1. Introduction
In recent years Bose-Einstein (BEC) and Fermi-Dirac (FDC) correlations [
1] have been extensively studied mainly with identical pion pairs produced in lepton-lepton and hadron-hadron reactions, as well as in heavy ion (AA) collisions. In the one-dimension (1D) correlation analyses of pion and hadron pairs it was found that the resulting
R dimension depends on the particle mass and found to be proportional to 1/
where
m is the mass of the correlated particles (See e.g., Ref. [
2]). It has been further shown [
3] that this
behavior can be described in terms of the Heisenberg uncertainty relations and from a general QCD potential considerations.
The two identical particle correlation effect can be measured in terms of the correlation function
where
and
are the 4-momenta of the two correlated hadrons and
is the two-particle density function. The
stands for the two particle density function in the absence of the a BEC (or FDC) effect. This
is often referred to as the reference sample against which the correlation effect is compared to. The BEC and FDC analyses had often different experimental backgrounds and have chosen various types of reference
samples. Thus, one must take this situation in account when judging the correlation results in terms of energy and/or mass dependence.
The function frequently used in the BEC and the FDC studies the evaluation of the
R are:
These are the Goldhaber parametrizations [
4,
5] proposed for a static Gaussian particle source in the plane-wave approach which assumes for the particle emitter a spherical volume with a radial Gaussian distribution. The
factor, also known as the chaoticity parameter, lies within the range of 0 to 1. Due to the fact that the major correlation experiments were carried out with identical bosons we will here focus our discussion on the BEC.
It has been noticed already some two decades ago that the
R extracted from BEC and FDC analysis of hadron pairs produced in the decay of the
gauge boson [
2,
6] suggested a mass dependence roughly proportional to 1/
[
3]. This is illustrated in
Figure 1 taken from reference [
7] where a compilation of the
R results was obtained from the
hadronic decay experiments at LEP, The difference between the
value at the pion mass to those of the proton and
baryons is indeed impressive. However presently no significant difference is seen between the
of the pions and the K-mesons produced in the
decay. Thus, this dimension data, deduced from the
prompt interactions, cannot serve for a precise expression for the
dependence on energy. For that reason, we use here the BEC dimension results obtained in
−
collisions experiments [
8].
In this letter we show that the BEC can serve in the evaluation of the strong coupling constant at the non-perturbative region of the scales GeV (where E is the energy of the hadron in the center of mass reference frame of the di-hadron pair). The resulting coupling constant is shown to be in good qualitative agreement with the one obtained from solving the Bethe-Saltpeter equation to determine the effective potential of the quarkonium which in turn is consistent with the deduced from an Analytic Perturbative Theory (APT) prescription.
In
Section 2 we discuss the mass dependence of the BEC source scale and in
Section 3 we derive an analytic formula relating the strong coupling constant
and the BEC source radius. Finally, in
Section 4 we present numerical values for
and show that the BEC derived source dimension corresponds to strong overlapping hadrons where the BEC source radius is of the order of the distance between them.
2. The Mass Dependence of the BEC Dimension
Since the maximum of the BEC enhancement of two identical bosons of mass
m occurs when
, the three-vector momentum difference of the bosons approaches zero. Thus, we can link the BEC effect to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle [
3], namely
where
is the reduced mass of the di-hadron system and
is the distance between them. Here we use for
the GeV unit while
r is given in fm units so that
= 0.197 GeV fm. Thus, one obtains:
We also apply the uncertainty relation expressed in terms of time and energy
where the energy and
are given respectively in GeV and seconds. Thus, one has
Inserting this expression for
p into Equation (
4) one finally obtains
Comparing values of
r in Equation (
7) and experimental data for
(see
Figure 1 we are led to identify
r with
.
As mentioned above the
values, deduced from the BEC and FDC analyses of the
hadronic decays are shown in
Figure 1. These results provided the first clue that the
may depend on the mass of the two identical correlated particles [
3]. As can be seen, the measured
R values of the pion pairs are located at ∼0.6 fm except for one
result where its
R value lies significantly lower. The
Kaon pairs values are seen to be near to those of the charged pions. Impressive however are the
values obtained from the
hyperon and proton baryon pairs which lie close together in the vicinity of 0.15 fm. The solid line in the figure was calculated from Equation (
7) with
s representing the strong interactions time scale. The dashed lines are derived from Equation (
7) setting
s to illustrate the sensitivity of Equation (
7) in its ability to estimate the energy dependence of
. An alternative way to extract
dependence on the energy is to use the BEC results of the boson pairs produced in
−
collisions.
A clear evidence for the dependence of
on the mass of the BEC boson pairs is seen in
Figure 2 that was obtained by the WA98 collaboration [
8]. In
Figure 2 are plotted the BEC dimension deduced from identical correlated boson pairs, including the deutron pairs, produced in
−
collisions at the nucleon-nucleon center of mass energy of 158 GeV/A. As can be seen, apart from the proton pair result, the
dependence on the mass value is very well described by
, with the fitted value of
fm GeV
. According to Equation (
7) one finds that
so that in the
−
collisions case
s. Taking for prompt
collision the representing strong interaction value of
s one obtains for
versus the mass, in GeV units, the relation
which is shown by a ±1 s.d. band in
Figure 3 which is of the same value as the LEP data-based result.
