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TECHNOLOGY AND CODE article

Front. Phys., 02 November 2022
Sec. Nuclear Physics​
This article is part of the Research Topic Particle Production and System Evolution in Collisions from GeV to TeV View all 5 articles

DREENA-A framework as a QGP tomography tool

  • 1Laboratory for High-Energy Physics, Institute of Physics Belgrade, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia
  • 2Incubator of Scientific Excellence—Centre for Simulations of Superdense Fluids, University of Wrocław, Wrocław, Poland

QGP tomography aims to constrain the QGP parameters by exploiting both low and high-p theory and data. With this goal in mind, we present a fully optimised framework DREENA-A based on a state-of-the-art energy loss model. The framework can include any, in principle arbitrary, temperature profile within the dynamical energy loss formalism. Thus, “DREENA” stands for Dynamical Radiative and Elastic ENergy loss Approach, while “A” stands for Adaptive. DREENA-A does not adjust parameters within the energy loss model, allowing it to exploit differences in temperature profiles which are the only input in the framework. The framework applies to light and heavy flavor observables, different collision energies, and large and smaller systems. This, together with the ability to systematically compare data and predictions within the same formalism and parameter set, makes DREENA-A a unique multipurpose QGP tomography tool. The provided code allows researchers to use their own QGP evolution models to straightforwardly generate high-p predictions.

1 Introduction

QCD predicted that a new form of matter [1, 2]— consisting of quarks, antiquarks, and gluons that are no longer confined—is created at extremely high energy densities. According to the current cosmology, this new state of matter, called Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) [37], existed immediately after the Big Bang [8]. Today, QGP is created in ‘Little Bangs’, when heavy ions collide at ultra-relativistic energies [5, 6]. Such collisions lead to an expanding fireball of quarks and gluons, which thermalises to form QGP; the QGP then cools down, and when the temperature reaches a critical point, quarks and gluons hadronise.

Successful production of this exotic state of matter at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) allowed systematical testing of different models of QGP evolution against experimental data. Up to now, it has been established that QGP is formed at the LHC and RHIC experiments through two main lines [5, 6, 9] of evidence: 1) by comparison of low momentum (p) measurements with relativistic hydrodynamic predictions, which implied that created QGP is consistent with the description of a nearly perfect fluid [1012], 2) by comparison of high-p data [1317] with pQCD predictions, which showed that high-p partons (jets) significantly interact with an opaque medium. Beyond this discovery phase, the current challenge is to investigate the properties of this extreme form of matter.

While high-p physics had a decisive role in the QGP discovery [5], it was rarely used for understanding the bulk medium properties. On the other hand, low-p observables do not provide stringent constraints to all parameters of the models used to describe the evolution of QGP [1821]. Thus, it is desirable to explore QGP properties through independent theory and data set. We argue that this is provided by jet energy loss and high-p data, complementing the low-p constraints to QGP.

To use high-p theory and data as a QGP tomography tool, it is necessary to have a realistic high-p parton energy loss model. We use our dynamical energy loss formalism, which has the following properties: 1) It is based on finite size, finite temperature field theory [22, 23], and takes into account that QGP constituents are dynamical (moving) particles. Consequently, all divergences are naturally regulated in the model. 2) Both collisional [24] and radiative [25, 26] energy losses are calculated in the same theoretical framework. In radiative energy loss, finite size effects induce a non-linear path length dependence of the energy loss, recovering both the incoherent Gunion Bertsch and destructive Landau-Pomeanchuk-Migdal limit [25, 26]. For collisional energy loss, we show that finite size effects can be neglected [24], i.e., path-length dependence is close to linear. 3) It is applicable to both light and heavy flavors, so it can provide predictions for an extensive set of probes. 4) Temperature is a natural variable in the framework [27], so that the T profiles resulting from bulk medium simulations are a direct input in the model. 5) The non-perturbative effects related to screening of the chromo-magnetic and chromo-electric fields are included [28] through the generalized hard-thermal-loop (HTL) approach. For radiative energy loss, the effective cross-section is handled through sum-rules [29], which allows consistent inclusion of non-perturbative medium-related interactions captured by lattice QCD (see [28] for more details). For collisional energy loss, the nonperturbative effects were included at the leading order through modification of the running coupling, following the procedure from [30] (see [31] for more details). 6) No parameters are adjusted when comparing the dynamical energy loss predictions with high-p data [32, 33], i.e., we use fixed parameter values consistent with other studies (specified in Subsection 2.1). The formalism explained a wide range of high-p data [31, 3437], including puzzling data [37] and generating predictions for future experiments [35]. This suggests that the model realistically describes high-p parton-medium interactions. While other available energy loss models (see e.g. [3848]) have some of the above properties, none have all (or even most of them), making the dynamical energy loss an advanced framework for QGP tomography1. As the temperature is the only input in the energy loss model, this allows further exploiting different temperature profiles that agree with low-p data by testing their agreement with high-p data. Consequently, a systematic comparison of data and predictions obtained by the same formalism and parameter set allows constraining the QGP parameters from both low and high-p theory and data.

