In-medium effects of nucleon-nucleon cross sections in heavy-ion collisions
Shuochong Han, Xinle Shang, Wei Zuo, Gaochan Yong, and Ang Li

TL;DR
This study uses a transport model with microscopic in-medium nucleon-nucleon cross sections to analyze their effects on various observables in heavy-ion collisions, highlighting the importance of multiple medium modifications.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of in-medium effects on nucleon-nucleon cross sections and their impact on collision observables, emphasizing the roles of scattering amplitude, density of states, and momentum dependence.
Findings
Larger in-medium NN cross sections increase nucleon emission and nuclear stopping.
Nuclear stopping is highly sensitive to in-medium modifications.
The n/p ratio and transverse flow difference are largely insensitive to medium effects.
Abstract
Based on the isospin-dependent Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck transport model, we systematically investigate the in-medium effects of nucleon-nucleon () cross sections on nucleonic and pionic observables in heavy-ion collisions, employing microscopic cross sections derived from the Brueckner-Hartree-Fock approach. Key observables include nuclear stopping, the neutron-to-proton () ratio, neutron-proton transverse flow differences, differential collective flow, pion multiplicities, and the resulting ratio. The analysis disentangles the respective contributions from the scattering amplitude, the density of states, and the total momentum () of the colliding pairs. We find that larger in-medium cross sections generally enhance free nucleon emission and nuclear stopping, with the nucleon effective mass playing a dominant suppressive role. However,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-Energy Particle Collisions Research · Nuclear physics research studies · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions
