Investigation of the neutron-proton effective mass splitting via heavy ion collisions: Constraints and Implications

Abstract

The neutron-proton effective mass splitting ( m*np) is investigated through analyses of heavy-ion collisions using the improved quantum molecular dynamics (ImQMD) model with both standard and extended Skyrme interactions. By uncovering the strong correlation between the slope of the neutron-to-proton yield ratio with respect to the kinetic energy (i.e., Sn/p ) and m*np, we reveal that the constraints of the neutron-proton effective mass splitting via heavy ion collisions depend on the kinetic energy region of the emitted nucleons. At low kinetic energies, the data favor mn*>mp* which is consistent with the nucleon-nucleus scattering analysis, while at high kinetic energies, they favor mn*<mp*. Our findings partly resolve the longstanding discrepancy in the constraints of neutron-proton effective mass splitting with heavy ion collisions and nucleon-nucleus scattering, and significantly advance the understanding of nucleon effective mass splitting through heavy ion collisions.

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