Transport-theoretical Description of Nuclear Reactions
O. Buss, T. Gaitanos, K. Gallmeister, H. van Hees, M. Kaskulov, O., Lalakulich, A. B. Larionov, T. Leitner, J. Weil, U. Mosel

TL;DR
This review discusses transport theory, especially the GiBUU model, and its successful application to a wide range of nuclear reactions, emphasizing its versatility and importance in modeling final-state interactions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of transport theory, details the GiBUU implementation, and demonstrates its broad applicability across various nuclear reaction types.
Findings
GiBUU accurately describes diverse nuclear reactions.
The same physics input applies across different reaction types.
GiBUU is essential for studying final-state interactions.
Abstract
In this review we first outline the basics of transport theory and its recent generalization to off-shell transport. We then present in some detail the main ingredients of any transport method using in particular the Giessen Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck (GiBUU) implementation of this theory as an example. We discuss the potentials used, the ground state initialization and the collision term, including the in-medium modifications of the latter. The central part of this review covers applications of GiBUU to a wide class of reactions, starting from pion-induced reactions over proton and antiproton reactions on nuclei to heavy-ion collisions (up to about 30 AGeV). A major part concerns also the description of photon-, electron- and neutrino-induced reactions (in the energy range from a few 100 MeV to a few 100 GeV). For this wide class of reactions GiBUU gives an excellent description with…
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