Including full medium evolution in the dynamical energy loss is, however, a highly non-trivial task, as all the model properties have to be preserved [49], without additional simplifications in the numerical procedure. Furthermore, to be effectively used as a precision QGP tomography tool, the framework needs to efficiently (timewise) generate a comprehensive set of light and heavy flavor suppression predictions through the same numerical framework and the same parameter set. Such predictions can then be compared with the available experimental data, sometimes even repeatedly (i.e., iteratively)—for different combinations of QGP medium parameters–to extract medium properties that are consistent with both low and high-p data.

To introduce the medium evolution in the dynamical energy loss, we took a step-by-step approach, allowing us to check the consistency of each consecutive step by comparing its results with the previous (simpler) framework versions. Consequently, we first developed the DREENA-C framework [50] (‘C’ stands for constant temperature), continuing to DREENA-B [51] (‘B’ stands for Bjorken expansion). In this manuscript, we present a fully optimised DREENA-A framework, where ‘A’ stands for ‘adaptive’ (i.e., arbitrary) temperature evolution. The convergence speed of the developed numerical procedure is analysed, as well as consistency with other (earlier) versions of the framework, as necessary for the reliable and efficient QGP tomography tool. Finally, as a utility check of the DREENA-A framework, the sensitivity of high-p observables to different temperature profiles is presented.

The link to the software code implementing the DREENA-A framework (with usage instructions and example data) is provided at https://github.com/DusanZigic/DREENA-A. Using this software, researchers can generate high-p predictions for their own (different) models of medium evolution and compare the results with experimental data.

2 Methods

2.1 Theoretical outline

The calculation of the final hadron spectrum includes initial high-p parton (quark and gluon) distributions from perturbative QCD, energy loss (if the QCD medium is formed), and fragmentation into hadrons. The cross section for quenched spectra is schematically written as [52, 53]:

Efd3σqHQdpf3=Eid3σQdpi3PEiEfDQHQ,(1)

where ⊗ is a generic convolution, and the change in the initial spectra due to energy loss in QGP is denoted P (EiEf). If the medium is not created, then Eq. 1 reduces to cross section for unquenched spectra

Efd3σuHQdpf3=Eid3σQdpi3DQHQ.(2)

More specifically, Efd3σq(HQ)dpf3 is the final hadron spectrum in the presence of QGP, while Efd3σu(HQ)dpf3 is the spectrum in the absence of QGP. ‘i’ and ‘f’ correspond to ‘initial’ and ‘final’, respectively. Q denotes quarks and gluons, while HQ denotes hadrons. Initial parton spectrum is denoted by Eid3σ(Q)/dpi3, and computed at next to leading order [5456] for light and heavy partons. P (EiEf) is the probability for energy transfer, which includes medium induced radiative [25, 26] and collisional [24] contributions in a finite size dynamical QCD medium with running coupling [31]. Both contributions include multi-gluon fluctuations, introduced according to Refs. [31, 57] for radiative and [52, 58] for collisional energy loss (for more details, see below). Q to hadron HQ fragmentation is denoted by D (QHQ). For charged hadrons we use DSS [59], for D mesons BCFY [60, 61] and for B mesons KLP [62] fragmentation functions, respectively.

In DREENA-A, the medium temperature needed to calculate P (EiEf) depends on the position of the parton according to a temperature profile given as an input. Therefore, the temperature that the parton experiences along its path, becomes a function of the coordinates of its origin (x0, y0), the angle of its trajectory ϕ, and the proper time τ:

Tx0,y0,ϕ,τ=Tprofilex0+τcosϕ,y0+τsinϕ,τ,(3)

where Tprofile is, in principle, arbitrary. This temperature then appears in the expressions below.

The collisional energy loss is given by the following analytical expression [51]:

dEcoldτ=2CRπv2αSETαSμE2T×0neq|k|,Td|k|0|k|/1+vd|q|v|q|v|q|ωdω+|k|/1+v|q|maxd|q||q|2|k|v|q|ωdω×|ΔLq,T|22|k|+ω2|q|22+|ΔTq,T|2|q|2ω22|k|+ω2+|q|24|q|4v2|q|2ω2.(4)

Here we used the following notation: k is the 4-momentum of the incoming medium parton; T is the current temperature along the path, given by Eq. 3; neq(|k|,T)=Ne|k|/T1+Nfe|k|/T+1 is the equilibrium momentum distribution [63] at temperature T including quarks and gluons. N = 3 and Nf represent, respectively, the number of colors and flavors, where we assume Nf = 3 for the LHC and Nf = 2.5 for RHIC; q=(ω,q) is the 4-momentum of the exchanged gluon; E2 = p2 + M2 denotes the initial jet energy, p is the jet momentum, while M is the mass (specified below) of the quark or gluon jet; v=p/p2+M2 denotes velocity of the incoming jet; CR=43 for quark jet and three for gluon jet; ΔL(T) and ΔT(T) are effective longitudinal and transverse gluon propagators [64, 65], while the electric screening (the Debye mass) μE(T) is obtained by self-consistently solving the expression from [66] (ΛQCD is perturbative QCD scale):

μET2ΛQCD2lnμET2ΛQCD2=1+Nf/6112/3Nf4πTΛQCD2.(5)

Note that such solution leads to the Debye mass consistent with lattice QCD results [66, 67].

