118 research outputs found
Towards azimuthal anisotropy of direct photons
Intensive radiation of magnetic bremsstrahlung type (synchrotron radiation)
resulting from the interaction of escaping quarks with the collective confining
colour field is discussed as a new possible mechanism of observed direct photon
anisotropy.Comment: 3 pages, Comments and references added, accepted to JETP Letters
(Pis'ma v ZhETF
Probing confinement by direct photons and dileptons
The intensive synchrotron radiation resulting from quarks interacting with
the collective confining color field in relativistic heavy ion collisions is
discussed. The spectrum of photons with large transverse momentum is calculated
and compared with the experimental data to demonstrate the feasibility of this
type of radiation. A study of the earlier predicted azimuthal anisotropy in the
angular distribution of dileptons with respect to the three-momentum of the
pair is performed as well. This boundary-induced mechanism of lepton pair
production is shown to possess the features that are distinctly different from
the standard mechanisms and can potentially provide an efficient probe of
quark-gluon plasma formation.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Fig., Refs. and explanations added, typos
corrected, text revise
A new regime of anomalous penetration of relativistically strong laser radiation into an overdense plasma
It is shown that penetration of relativistically intense laser light into an
overdense plasma, accessible by self-induced transparency, occurs over a finite
length only. The penetration length depends crucially on the overdense plasma
parameter and increases with increasing incident intensity after exceeding the
threshold for self-induced transparency. Exact analytical solutions describing
the plasma-field distributions are presented.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures in 2 separate eps files; submitted to JETP Letter
Strange quark matter with effective quark masses
The properties of strange quark matter at zero temperature are investigated
including medium effects. The quarks are considered as quasiparticles which
acquire an effective mass generated by the interaction with the other quarks of
the dense system. Within this approach we find that these medium effects reduce
the binding energy of strange quark matter with respect to .Comment: 6 pages, 2 Postscript figures, to be published in Proc. Int. Workshop
"Hirschegg'97: QCD Phase Transitions
Strange quark matter: mapping QCD lattice results to finite baryon density by a quasi-particle model
A quasi-particle model is presented which describes QCD lattice results for
the 0, 2 and 4 quark-flavor equation of state. The results are mapped to finite
baryo-chemical potentials. As an application of the model we make a prediction
of deconfined matter with appropriate inclusion of strange quarks and consider
pure quark stars.Comment: invited talk at Strangeness 2000, Berkeley; prepared version for the
proceedings, 5 page
Thermal Particle and Photon Production in Pb+Pb Collisions with Transverse Flow
Particle and photon production is analyzed in the presence of transverse flow
using two approximations to describe the properties of the hadronic medium, one
containing only , and mesons (simplified equation of
state) and the other containing hadrons and resonances from the particle data
table. Both are considered with and without initial quark gluon plasma
formation. In each case the initial temperature is fixed by requiring
550 in the final state. It is shown that most observables are
very sensitive to the equation of state. This is particularly evident when
comparing the results of the simplified equation of state in the scenarios with
and without phase transition. The hadronic gas scenario leads to a
substantially higher rate for the -distribution of all particles. In the
complete equation of state with several hundreds of hadronic resonances, the
difference between the scenarios with and without phase transition is rather
modest. Both photon and particle spectra, in a wide range, show very
similar behavior. It is therefore concluded that from the spectra it will
be hard to disentangle quark gluon plasma formation in the initial state. It is
to be stressed however, that there are conceptual difficulties in applying a
pure hadronic gas equation of state at SPS-energies. The phase transition
scenario with a quark gluon plasma present in the initial state seems to be the
more natural one.Comment: 9 pages RevTeX figures in postscript forma
Glueballs, gluon condensate, and pure glue QCD below T_c
A quasiparticle description of pure glue QCD thermodynamics at T<T_c is
proposed and compared to recent lattice data. Given that a gas of glueballs
with constant mass cannot quantitatively reproduce the early stages of the
deconfinement phase transition, the problem is to identify a relevant mechanism
leading to the observed sudden increase of the pressure, trace anomaly, etc. It
is shown that the strong decrease of the gluon condensate near T_c combined
with the increasing thermal width of the lightest glueballs might be the
trigger of the phase transition.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures; analysis refined in v2, explanations added; v3 to
appear in EPJ
CFD validation in OECD/NEA t-junction benchmark.
