- Rapp, R;
- Gossiaux, PB;
- Andronic, A;
- Averbeck, R;
- Masciocchi, S;
- Beraudo, A;
- Bratkovskaya, E;
- Braun-Munzinger, P;
- Cao, S;
- Dainese, A;
- Das, SK;
- Djordjevic, M;
- Greco, V;
- He, M;
- van Hees, H;
- Inghirami, G;
- Kaczmarek, O;
- Lee, Y-J;
- Liao, J;
- Liu, SYF;
- Moore, G;
- Nahrgang, M;
- Pawlowski, J;
- Petreczky, P;
- Plumari, S;
- Prino, F;
- Shi, S;
- Song, T;
- Stachel, J;
- Vitev, I;
- Wang, X-N
We report on broadly based systematic investigations of the modeling components for open heavy-flavor diffusion and energy loss in strongly interacting matter in their application to heavy-flavor observables in high-energy heavy–ion collisions, conducted within an EMMI Rapid Reaction Task Force framework. Initial spectra including cold-nuclear-matter effects, a wide variety of space-time evolution models, heavy-flavor transport coefficients, and hadronization mechanisms are scrutinized in an effort to quantify pertinent uncertainties in the calculations of nuclear modification factors and elliptic flow of open heavy-flavor particles in nuclear collisions. We develop procedures for error assessments and criteria for common model components to improve quantitative estimates for the (low-momentum) heavy-flavor diffusion coefficient as a long-wavelength characteristic of QCD matter as a function of temperature, and for energy loss coefficients of high-momentum heavy-flavor particles.