Running coupling αS (Q2) is defined as [68].

αSQ2=4π112/3NflnQ2/ΛQCD2,(6)

where, in the collisional energy loss case, the coupling appears through the term αS2 [24], which can be factorised to αS(μE2)αS(ET) [30] (see also [31]).

The radiation spectrum [51] is:

d2Nraddxdτ=d2kπd2qπ2CRC2GTxμET2μMT2q2+μMT2q2+μET2αSETαSk2+χTxπ×k+qk+q2+χT1cosk+q2+χTxE+pzτk+qk+q2+χTkk2+χT.(7)

Here C2(G) = 3; χ(T) ≡ M2x2 + mg(T)2, where x is the longitudinal momentum fraction of the jet carried away by the emitted gluon, pz is longitudinal component of initial jet momentum, and mg(T)=μE(T)/2 is the effective gluon mass in finite temperature QCD medium [69], where μE(T) is Debye mass defined above; M = 1.3 GeV for charm, 4.5 GeV for bottom [5456, 70, 71] and μE(T)/6 for light quarks (where thermal mass originates from gluon propagators); μM(T) is magnetic screening, where different non-perturbative approaches suggest 0.4 < μM(T)/μE(T) < 0.6 [67, 72]; q and k are transverse momenta of exchanged (virtual) and radiated gluon, respectively. Qk2=k2+χ(T)x in αS(k2+χ(T)x) corresponds to the off-shellness of the jet prior to the gluon radiation [25]. Note that, all αS terms in Eqs 4, 7 are infrared safe (and moreover of a moderate value) [31]. Thus, contrary to majority of other approaches, we do not need to introduce a cut-off in αS (Q2).

We further assume that radiative and collisional energy losses can be separately treated in P (EiEf), i.e., jet quenching is performed via two independent branching processes [31, 52]. We first calculate the modification of the quark and gluon spectrum due to radiative energy loss, then collisional energy loss (we checked that change of order is unimportant within our model). This is a reasonable approximation when the radiative and collisional energy losses can be considered small (which is in the essence of the soft-gluon, soft-rescattering approximation widely used in energy loss calculations) and when radiative and collisional energy loss processes are decoupled, as is the case in the generalized HTL approach [73] used in our energy loss calculations.

To obtain the radiative energy loss contribution to the suppression [57], we start with Eq. 7 and, for a given trajectory, we first compute the mean number of gluons emitted due to induced radiation (further denoted as N̄tr(E)), as well as the mean number of gluons emitted per fractional energy loss x (i.e., dN̄tr(E)dx, for compactness further denoted as N̄tr(E,x)):

N̄trE=trd2Nraddxdτdxdτ,N̄trE,x=trd2Nraddxdτdτ,(8)

where the subscript tr indicates that the value depends on the trajectory. Radiative energy loss suppression takes multi-gluon fluctuations into account, where we assume that the fluctuations of gluon number are uncorrelated. Such assumption is reasonable, as Ref. [74] studied full splitting cascade and found that independent branchings reasonably well approximate a full branching. The radiative energy loss probability can then be expressed via Poisson expansion [31, 57]:

PradtrEiEf=δEiEfeN̄trEi+N̄trEi,1EfEiEieN̄trEi++n=2eN̄trEin!Eidx1dxnN̄trEi,x1N̄trEi,xn1N̄trEi,1EfEix1xn1.(9)

Ei and Ef are initial and final jet energy (before and after) radiative process.

To calculate the parton spectrum after radiative energy loss, we apply

Ef,Rd3σdpf,R3=Eid3σQdpi3PradtrEiEf,R,(10)

where the final spectra is obtained after integrating over pi > pf,R.

To find collisional energy loss contribution, Eq. 4 is first integrated over the given trajectory:

ĒcoltrE=trdEcoldτdτ.(11)

For collisional energy loss, the full fluctuation spectrum is approximated by a Gaussian centered at the average energy loss Ēcoltr(E) [52, 58].

PcoltrEi,Ef=12πσcoltrEiexpEiEfĒcoltrEi22σcoltrEi2,(12)

with a variance

σcoltrE=2Ttr̄ĒcoltrE,(13)

where Ttr̄ is the average temperature along the trajectory, Ei and Ef are initial and final energy (before and after collisional processes).

To calculate the quenched hadron spectrum after collisional energy loss, we apply

Efd3σqHQdpf3=Ei,Cd3σQdpi,C3PcoltrEi,CEfDQHQ,(14)

where we assume Ei,C = Ef,R, i.e. the final jet energy after radiative quenching corresponds to the initial jet energy for collisional quenching. Since both collisional energy loss and gain contribute to the final spectra [24, 52], both Ei,C > Ef and Ei,C < Ef have to be taken into account in Eq. 14. Finally, the hadron suppression RAAtr(pf,HQ) for the single trajectory, after radiative and collisional energy loss, is equal to the ratio of quenched and unquenched momentum spectra

RAAtrpf,HQ=Efd3σqHQdpf3Efd3σuHQdpf3,(15)

where Efd3σu(HQ)dpf3 is given by Eq. 2. RAAtr(pf,HQ) then needs to be averaged over trajectories with the same direction angle ϕ to obtain the suppression as a function of angle, RAA (pf, ϕ, HQ). This is an important intermediary step since, depending on the details of QGP temperature evolution and the spatial variations in the temperature profile, energy loss may significantly depend on the parton’s direction of motion2. Once we have calculated RAA (pf, ϕ, HQ), we can easily evaluate RAA and v2 observables as [75] (we here omit HQ in the expressions, and denote pf = p)3:

RAAp=12π02πRAAp,ϕdϕ,(16)
v2p=12π02πcos2ϕRAAp,ϕdϕRAAp.(17)

While the general expressions of the dynamical energy loss formalism are the same as in the DREENA-B framework [51], the fact that, in DREENA-A, the temperature entering the Eqs 47 explicitly depends on the current parton position, notably complicates the implementation of these formulas, as we discuss in the following section.

2.2 Framework outline

Our previous DREENA-C and DREENA-B frameworks were based on computationally useful, but rough, approximations of the medium evolution: while in DREENA-C, there was no evolution, and the temperature remained constant both in time and along spatial dimensions, in DREENA-B, the medium was assumed to evolve according to 1D Bjorken approximation [76]. Due to these approximations, parton energy loss depended on its path length independently of its direction or production point. This allowed to analytically integrate energy-loss formulas to a significant extent, which notably reduced the number of required numerical integrations. Furthermore RAA only needed to be averaged out over precalculated path-length distributions. Thus, these approximations of the medium evolution straightforwardly led to efficient computational algorithms for DREENA-C and DREENA-B.

DREENA-A framework, on the other hand, addresses fully general medium dynamics, with arbitrary spatio-temporal temperature distribution. The main input to the algorithm is the temperature profile Tprofile given as a three-dimensional matrix of temperature values at points with coordinates (x, y, τ) (in the input file, the values should be arranged in an array of quartets of the form (τ, x, y, Tprofile), and the lowest value of τ appearing in the data is taken to be τ0). In addition to the temperature profile, the DREENA-A algorithm also takes, as inputs, the initial parton p distributions d2σdp2 (each as an array of (p,d2σdp2) pairs) and the jet production probability distribution (as a matrix of probability density values in the transversal plane, formatted analogously as the profile temperature values). This level of generality requires a different approach than in previous frameworks. Since the DREENA-A algorithm takes arbitrary medium temperature evolution as the input, the energy loss has to be individually calculated for each parton trajectory.

This means that for each trajectory–given by the coordinates x0 and y0 of the parton origin (in the transversal plane) and the direction angle ϕ–we must first numerically evaluate integrals (8) and (11). Since the current parton position–for a given trajectory–becomes a function of the proper time τ, integrands in Eqs 8, 11 also become functions of τ, either through an explicit dependence, or via position and time dependent medium temperature (3). We numerically integrate these functions along the trajectory (parametrized by τ as x = x0 + τ cos ϕ, y = y0 + τ sin ϕ), starting from the origin at (x0, y0) and moving in small integration steps along the direction ϕ (in practice, 0.1 fm step is sufficiently small for most of the profiles). The integration is terminated when the medium temperature at the current parton’s position drops below Tc = 155 MeV [77], i.e., when the parton leaves the QGP phase. Also, we approximate that there are no energy losses before the initial time τ0 (which is a parameter of the temperature profile evolution) and thus the first part of the trajectory, corresponding to τ < τ0, is effectively skipped (i.e., τ0 is taken as the lower limit of integration in Eqs 8, 11).

Once we, for a given trajectory, compute the integrals (8) and (11), we then perform the rest of procedure laid out by Eqs 815. Most of the computation time is spent on numerical integrations, in particular for evaluating integrals in Eqs 9, 10. While, in principle, n in Eq. 9, in practice we show that n = 5 is sufficient for convergence in the case of quark jets, while for gluon jets n = 7 is needed. In general, the Quasi-Monte Carlo integration method turned out to be the most efficient and is used for all these integrals (as quasirandom numbers, we use precalculated and stored Halton sequences). The result of the integration (15) is the final hadron suppression RAAtr(p,HQ) for the jet moving along the chosen trajectory, given as the function of its transversal momentum.

