Evolution of mechanism of parton energy loss with transverse momentum at RHIC and LHC in relativistic collision of heavy nuclei
Abstract
We analyze the suppression of particle production at large transverse momenta in (0-5% most) central collisions of gold nuclei at sNN= 200 GeV and lead nuclei at sNN= 2.76 TeV. Full next-to-leading order radiative corrections at O(αs3), and nuclear effects like shadowing and parton energy loss are included. The parton energy loss is implemented in a simple multiple scattering model, where the partons lose an energy ε=λ × dE/dx per collision, where λ is their mean free path. We take ε= E for a treatment which is suggestive of the Bethe Heitler (BH) mechanism of incoherent scatterings, ε = α E for LPM mechanism, and ε= constant for a mechanism which suggests that the rate of energy loss (dE/dx) of the partons is proportional to total path length (L) of the parton in the plasma, as the formation time of the radiated gluon becomes much larger than L. We find that while the BH mechanism describes the nuclear modification factor RAA for pT ≤ 5 GeV/c (especially at RHIC energy), the LPM and more so the constant dE/dx mechanism provides a good description at larger pT. This confirms the earlier expectation that the energy loss mechanism for partons changes from BH to LPM for pT λ <kT2>, where λ ≈ 1 fm and <kT2> ≈ 1 GeV2 is the average transverse kick-squared received by the parton per collision. The energy loss per collision at the sNN =2.76 TeV is found to be about twice of that at 0.2 TeV.