Imaging nuclear shape through anisotropic and radial flow in high-energy heavy-ion collisions
STAR Collaboration

TL;DR
This paper uses high-energy heavy-ion collisions to image nuclear shapes, revealing deformation parameters and suggesting octupole deformation in uranium nuclei through flow measurements and hydrodynamic modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to extract nuclear shape parameters from high-energy collision data, including evidence for octupole deformation in uranium nuclei.
Findings
Deformation parameters $eta_2$ and $eta_3$ are extracted consistent with low-energy measurements.
First experimental indication of octupole deformation in $^{238}$U.
Flow observables effectively isolate nuclear shape effects from final-state interactions.
Abstract
Most atomic nuclei exhibit ellipsoidal shapes characterized by quadrupole deformation and triaxiality , and sometimes even a pear-like octupole deformation . The STAR experiment introduced a new "imaging-by-smashing" technique [arXiv:2401.06625, arXiv:2501.16071] to image the nuclear global shape by colliding nuclei at ultra-relativistic speeds and analyzing outgoing debris. Features of nuclear shape manifest in collective observables like anisotropic flow and radial flow via mean transverse momentum . We present new measurements of the variances of (, 3, and 4) and , and the covariance of with , in collisions of highly deformed U and nearly spherical Au. Ratios of these observables between the two systems effectively suppress common final-state effects, isolating…
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