Boson Interferometry in High Energy Physics
Richard M. Weiner

TL;DR
This paper reviews how Bose-Einstein correlations (BEC) serve as a key experimental tool for probing source sizes, lifetimes, and quantum coherence in high energy physics, with implications for understanding strong interactions and quark matter.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of recent theoretical developments in BEC and their applications in high energy and heavy-ion collision experiments.
Findings
Comparison of wave-function and space-time approaches to BEC
Analysis of final state interactions in BEC
Application of hydrodynamics to particle correlations
Abstract
Intensity interferometry and in particular that due to Bose Einstein correlations (BEC) constitutes at present the only direct experimental method for the determination of sizes and lifetimes of sources in particle and nuclear physics. The measurement of these is essential for an understanding of the dynamics of strong interactions which are responsible for the existence and properties of atomic nuclei. Moreover a new state of matter, quark matter, in which the ultimate constituents of matter move freely, is within the reach of present accelerators or those under construction. The confirmation of the existence of this new state is intimately linked with the determination of its space-time properties. Furthermore BEC provides information about quantum coherence which lies at the basis of the phenomenon of Bose-Einstein condensation seen in many chapters of physics. Coherence and the…
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