in hydrodynamics and transport theory

31 Aug 2010, 14:00
1h
TH Theory Conference Room (CERN)

TH Theory Conference Room

CERN

Speaker

Dr Matthew Luzum (CEA Saclay)

Description

In ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions, the Fourier decomposition of the relative azimuthal angle, $\Delta\phi$, distribution of particle pairs yields a large $\cos (3\Delta\phi)$ component, extending out to large rapidity separations $\Delta \eta>1$. This component captures a significant portion of the ridge and shoulder structures in the $\Delta\phi$ distribution, which have been observed after contributions from elliptic flow are subtracted. An average finite triangularity due to event-by-event fluctuations in the initial matter distribution, followed by collective flow, naturally produces a $\cos (3\Delta\phi)$ correlation. Using ideal and viscous hydrodynamics, and transport theory, we study the physics of triangular ($v_3$) flow in comparison to elliptic ($v_2$), quadrangular ($v_4$) and pentagonal ($v_5$) flow. We make quantitative predictions for $v_3$ at RHIC and LHC as a function of centrality and transverse momentum. Our results for the centrality dependence of $v_3$ show a quantitative agreement with data extracted from previous correlation measurements by the STAR collaboration. This study supports previous results on the importance of triangular flow in the understanding of ridge and shoulder structures. Triangular flow is found to be a sensitive probe of initial geometry fluctuations and viscosity.

Primary author

Dr Matthew Luzum (CEA Saclay)

Presentation materials