TL;DR
This paper evaluates the IP-Jazma model's ability to replicate initial-state correlation effects in small collision systems, questioning some recent findings and exploring implications for saturation physics without assuming hydrodynamic evolution.
Contribution
The paper introduces and tests the IP-Jazma model for saturation physics in small collision systems, providing insights into multiplicity and eccentricity without hydrodynamics.
Findings
Reproduces multiplicity distributions in d+Au collisions at RHIC.
Questions key elements of recent initial-state correlation calculations.
Highlights the need for further analysis of azimuthal anisotropies.
Abstract
Experimental measurements in collisions of small systems from p+p to p/d/3He+A at RHIC and the LHC reveal particle emission patterns that are strikingly similar to those observed in A+A collisions. One explanation of these patterns is the formation of small droplets of quark-gluon plasma followed by hydrodynamic evolution. A geometry engineering program was proposed [1] to investigate these emission patterns, and the experimental data from that program in p+Au, d+Au, 3He+Au collisions for elliptic and triangular anisotropy coefficients v2 and v3 follow the pattern predicted by hydrodynamic calculations [2]. One alternative approach, referred to as initial-state correlations, suggests that for small systems the patterns observed in the final-state hadrons are encoded at the earliest moments of the collision, and therefore require no final-state parton scattering or hydrodynamic evolution…
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