Examination of background effects on light-nuclei yield ratio in relativistic heavy-ion collisions
Shanjin Wu, Koichi Murase, Shian Tang, Huichao Song

TL;DR
This study investigates how non-critical background effects influence light-nuclei yield ratios in relativistic heavy-ion collisions, finding that certain background effects cancel out in the ratio, supporting its use in critical point searches.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic expansion of light-nuclei yields in phase-space cumulants, showing that second-order cumulants cancel out in generalized ratios, reducing background influence.
Findings
Second-order cumulants cancel in the yield ratio.
Background effects like fireball size and temperature are insignificant in the ratio.
Higher-order cumulants and azimuthal anisotropy significantly affect the yield ratio.
Abstract
The light-nuclei yield ratio is one of the candidates to probe the critical fluctuations of hot QCD matter. In this paper, we investigate the \textit{background effects}, namely the non-critical effects coming from the non-trivial thermal background, on the light-nuclei production within the framework of the coalescence model. Specifically, we analyze the impact of the equilibrium phase-space distribution function of nucleons, , on the light-nuclei yield ratio , where , , and denote triton, proton, and deuteron yields. By considering the characteristic function of the phase-space distribution, we systematically expand the yield of light nuclei of -constituent nucleons, , in terms of the \textit{phase-space cumulants}, . We find that the cumulants up to the second-order are canceled…
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