When streams of rapidly moving flow merge in a T-junction, the potential arises for large oscillations at the scale of the diameter, D, with a period scaling as O(D/U), where U is the characteristic flow velocity. If the streams are of different temperatures, the oscillations result in experimental fluctuations (thermal striping) at the pipe wall in the outlet branch that can accelerate thermal-mechanical fatigue and ultimately cause pipe failure. The importance of this phenomenon has prompted the nuclear energy modeling and simulation community to establish a benchmark to test the ability of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) codes to predict thermal striping. The benchmark is based on thermal and velocity data measured in an experiment designed specifically for this purpose. Thermal striping is intrinsically unsteady and hence not accessible to steady state simulation approaches such as steady state Reynolds-averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) models.1 Consequently, one must consider either unsteady RANS or large eddy simulation (LES). This report compares the results for three LES codes: Nek5000, developed at Argonne National Laboratory (USA), and Cabaret and Conv3D, developed at the Moscow Institute of Nuclear Energy Safety at (IBRAE) in Russia. Nek5000 is based on the spectral element method (SEM), which is a high-order weighted residual technique that combines the geometric flexibility of the finite element method (FEM) with the tensor-product efficiencies of spectral methods. Cabaret is a 'compact accurately boundary-adjusting high-resolution technique' for fluid dynamics simulation. The method is second-order accurate on nonuniform grids in space and time, and has a small dispersion error and computational stencil defined within one space-time cell. The scheme is equipped with a conservative nonlinear correction procedure based on the maximum principle. CONV3D is based on the immersed boundary method and is validated on a wide set of the experimental and benchmark data. The numerical scheme has a very small scheme diffusion and is the second and the first order accurate in space and time, correspondingly. We compare and contrast simulation results for three computational fluid dynamics codes CABARET, Conv3D, and Nek5000 for the T-junction thermal striping problem that was the focus of a recent OECD/NEA blind benchmark. The corresponding codes utilize finite-difference implicit large eddy simulation (ILES), finite-volume LES on fully staggered grids, and an LES spectral element method (SEM), respectively. The simulations results are in a good agreement with experimenatl data. We present results from a study of sensitivity to computational mesh and time integration interval, and discuss the next steps in the simulation of this problem
Soft Electromagnetic Radiations from Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
The production of low mass dileptons and soft photons from thermalized Quark
Gluon Plasma (QGP) and hadronic matter in relativistic heavy ion collisions is
evaluated. A boost invariant longitudinal and cylindrically symmetric
transverse expansion of the systems created in central collision of lead nuclei
at CERN SPS, BNL RHIC, and CERN LHC, and undergoing a first order phase
transition to hadronic matter is considered. A large production of low mass (M<
0.3 GeV) dileptons, and soft photons (p_T< 0.4 GeV) is seen to emanate from the
bremsstrahlung of quarks and pions. We find an increase by a factor of 2--4 in
the low mass dilepton and soft photon yield as we move from SPS to RHIC
energies, and an increase by an order of magnitude as we move from SPS to LHC
energies. Most of the soft radiations are found to originate from pion driven
processes at SPS and RHIC energies, while at the LHC energies the quark and the
pion driven processes contribute by a similar amount. The study of the
transverse mass distribution is seen to provide interesting details of the
evolution. We also find a unique universal behaviour for the ratio of M^2
weighted transverse mass distribution for M= 0.1 GeV to that for M= 0.2 and 0.3
GeV, as a function of M_T, for SPS, RHIC, and LHC energies, in the absence of
transverse expansion of the system. A deviation from this universal behaviour
is seen as a clear indication of the flow.Comment: Revtex fil
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