Rapidity-dependent eccentricity scaling in relativistic heavy-ion collisions
Abstract
There is a well-established relation between the spatial asymmetry in the initial stage of a heavy-ion collision and the final momentum anisotropy, which allows for a separation of effects from initial conditions vs. later evolution and has proved exceptionally powerful. However, until recently it has only been studied in two dimensions -- either through boost-invariant simulations or studying only quantities at mid-rapidity. We explore an extension to 3 dimensions, in order to determine whether a similar understanding can be obtained for the rapidity dependence of the collision system. In particular, we introduce rapidity-dependent eccentricities and investigate a trivial extension of the 2D eccentricity scaling of elliptic and triangular flow, as well as a way to systematically improve these initial-state estimators. We then explore the dependence of the resulting response coefficients on shear viscosity and initial total energy.
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