To obtain RAA (p, ϕ, HQ), we have to average this result over all production points (taking into account the provided jet production probability distribution) and repeat the procedure for many angles ϕ. In practice, this means that we must evaluate energy loss along a very large number of trajectories. This has significantly increased the computational complexity of the problem compared to DREENA-C and DREENA-B and required a number of optimisations.

2.3 Numerical optimisation of DREENA-A

We started by adapting optimisation methods that we successfully implemented in earlier versions. One useful approach was a tabulation and consequent interpolation of values for computationally expensive functions. In particular, this is crucial for the complicated integrals (4–7): while a two dimensional array is sufficient to tabulate dEcoldτ (which is a function of T and p), values of d2Nraddxdτ (depending on τ, T, p and x) must be stored in a four-dimensional array. Tabulating such functions is done adaptively, with the density of evaluated points varying, depending on the function behaviour (i.e., using a denser grid where the functions change rapidly and sparser where the behaviour is smooth). In the case of these two functions, not only that the consequent interpolation can significantly reduce the overall number of integral evaluations, but the corresponding tables (for each particle type) can be evaluated only once and then permanently stored and reused for all trajectories and even for different temperature profiles. To further optimise the algorithm, we also precalculate the integral d2Nraddxdτdx values and store a corresponding three-dimensional array (since it is a function of τ, T, and p).

When using this table-interpolation method, it is often necessary to make a function transformation before tabulation: e.g., it is more efficient and accurate to sample and later interpolate logarithm of a rapidly (nearly or approximately-exponentially) increasing function than the function itself (similarly, it is sometimes more optimal to tabulate ratio, or a product of functions than each of the functions separately). For example, it is much more optimal to tabulate and consecutively interpolate RAAs (and other similarly behaving expressions) than the corresponding momentum distributions. This methodology is now extensively applied throughout DREENA-A (from some intermediate-level energy loss results to evaluating multi-dimensional integrals in the calculation of radiated gluon rates). Given the size of some of these tables and that many interpolations are needed, we ensured that the table lookup and interpolation algorithm are efficient.

As we encounter multiple numerical integrations at different stages of the computation, modifying their order was another type of optimisation, where the natural order (from the theoretical viewpoint) is not necessarily followed but is instead adapted to the particular function behaviour. Specifically, it turned out that a different order of integration (for radiative contribution) is optimal for heavy flavor particles compared to gluons. I.e., while it is natural, from the physical perspective, to start with the initial momentum distributions of partons and integrate over the radiative energy loss (see Eqs 9 and 10), it turned out that (for heavy flavors) the shape of the initial distributions necessitates a very high number of integration points to achieve the required computation precision. Reorganising the formulas and postponing the integration over initial distributions to the very end turned much more computationally optimal for heavy flavor. A similar procedure in the case of light quarks allowed much of the integration to be carried out jointly for all quarks, since their effective masses are the same, but initial p distributions differ.

The crucial optimisation in DREENA-A is the method used for averaging over the particle trajectories. In suppression calculations, it is common to carry out the averaging over production points and directions by Monte Carlo (MC) sampling, but it turned out that the equidistant sampling of both jet production points and direction angles was here significantly more efficient. We initially implemented the Monte Carlo approach, randomly selecting both the origin coordinates and the angles of particle trajectories. The binary collision density was used as the probability density for coordinates of origins, while the angles were generated from a uniform distribution. Convergence of the results by using this method required a large number of sampled trajectories, as illustrated in Figure 1. The figure shows RAA and v2 results obtained by the DREENA-A algorithm for a different total number of trajectories (the computation was done for D meson traversing the temperature evolution generated using a Glauber initialised viscous hydrodynamic code [78], at 30–40% centrality class). The plots in the right column of Figure 1 show the magnitude of the deviation of the particular curve from the median curve, where the latter is the arithmetic mean of all curves in the plot (as the measure of deviation of a function f(p) from a reference function f̄(p) we use |δf|=|f(p)f̄(p)|dp|f̄(p)|dp). We see that RAA convergence is easily achieved, where relative deviations of the order of 1% are obtained by taking into account only 2,500 trajectories (see Figure 1-A and Figure 1-A*). Computing the v2 value requires much more trajectories, i.e., we see a substantial scattering of the Monte Carlo results with 2,500 trajectories, while 106 trajectories are needed to reduce relative deviation below 1%. Note that a small number of sampled trajectories also causes a systematic error: the smaller the number of trajectories, the lower the averaged v2.

