On coalescence as the origin of nuclei in hadronic collisions
Francesca Bellini, Kfir Blum, Alexander Phillip Kalweit, Maximiliano, Puccio

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework linking femtoscopic correlations to nuclear cluster formation in hadronic collisions, providing predictions consistent with experimental data and suggesting new avenues for testing coalescence models.
Contribution
It derives the coalescence--correlation relation from fundamental equations, connecting femtoscopic measurements with cluster spectra in various collision systems.
Findings
Coalescence--correlation relation predicts cluster spectra consistent with data.
The framework applies to hypertriton and other nuclear clusters.
Upcoming experiments can test the coalescence origin hypothesis.
Abstract
The origin of weakly-bound nuclear clusters in hadronic collisions is a key question to be addressed by heavy-ion collision (HIC) experiments. The measured yields of clusters are approximately consistent with expectations from phenomenological statistical hadronisation models (SHMs), but a theoretical understanding of the dynamics of cluster formation prior to kinetic freeze out is lacking. The competing model is nuclear coalescence, which attributes cluster formation to the effect of final state interactions (FSI) during the propagation of the nuclei from kinetic freeze out to the observer. This phenomenon is closely related to the effect of FSI in imprinting femtoscopic correlations between continuum pairs of particles at small relative momentum difference. We give a concise theoretical derivation of the coalescence--correlation relation, predicting nuclear cluster spectra from…
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