Peeling off neutron skins from neutron-rich nuclei: Constraints on the symmetry energy from neutron-removal cross sections
T. Aumann, C.A. Bertulani, F. Schindler, S. Typel

TL;DR
This paper explores how measuring neutron-removal cross sections in high-energy nuclear collisions can constrain the density dependence of the symmetry energy, which is vital for understanding nuclear and astrophysical phenomena.
Contribution
It demonstrates that neutron-removal cross sections can effectively constrain the symmetry energy's slope parameter with high accuracy, reducing model dependence.
Findings
Neutron-removal cross sections are highly sensitive to the neutron skin.
A 2% measurement accuracy can constrain the symmetry energy slope parameter L to ±10 MeV.
Separately measuring inelastic scattering improves model comparison.
Abstract
An experimentally constrained equation of state of neutron-rich matter is fundamental for the physics of nuclei and the astrophysics of neutron stars, mergers, core-collapse supernova explosions and the synthesis of heavy elements. To this end, we investigate the potential of constraining the density dependence of the symmetry energy close to saturation density through measurements of neutron-removal cross sections in high-energy nuclear collisions of a few hundreds MeV/nucleon to GeV/nucleon. We show that the sensitivity of the total neutron-removal cross section is high enough so that the required accuracy can be reached experimentally with the recent developments of new detection techniques. We quantify two crucial points to minimize the model dependence of the approach and to reach the required accuracy: the contribution to the cross section from inelastic scattering has to be…
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