FIGURE 1
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FIGURE 1. D meson RAA (left) and v2 (middle) at 30–40% centrality computed using different numbers of randomly generated trajectories (Monte Carlo approach), together with their deviations (right, scaled 1-norm was used as a metric) from the results averaged over the same ensemble of trajectories. The dashed horizontal line in rightmost panels indicates the threshold of 1% deviation. The top row depicts results obtained from sampling 25 trajectories at different angles originating from each of 100 randomly selected jet-production points; the middle row—50 angles from 1,000 points; the bottom row—100 angles from 10,000 points. Each panel shows the results of eight repeated computations (each with an independent ensemble of randomly generated trajectories), the dashed line representing the mean. M = 1.2 GeV. We use a single value μM/μE = 0.5 [67, 72] to make the figure clearer.

When using the equidistant sampling method instead of Monte Carlo, we divide the transverse plane into an equidistant grid, whose points are used as jet origins. Energy loss for each trajectory is then weighted with the jet production probability at each point, and summed up. As production probability, we used the binary collision density evaluated using the optical Glauber model. In Figure 2, we see that, for already ∼ 10.000 evaluated trajectories, the integral has converged within 1% of the estimated ‘proper’ value. This modification resulted in a more than two orders of magnitude reduction of the execution time. We also tested two hybrid variants: 1) where trajectory origins were randomly selected but directions equidistantly, and 2) where production points were equidistantly selected, but directions randomly sampled. The convergence of the two variants interpolated between the MC sampling and the equidistant sampling (Figures 1, 2, respectively).

FIGURE 2
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FIGURE 2. D meson RAA (left) and v2 (middle) at 30–40% centrality computed using different numbers of trajectories originating from equidistant points. Results are labeled by numbers nϕ × (nx × ny): jet directions are along nϕ uniformly distributed angles (from 0 to 2π) originating from each point of the nx-by-ny equidistant grid in the transversal plane. Deviation of each line from the baseline result (chosen as the outcome for 100 × (150 × 150) trajectories, dashed line) is shown in right panels. M = 1.2 GeV, μM/μE = 0.5.

2.4 Convergence test of different DREENA methods

Finally, as a consistency check for DREENA-A, we compared its predictions with DREENA-C and DREENA-B results. For this purpose, we generated artificial T profiles suitable for this comparison, illustrated in Figure 3. The results of the DREENA-A and DREENA-B comparison, for RAA and v2, are shown in the upper panels of Figure 4, respectively. Lower panels of Figure 4 show the comparison of all three frameworks on the hard-cylinder collision profile constant in time (for this comparison, we modified the DREENA-B code to remove temperature dependence on time). We see that all frameworks lead to consistent results (up to computational precision), supporting the reliability of the DREENA-A.

FIGURE 3
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FIGURE 3. Temperature distribution (Pb + Pb collision, 30–40% centrality, mid-rapidity) for constant temperature [50] (A) and 1D Bjorken evolution [51] (B), at time (from left to right) τ = τ0, 3, and five fm/c, represented by colour mapping. For constant temperature approximation, τ0 = 0 fm. For 1D Bjorken approximation, τ0 = 0.6 fm.

FIGURE 4
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FIGURE 4. Comparison of different DREENA frameworks, for Bjorken medium evolution (A) and for constant medium temperature approximation (B), demonstrating inter-framework consistency. (A) show D meson RAA (left) and v2 (right) at 30–40% centrality computed using DREENA-A (supplied with temperature profiles representing Bjorken evolution) and DREENA-B. (B) show the same observables, computed using all three DREENA frameworks, when applied to the same constant temperature medium. M = 1.2 GeV, μM/μE = 0.5.

3 Results and discussion

To demostrate the utility of the DREENA-A approach, we generated temperature profiles for Pb + Pb collisions at the full LHC energy (sNN=5.02 TeV) and Au + Au collisions at the full RHIC energy (sNN=200 GeV) using three different initialisations of the fluid-dynamical expansion.

First, we used optical Glauber initialisation at initial time τ0 = 1.0 fm without initial transverse flow. The evolution of the fluid was calculated using a 3+1D viscous fluid code from Ref. [78]. The parameters to describe collisions at the LHC energy were tuned to reproduce the low-p data obtained in Pb + Pb collisions at sNN=5.02 TeV [32]. In particular, shear viscosity over entropy density ratio was constant η/s = 0.12, there was no bulk viscosity, and the equation of state (EoS) parametrisation was s95p-PCE-v1 [79]. For RHIC energy we used ‘LH-LQ’ parameters from Ref. [78], except that we used constant η/s = 0.16. Binary collision density from Glauber model was used as the probability distribution for the initial points of jets, while their directions were sampled from a uniform angular distribution.

