{"title":"Common femtoscopic hadron-emission source in pp collisions at the LHC","authors":"ALICE Collaboration","doi":"10.1140/epjc/s10052-025-13793-y","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>The femtoscopic study of pairs of identical pions is particularly suited to investigate the effective source function of particle emission, due to the resulting Bose–Einstein correlation signal. In small collision systems at the LHC, pp in particular, the majority of the pions are produced in resonance decays, which significantly affect the profile and size of the source. In this work, we explicitly model this effect in order to extract the primordial source in pp collisions at <span>\\(\\sqrt{s}~=~13\\)</span> TeV from charged <span>\\(\\uppi \\)</span>–<span>\\(\\uppi \\)</span> correlations measured by ALICE. We demonstrate that the assumption of a Gaussian primordial source is compatible with the data and that the effective source, resulting from modifications due to resonances, is approximately exponential, as found in previous measurements at the LHC. The universality of hadron emission in pp collisions is further investigated by applying the same methodology to characterize the primordial source of <span>\\(\\textrm{K}\\)</span>–<span>\\(\\textrm{p}\\)</span> pairs. The size of the primordial source is evaluated as a function of the transverse mass (<span>\\(m_{\\textrm{T}}\\)</span>) of the pairs, leading to the observation of a common scaling for both <span>\\(\\uppi \\)</span>–<span>\\(\\uppi \\)</span> and <span>\\(\\textrm{K}\\)</span>–<span>\\(\\textrm{p}\\)</span> , suggesting a collective effect. Further, the present results are compatible with the <span>\\(m_{\\textrm{T}}\\)</span> scaling of the <span>\\(\\textrm{p}\\)</span>–<span>\\(\\textrm{p}\\)</span> and p<span>\\(-\\Lambda \\)</span> primordial source measured by ALICE in high multiplicity pp collisions, providing additional evidence for the presence of a common emission source for all hadrons in small collision systems at the LHC. This will allow the determination of the source function for any hadron–hadron pairs with high precision, granting access to the properties of the possible final-state interaction among pairs of less abundantly produced hadrons, such as strange or charmed particles.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":788,"journal":{"name":"The European Physical Journal C","volume":"85 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":4.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1140/epjc/s10052-025-13793-y.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The European Physical Journal C","FirstCategoryId":"4","ListUrlMain":"https://link.springer.com/article/10.1140/epjc/s10052-025-13793-y","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"物理与天体物理","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"PHYSICS, PARTICLES & FIELDS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The femtoscopic study of pairs of identical pions is particularly suited to investigate the effective source function of particle emission, due to the resulting Bose–Einstein correlation signal. In small collision systems at the LHC, pp in particular, the majority of the pions are produced in resonance decays, which significantly affect the profile and size of the source. In this work, we explicitly model this effect in order to extract the primordial source in pp collisions at \(\sqrt{s}~=~13\) TeV from charged \(\uppi \)–\(\uppi \) correlations measured by ALICE. We demonstrate that the assumption of a Gaussian primordial source is compatible with the data and that the effective source, resulting from modifications due to resonances, is approximately exponential, as found in previous measurements at the LHC. The universality of hadron emission in pp collisions is further investigated by applying the same methodology to characterize the primordial source of \(\textrm{K}\)–\(\textrm{p}\) pairs. The size of the primordial source is evaluated as a function of the transverse mass (\(m_{\textrm{T}}\)) of the pairs, leading to the observation of a common scaling for both \(\uppi \)–\(\uppi \) and \(\textrm{K}\)–\(\textrm{p}\) , suggesting a collective effect. Further, the present results are compatible with the \(m_{\textrm{T}}\) scaling of the \(\textrm{p}\)–\(\textrm{p}\) and p\(-\Lambda \) primordial source measured by ALICE in high multiplicity pp collisions, providing additional evidence for the presence of a common emission source for all hadrons in small collision systems at the LHC. This will allow the determination of the source function for any hadron–hadron pairs with high precision, granting access to the properties of the possible final-state interaction among pairs of less abundantly produced hadrons, such as strange or charmed particles.
期刊介绍:
Experimental Physics I: Accelerator Based High-Energy Physics
Hadron and lepton collider physics
Lepton-nucleon scattering
High-energy nuclear reactions
Standard model precision tests
Search for new physics beyond the standard model
Heavy flavour physics
Neutrino properties
Particle detector developments
Computational methods and analysis tools
Experimental Physics II: Astroparticle Physics
Dark matter searches
High-energy cosmic rays
Double beta decay
Long baseline neutrino experiments
Neutrino astronomy
Axions and other weakly interacting light particles
Gravitational waves and observational cosmology
Particle detector developments
Computational methods and analysis tools
Theoretical Physics I: Phenomenology of the Standard Model and Beyond
Electroweak interactions
Quantum chromo dynamics
Heavy quark physics and quark flavour mixing
Neutrino physics
Phenomenology of astro- and cosmoparticle physics
Meson spectroscopy and non-perturbative QCD
Low-energy effective field theories
Lattice field theory
High temperature QCD and heavy ion physics
Phenomenology of supersymmetric extensions of the SM
Phenomenology of non-supersymmetric extensions of the SM
Model building and alternative models of electroweak symmetry breaking
Flavour physics beyond the SM
Computational algorithms and tools...etc.