2,427 research outputs found
Antimatter and Matter Production in Heavy Ion Collisions at CERN (The NEWMASS Experiment NA52)
Besides the dedicated search for strangelets NA52 measures light
(anti)particle and (anti)nuclei production over a wide range of rapidity.
Compared to previous runs the statistics has been increased in the 1998 run by
more than one order of magnitude for negatively charged objects at different
spectrometer rigidities. Together with previous data taking at a rigidity of
-20 GeV/c we obtained 10^6 antiprotons 10^3 antideuterons and two antihelium3
without centrality requirements. We measured nuclei and antinuclei
(p,d,antiprotons, antideuterons) near midrapidity covering an impact parameter
range of b=2-12 fm. Our results strongly indicate that nuclei and antinuclei
are mainly produced via the coalescence mechanism. However the centrality
dependence of the antibaryon to baryon ratios show that antibaryons are
diminished due to annihilation and breakup reactions in the hadron dense
environment. The volume of the particle source extracted from coalescence
models agrees with results from pion interferometry for an expanding source.
The chemical and thermal freeze-out of nuclei and antinuclei appear to coincide
with each other and with the thermal freeze-out of hadrons.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the conference
on 'Fundamental Issues in Elementary Matter' Bad Honnef, Germany, Sept.
25-29, 200
Detectability of Strange Matter in Heavy Ion Experiments
We discuss the properties of two distinct forms of hypothetical strange
matter, small lumps of strange quark matter (strangelets) and of hyperon matter
(metastable exotic multihypernuclear objects: MEMOs), with special emphasis on
their relevance for present and future heavy ion experiments. The masses of
small strangelets up to A = 40 are calculated using the MIT bag model with
shell mode filling for various bag parameters. The strangelets are checked for
possible strong and weak hadronic decays, also taking into account multiple
hadron decays. It is found that strangelets which are stable against strong
decay are most likely highly negative charged, contrary to previous findings.
Strangelets can be stable against weak hadronic decay but their masses and
charges are still rather high. This has serious impact on the present high
sensitivity searches in heavy ion experiments at the AGS and CERN facilities.
On the other hand, highly charged MEMOs are predicted on the basis of an
extended relativistic mean-field model. Those objects could be detected in
future experiments searching for short-lived, rare composites. It is
demonstrated that future experiments can be sensitive to a much wider variety
of strangelets.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figures, uses RevTeX and epsf.st
Cold Strangelets Formation with Finite Size Effects in High Energy Heavy-Ion Collisions
We have studied the phase diagram and evolution of a strangelet in
equilibrium with a finite hadronic gas. Significant finite size modifications
of the phase diagram are found and their parameter dependences are studied.
With the inclusion of finite size effects we have also been able to obtain the
detailed properties of the cold strangelet emerging in the final stage of the
isentropic expansion of a finite strange fireball in high energy heavy-ion
collisions.Comment: 19 pages(RevTex), 11 Postscript figures; To appear in Phys. Rev.
Effect of Biodiversity Changes in Disease Risk: Exploring Disease Emergence in a Plant-Virus System
The effect of biodiversity on the ability of parasites to infect their host and cause disease (i.e. disease risk) is a major question in pathology, which is central to understand the emergence of infectious diseases, and to develop strategies for their management. Two hypotheses, which can be considered as extremes of a continuum, relate biodiversity to disease risk: One states that biodiversity is positively correlated with disease risk (Amplification Effect), and the second predicts a negative correlation between biodiversity and disease risk (Dilution Effect). Which of them applies better to different host-parasite systems is still a source of debate, due to limited experimental or empirical data. This is especially the case for viral diseases of plants. To address this subject, we have monitored for three years the prevalence of several viruses, and virus-associated symptoms, in populations of wild pepper (chiltepin) under different levels of human management. For each population, we also measured the habitat species diversity, host plant genetic diversity and host plant density. Results indicate that disease and infection risk increased with the level of human management, which was associated with decreased species diversity and host genetic diversity, and with increased host plant density. Importantly, species diversity of the habitat was the primary predictor of disease risk for wild chiltepin populations. This changed in managed populations where host genetic diversity was the primary predictor. Host density was generally a poorer predictor of disease and infection risk. These results support the dilution effect hypothesis, and underline the relevance of different ecological factors in determining disease/infection risk in host plant populations under different levels of anthropic influence. These results are relevant for managing plant diseases and for establishing conservation policies for endangered plant species