Second, we used the EKRT initialisation [8082], and evolved it using the same code we used to evolve the Glauber initialisation, but restricted to a boost-invariant expansion. In this case, the initial time was τ0 = 0.2 fm, and parameters were the favoured values of a Bayesian analysis of the data from Pb + Pb collisions at sNN=2.76 and 5.02 GeV, and from Au + Au collisions at sNN=200 GeV using the EoS parametrisation s83s18 [19]. In particular, there was no bulk viscosity and the minimum value of temperature-dependent η/s was 0.18. Origins of the high-p particles were sampled using the binary collision density of Glauber model, while the distribution of their directions was uniform.

Our third option was the TRENTo initialisation [83] evolved using the VISH2+1 code [84] as described in [85, 86]. To describe collisions at LHC, parameters were based on a Bayesian analysis of the data at the above mentioned two LHC collision energies [86], although the analysis was done event-by-event, whereas we carried out the calculations using simple event-averaged initial states. In particular, the calculation included free streaming stage until τ0 = 1.16 fm, EoS based on the lattice results by the HotQCD collaboration [77], and temperature-dependent shear and bulk viscosity coefficients with the minimum value of (η/s)min = 0.081 and maximum of (ζ/s)max = 0.052. For RHIC, we used the “PTB” maximum a posteriori parameter values from Ref. [87], but changed the temperature-dependent shear viscosity coefficient (η/s) (T) to a constant η/s = 0.16. The initial event-by-event collision points were used to generate the spatial probability distribution for the initial coordinates of the high-p particles, while their angular distribution was uniform.

All these calculations lead to an acceptable fit to measured charged hadron multiplicities, low-p spectra, and p-differential v2 in 10–20%, 20–30%, 30–40%, and 40–50% centrality classes. As we may expect, different initialisations and initial times lead to a visibly different temperature evolution. This is demonstrated in Figure 5 where we show the calculated temperature distributions in collisions at the LHC energy at various times. Looking at the profiles, it is easily noticeable that they evolve differently in space and time. Even if the initial anisotropy of the Glauber initialisation is lowest, later in time, its anisotropy is largest, since the very early start of EKRT initialisation, or the early free streaming of TRENTo, dilute the spatial anisotropy very fast. That is, “Glauber” exhibits larger asymmetry throughout the QGP evolution compared to the other two profiles (though “EKRT” has larger asymmetry than “Trento”), which might accordingly translate to differences in high-p v2. Similarly, the early start of EKRT leads to a large initial temperature, which is expected to result in a smaller RAA than the other two profiles.

FIGURE 5
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FIGURE 5. Temperature distribution (Pb + Pb collision, 30–40% centrality, mid-rapidity) for different medium evolution models, at time (from left to right) τ = τ0, 2, 3, 4 and five fm/c, represented by colour mapping. First row: “Glauber”, τ0 = 1 fm; second row: “EKRT”, τ0 = 0.2 fm; third row: “TRENTo”, τ0 = 1.16 fm. Note that distributions in the first column correspond to different times.

To test if these visual differences can be quantified through high-p data at the LHC and RHIC, we used these profiles as an input to the DREENA-A to generate high-p RAA and v2 predictions for charged hadrons, D and B mesons. As can be seen in Figures 6, 7, both RAA and v2 show notable differences for both experiments and all types of flavor. For example, “EKRT” leads to the smallest RAA, i.e., largest suppression, as can be expected based on the largest temperature. Similarly, the calculated high-p v2 depicts the same ordering as the system anisotropy during the evolution: “Glauber” leads to the largest, followed by “EKRT”, while TRENTo leads to the lowest v2. Consequently, the DREENA-A framework can differentiate between temperature profiles by corresponding differences in high-p observables, where these differences agree with the qualitative observations from Figure 5. Since the differences in evolution are due to different initialisations, and different properties of the fluid (EoS and/or dissipative coefficients), RAA and v2 observables can be used to provide further constraints to the fluid properties. We note here that even low-p data could be used to differentiate our three evolution scenarios, but such analysis would require evaluating χ2 or a similar measure of the quality of the fit, or computing Bayes factors [87]. The high-p observables, on the other hand, show clear differences visible by the naked eye.

FIGURE 6
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FIGURE 6. DREENA-A RAA (top panels) and v2 (bottom panels) predictions in Pb + Pb collisions at sNN=5.02 TeV are generated for different models of QGP medium evolution (indicated in the legend). Charged hadron (A) predictions are generated for 30–40% centrality, while D (B) and B (C) meson predictions are generated for 30–50% centrality region. For charged hadrons, the predictions are compared with the experimental data from CMS [88, 89], ALICE [90, 91] and ATLAS [92, 93]. For D mesons, the predictions are compared with ALICE [94, 95] and CMS [96] data. For B mesons predictions are compared with preliminary ALICE [97] and CMS [98]. The boundary of each gray band corresponds to 0.4 < μM/μE < 0.6 [67, 72].

