Influence of the residual magnetic field on the azimuthal distribution of final-state particles in photon-nuclear processes
Zhan Zhang (1), Xin Wu (1), Xinbai Li (1), Wangmei Zha (1), Zebo Tang (1) ((1) State Key Laboratory of Particle Detection, Electronics, University of Science, Technology of China, Hefei, China)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how residual magnetic fields in relativistic heavy-ion collisions influence the azimuthal distribution of low transverse momentum vector mesons, impacting their use as probes of nuclear structure.
Contribution
It introduces a simulation of residual magnetic field effects on photoproduced rho0 mesons, highlighting their impact on azimuthal distributions in peripheral collisions.
Findings
Residual magnetic fields significantly alter rho0 azimuthal distributions in peripheral collisions.
Magnetic deflections can distort measurements of nuclear structure using photoproduction.
Simulations provide insights for future experiments on nuclear geometry.
Abstract
In relativistic heavy-ion collisions, charged particles are accelerated to nearly the speed of light, and their external electromagnetic fields can be effectively approximated as quasi-real photons. These photons interact with another nucleus via photon-nuclear interactions, producing vector mesons. These vector mesons possess extremely low transverse momentum (pT ~ 0.1 GeV/c), distinguishing them from particles produced via hadronic interactions. STAR and ALICE have observed J/psi, rho0 and other vector mesons with very low pT, which are well described by photoproduction models. This unique characteristic of having extremely low transverse momentum allows them to serve as a novel experimental probe. Recent STAR results show that the equivalent photons in photoproduction processes are fully linearly polarized, affecting the azimuthal distribution of final-state particles like rho0 ->…
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