Transport Model Comparison Studies of Intermediate-Energy Heavy-Ion Collisions
Hermann Wolter (1), Maria Colonna (2), Dan Cozma (3), Pawel, Danielewicz (4,5), Che Ming Ko (6), Rohit Kumar (4), Akira Ono (7), ManYee, Betty Tsang (4,5), Jun Xu (8,9), Ying-Xun Zhang (10,11), Elena Bratkovskaya, (12,13), Zhao-Qing Feng (14), Theodoros Gaitanos (15)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the Transport Model Evaluation Project, comparing various transport codes used in heavy-ion collision simulations to assess their consistency, differences, and areas needing improvement.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of 26 transport codes, highlighting systematic differences and suggesting strategies for validation and improvement.
Findings
Box calculations show well-understood differences and convergence.
Systematic differences exist between BUU and QMD code families.
Full collision simulations still yield diverse results, indicating need for further validation.
Abstract
Transport models are the main method to obtain physics information from low to relativistic-energy heavy-ion collisions. The Transport Model Evaluation Project (TMEP) has been pursued to test the robustness of transport model predictions in reaching consistent conclusions from the same type of physical model. Calculations under controlled conditions of physical input and set-up were performed with various participating codes. These included both calculations of nuclear matter in a box with periodic boundary conditions, and more realistic calculations of heavy-ion collisions. In this intermediate review, we summarize and discuss the present status of the project. We also provide condensed descriptions of the 26 participating codes, which contributed to some part of the project. These include the major codes in use today. We review the main results of the studies completed so far. They…
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