Stability of strangelet at finite temperature
Using the quark mass density- and temperature dependent model, we have
studied the thermodynamical properties and the stability of strangelet at
finite temperature. The temperature, charge and strangeness dependences on the
stability of strangelet are investigated. We find that the stable strangelets
are only occured in the high strangeness and high negative charge region.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figure
The OPERA experiment Target Tracker
The main task of the Target Tracker detector of the long baseline neutrino
oscillation OPERA experiment is to locate in which of the target elementary
constituents, the lead/emulsion bricks, the neutrino interactions have occurred
and also to give calorimetric information about each event. The technology used
consists in walls of two planes of plastic scintillator strips, one per
transverse direction. Wavelength shifting fibres collect the light signal
emitted by the scintillator strips and guide it to both ends where it is read
by multi-anode photomultiplier tubes. All the elements used in the construction
of this detector and its main characteristics are described.Comment: 25 pages, submitted to Nuclear Instrument and Method
Multibaryons as Symmetric Multiskyrmions
We study non-adiabatic corrections to multibaryon systems within the bound
state approach to the SU(3) Skyrme model. We use approximate ansatze for the
static background fields based on rational maps which have the same symmetries
of the exact solutions. To determine the explicit form of the collective
Hamiltonians and wave functions we only make use of these symmetries. Thus, the
expressions obtained are also valid in the exact case. On the other hand, the
inertia parameters and hyperfine splitting constants we calculate do depend on
the detailed form of the ansatze and are, therefore, approximate. Using these
values we compute the low lying spectra of multibaryons with B <= 9 and
strangeness 0, -1 and -B. Finally, we show that the non-adiabatic corrections
do not affect the stability of the tetralambda and heptalambda found in a
previous work.Comment: 17 pages, RevTeX, no figure
Meson Production in In-In Collisions and the Puzzle
The NA60 experiment measured dimuon production in In-In collisions at 158
AGeV. This paper presents a high statistics measurement of with
the specific objective to provide insight on the puzzle, i.e. the
difference in the inverse slopes and absolute yields measured by NA49 and
NA50 in the kaon and lepton channel, respectively. Transverse momentum
distributions were studied as a function of centrality. The slope parameter
shows a rapid increase with centrality, followed by a saturation. Variations of
with the fit range of the order of 15 MeV were observed, possibly as a
consequence of radial flow. The meson yield normalized to the number of
participants increases with centrality and is consistently higher than the
yield measured by the NA49 experiment at any centrality.Comment: 4 Pages, 2 Figures. Proceedings of the 20 International
Conference on Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus Nucleus Collision
Multibaryons with heavy flavors in the Skyrme model
We investigate the possible existence of multibaryons with heavy flavor
quantum numbers using the bound state approach to the topological soliton model
and the recently proposed approximation for multiskyrmion fields based on
rational maps. We use an effective interaction lagrangian which consistently
incorporates both chiral symmetry and the heavy quark symmetry including the
corrections up to order 1/m_Q. The model predicts some narrow heavy flavored
multibaryon states with baryon number four and seven.Comment: 8 pages, no figures, RevTe
Thermal dileptons at SPS energies
Clear signs of excess dileptons above the known sources were found at the SPS
since long. However, a real clarification of these observations was only
recently achieved by NA60, measuring dimuons with unprecedented precision in
158A GeV, In-In collisions. The excess mass spectrum in the region M<1 GeV is
consistent with a dominant contribution from pi+pi- -> rho -> mu+mu-
annihilation. The associated rho spectral function shows a strong broadening,
but essentially no shift in mass. In the region M>1 GeV, the excess is found to
be prompt, not due to enhanced charm production. The inverse slope parameter
Teff associated with the transverse momentum spectra rises with mass up to the
rho, followed by a sudden decline above. While the initial rise, coupled to a
hierarchy in hadron freeze-out, points to radial flow of a hadronic decay
source, the decline above signals a transition to a low-flow source, presumably
of partonic origin. The mass spectra show at low transverse momenta the steep
rise towards low masses characteristic for Planck-like radiation. The
polarization of the excess referred to the Collins Soper frame is found to be
isotropic. All observations are consistent with the interpretation of the
excess as thermal radiation.Comment: Prepared for 20th International Conference on Ultra-Relativistic
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions: Quark Matter 2008 (QM2008), Jaipur, India, 4-10
Feb. 200
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