3. The Strong Coupling Constant and the BEC
The short-range interactions between two hadrons can be described in terms of the constituent quark model. This idea dates to [
9] (see also [
10]) and was applied to the BEC in [
3]. Namely, the short-range interaction between hadrons can be described by means of the quark-quark interaction potential [
11]
The coupling constant
is usually taken as a parameter to be fitted, while the constant
, that corresponds to the confinement part of the interaction, is of order of 0.9 GeV/fm [
12], while
r is the distance between the two hadrons.
We now make use of the virial theorem for the two-hadron system, which has the form [
13]
where
is the average kinetic energy of the hadrons.
Note now that in our approximation
, where p is the momentum. For momentum, using Equations (
6) and (
7) to exclude
, we immediately obtain
. Then, taking into account the spherical symmetry of the potential one obtains
This yields straightaway an expression for the strong coupling constant, namely
from which one has that
is equal to
Inserting
GeV fm one obtains
To evaluate
we use for the parameter
the value of 0.18 GeV
GeV/fm [
12] corresponding to the meson Regge trajectory. The variable
r and its mass dependence are taken to be identical to the
dimension given by Equation (
8) which was determined from the analyses of the BEC and FDC deduced from identical hadron pairs (see also [
3]).
4. Conclusions
Our main results are shown in
Figure 4. Since our system in the center of mass energy is nonrelativistic, the
that we determine corresponds to an energy scale of
, where
m is the hadron mass and
E is the hadron energy in the di-hadron pair in its center of mass reference frame (i.e., approximately half of the energy of the Bose-Einstein pair).
The non-perturbative
is calculated via Equation (
14) and is shown in
Figure 4 as a function of energy by the solid line. The accompanying dotted lines represent the ±1 s.d. limits of the band. For comparison we also show the perturbative
curve, labeled by pQCD, which essentially overlaps with the non-perturbative strong coupling in the region of about 2 to 11 GeV. Using our low energy non-perturbative strong coupling we obtain for example
at the mass energy of the K-meson and the
-hyperon respectively the following values:
The non-perturbative
determined here as a function of energy agrees well with the results obtained in [
16,
17], where effective
was obtained by solving the Bethe-Saltpeter equation for quarkonium. As a result, the strong coupling constant
determined here agrees well with the one-loop Analytic Perturbative Theory (APT) approach [
18]). In particular we have good agreement with the so called “massive” variation of the APT prescription [
18,
19]. The latter one approach coincides with the standard APT approach for energy scales of
MeV [
20], i.e., above the pion mass. However, for small
E the strong coupling constant goes down to zero [
18,
19], exactly as we have in
Figure 4. It is worthwhile to note however that although our curve is in good agreement with the “massive” APT prescription at small
E of order of the pion mass, strictly speaking it is questionable if we can apply our estimates at the pion scale, based on a simple nonrelativistic quark model. Thus, “reasonable” agreement of our result for the pion mass with a particular version of APT prescription deserves further study.
Please note that recently additional approaches to the determination of
behavior in the low transverse momenta region were discussed, see [
21,
22,
23]. The approach in [
21] is based on one-loop renormalization loop calculations, while in [
23] on combining dispersion relations with lattice simulations results and experimental data on
annihilation. It is quite amazing that all the approaches lead to the same qualitative form of
as a function of energy/transverse momentum scale.
On the other hand, it is clear that all theoretical descriptions of the infrared dynamics currently are model-dependent and based, from field theoretical point of view, on different ansats for field theoretical resummation of corrections. In particular, there arises a question of connection between strong coupling constant in nonrelativistic quark model used in this paper and
defined in field theoretical schemes for infrared QCD dynamics. This question was discussed in detail in [
16,
17,
18,
19] where it was shown that
defined in particular renormalization/resummation scheme in these references, can indeed be identified with (up to short-range corrections) with the running coupling constant that enters the potential for nonrelativistic bound states.
In conclusion, it is shown that the strong coupling constant
can be evaluated in the non-perturbative region using the Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac correlations dimension results. The resulting
is in good agreement with the so called APT “massive” prescription [
18,
19] and extrapolates well at the higher energies to the conventional perturbative
. Our results indicate that the BEC/FDC correlations both for baryons and mesons, correspond to a picture where the two participating hadrons strongly overlap, and the
radius, that conventionally characterizes the scale of the BEC/FDC, corresponds to the distance
r between the centers of these two correlated particles. Thus, our results indicate that these correlations may well serve as an alternative approach for the study of short-range correlations between hadrons [
24].
Finally, let us note that in our simulations we used the LEP and RHIC results. Recently high accuracy results for BEC were also obtained at LHC [
25,
26,
27]. The use of their data does not change the results obtained in the current letter.