11,334 research outputs found
Diffraction and Low-Q^2 Physics Including Two-Photon Physics
Recent experimental results on the partonic structure of the photon and on
the color singlet exchange in strong interaction processes are reviewed. At the
LEP electron-positron and HERA lepton-proton colliders, complementary and
consistent measurements have been achieved on the quark-gluon structure of
quasi-real and virtual photons. At the HERA lepton-proton and Tevatron
proton-antiproton colliders, the quark-gluon configuration of the diffractive
exchange is consistently found to have a large gluon component. The rate of
diffractive interactions observed by the HERA and Tevatron experiments,
however, is largely different and challenges explanation (invited plenary talk
at the XXIX International Conference on High Energy Physics, Vancouver, B.C.
Canada (1998)).Comment: 36 pages (Latex), 35 figures (Postscript); in this replaced version
the report on 'Structure Functions' by A.T.Doyle has been taken out and is
available in hep-ex/981202
Investigation of the Galactic Magnetic Field with Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays
We present a method to correct for deflections of ultra-high energy cosmic
rays in the galactic magnetic field. We perform these corrections by simulating
the expected arrival directions of protons using a parameterization of the
field derived from Faraday rotation and synchrotron emission measurements. To
evaluate the method we introduce a simulated astrophysical scenario and two
observables designed for testing cosmic ray deflections. We show that protons
can be identified by taking advantage of the galactic magnetic field pattern.
Consequently, cosmic ray deflection in the galactic field can be verified
experimentally. The method also enables searches for directional correlations
of cosmic rays with source candidates.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, presented at the Eur. Phys. Soc. Conf. on High
Energy Physics, Jul. 2015, Vienna, Austria, and the 34th Intern. Cosmic Ray
Conf., Jul. 2015, The Hague, The Netherland
Detecting Local Deflection Patterns of Ultra-high Energy Cosmic Rays using the Principal Axes of the Directional Energy Distribution
From deflections in galactic and extragalactic magnetic fields energy
dependent structures in the arrival directions of ultra-high energy cosmic rays
(UHECR) are expected. We propose to characterize these structures by the
strength of collimation of energy along the principal axes in selected regions
in the sky. While the strength of collimation are indicators of anisotropy in
the arrival distribution of UHECR, the orientation of the principal system
holds information about the direction of the deflections of UHECR. We discuss
the method and present expected limits on the strength of deflection and
density of sources using simulated scenarios of UHECR proton propagation.Comment: Contribution no. 1063 to the 33rd International Cosmic Ray
Conference, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, July 201
The Nuclear Window to the Extragalactic Universe
We investigate two recent parameterizations of the galactic magnetic field
with respect to their impact on cosmic nuclei traversing the field. We present
a comprehensive study of the size of angular deflections, dispersion in the
arrival probability distributions, multiplicity in the images of arrival on
Earth, variance in field transparency, and influence of the turbulent field
components. To remain restricted to ballistic deflections, a cosmic nucleus
with energy E and charge Z should have a rigidity above E/Z=6 EV. In view of
the differences resulting from the two field parameterizations as a measure of
current knowledge in the galactic field, this rigidity threshold may have to be
increased. For a point source search with E/Z>60 EV, field uncertainties
increase the required signal events for discovery moderately for sources in the
northern and southern regions, but substantially for sources near the galactic
disk.Comment: 15 pages, 30 figures, few additional sentences and references as in
accepted publicatio
Acceleration by Strong Interactions
Beyond the attractive strong potential needed for hadronic bound states,
strong interactions are predicted to provide repulsive forces depending on the
color charges involved. The repulsive interactions could in principle serve for
particle acceleration with highest gradients in the order of GeV/fm. Indirect
evidence for repulsive interactions have been reported in the context of heavy
meson production at colliders. In this contribution, we sketch a thought
experiment to directly investigate repulsive strong interactions. For this we
prepare two quarks using two simultaneous deep inelastic scattering processes
off an iron target. We discuss the principle setup of the experiment and
estimate the number of electrons on target required to observe a repulsive
effect between the quarks.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Origins of Extragalactic Cosmic Ray Nuclei by Contracting Alignment Patterns induced in the Galactic Magnetic Field
We present a novel approach to search for origins of ultra-high energy cosmic
rays. These particles are likely nuclei that initiate extensive air showers in
the Earth's atmosphere. In large-area observatories, the particle arrival
directions are measured together with their energies and the atmospheric depth
at which their showers maximize. The depths provide rough measures of the
nuclear charges. In a simultaneous fit to all observed cosmic rays we use the
galactic magnetic field as a mass spectrometer and adapt the nuclear charges
such that their extragalactic arrival directions are concentrated in as few
directions as possible. Using different simulated examples we show that, with
the measurements on Earth, reconstruction of extragalactic source directions is
possible. In particular, we show in an astrophysical scenario that source
directions can be reconstructed even within a substantial isotropic background.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figure
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