FIGURE 7
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FIGURE 7. DREENA-A RAA (top panels) and v2 (bottom panels) predictions in Au + Au collisions at sNN=200 GeV are generated for different models of QGP medium evolution (indicated in the legend). Charged hadron (A), D meson (B) and B meson (C) predictions are generated for 20–30% centrality region. The h± predictions are compared with π0 data from PHENIX [99, 100] and h± data from STAR [101, 102] - note that for v2 10–40% centrality data is shown for STAR. For D mesons, the predictions are compared with STAR [103, 104] data at 10–40% centrality and with PHENIX [105] data at 20–40%. B mesons predictions are compared with PHENIX [105] data at 20–40%. The boundary of each gray band corresponds to 0.4 < μM/μE < 0.6 [67, 72].

Moreover, from Figures 6, 7, we see that all types of flavor, at both RHIC and LHC, show apparent sensitivity to differences in medium evolution, making them equally suitable for exploring the bulk QGP properties with high-p data. With the expected availability of precision data from the upcoming high-luminosity experiments at RHIC and LHC (see e.g. [106108]), the DREENA-A framework provides a unique opportunity for exploring the bulk QGP properties. We propose that the adequate medium evolution should be able to reproduce high-p observables in both RHIC and LHC experiments for different collision energies and collision systems, with reasonable accuracy. As demonstrated in this study, an equal emphasis should be given to light and heavy flavor, as they provide a valuable independent constraint for bulk medium evolution. Overall, DREENA-A provides a versatile tool to put large amounts of data generated at RHIC and LHC experiments to optimal use.

We also observe that none of the profiles analysed in Figures 6, 7 lead to satisfactory agreement with high-p RAA and v2 data. However, we note that the goal of this study is not to get a good agreement with the experimental data, but to demonstrate that 1) different temperature profiles lead to different high-p predictions, 2) high-p data can provide an important further constraint in exploring the QGP properties. Finding suitable temperature profiles (i.e., QGP parameters) that would lead to a reasonable agreement with high-p data is a highly non-trivial task which is left for further work.

4 Summary

We presented the DREENA-A computational framework for tomography of Quark-Gluon Plasma created in heavy-ion collisions at RHIC and the LHC. The tool is based on state-of-the-art energy loss calculation and can include arbitrary temperature profiles. This feature allows fully exploiting different temperature profiles as the only input in the framework. We showed that the calculated high-p RAA and v2 exhibit notable sensitivity to the details of the temperature profiles, consistent with intuitive expectations based on the profile visualisation. The DREENA-A framework applies to different types of flavor, collision systems, and collision energies. It can, consequently, provide an efficient and versatile QGP tomography tool for further constraining the bulk properties of this extreme form of matter. To facilitate this, we also provided the fully optimized, publicly available software for generating DREENA-A predictions. The code allows straightforwardly generating high-p predictions for diverse models of QGP evolution.

Data availability statement

The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author. The source code of the DREENA-A algorithm (together with usage instructions and example data), can be found at https://github.com/DusanZigic/DREENA-A.

Author contributions

All authors listed have made a substantial, direct, and intellectual contribution to the work and approved it for publication.

Funding

This work is supported by the European Research Council, grant ERC-2016-COG: 725741, and by the Ministry of Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia. PH was also supported by the program Excellence Initiative–Research University of the University of Wrocław of the Ministry of Education and Science.

Acknowledgments

We thank Marko Djordjevic, Bojana Ilic, and Stefan Stojku for useful discussions.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher’s note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

Footnotes

1While it is challenging to implement further improvements into the analytical calculations while keeping all existing ingredients, some possible directions for advances include, e.g., flow velocity of the bulk medium and transverse gradients of temperature and density (see e.g. [4548]).

2In earlier DREENA frameworks, this dependence was also present but was solely a consequence of the path-length distribution dependence on the angle.

3Note that, in Eq. 17, using RAA(p, ϕ), instead of the hadron p spectrum, is computationally more efficient since RAA(p, ϕ) is a well-behaved function, and the number of p points where we need to evaluate RAA(p, ϕ) is significantly smaller.

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Keywords: relativistic heavy ion collisions, quark-gluon plasma, QGP tomography, predictions for high-p observables, light and heavy flavor

Citation: Zigic D, Salom I, Auvinen J, Huovinen P and Djordjevic M (2022) DREENA-A framework as a QGP tomography tool. Front. Phys. 10:957019. doi: 10.3389/fphy.2022.957019

Received: 30 May 2022; Accepted: 03 October 2022;
Published: 02 November 2022.

Edited by:

Andrea Beraudo, National Institute of Nuclear Physics of Turin, Italy

Reviewed by:

Plumari Salvatore, University of Catania, Italy
Ralf Rapp, Texas A&M University, United States

Copyright © 2022 Zigic, Salom, Auvinen, Huovinen and Djordjevic. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Magdalena Djordjevic, magda@ipb.ac.rs

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