2,064 research outputs found
Non-equilibrium phenomena in the QCD phase transition
Within the context of the linear \s-model for two flavours, we investigate
non-equilibrium phenomena that may occur during the QCD chiral phase transition
in heavy-ion collisions. We assume that the chiral symmetry breaking is
followed by a rapid quench so that the system falls out of thermal equilibrium.
We study the mechanism for the amplification of the pion field during the
oscillations of the \s-field towards and around its new minimum. We show that
the pion spectrum develops a characteristic pronounced peak at low momenta.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, RevTex
Critical Fluctuations at RHIC
On the basis of universal scaling properties, we claim that in Au+Au
collisions at RHIC, the QCD critical point is within reach. The signal turns
out to be an extended plateau of net baryons in rapidity with approximate
height of the net-baryon rapidity density approximately 15 and a strong
intermittency pattern with index s_2=1/6 in rapidity fluctuations. A window
also exists, to reach the critical point at the SPS, especially in Si+Si
collisions at maximal energy.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Pion Fluctuations near the QCD Critical Point
A critical point of second order, belonging to the universality class of the
3d Ising model, has recently been advocated as a strong candidate for the
critical behaviour (at high temperatures) of QCD with non-zero quark masses.
The implications of this conjecture are investigated in the multiparticle
environment of high-energy collisions. A universal intermittency pattern of
pion-density fluctuations is found, at the critical point, and its association
to the critical exponents is discussed. A Monte Carlo simulation of critical
events, in heavy-ion collisions, reveals the detailed structure of these
fluctuations, suggesting a framework of (event-by-event) measurements in which
the critical theory of QCD may become falsifiable.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures (ps
Critical Opalescence in Baryonic QCD Matter
We show that critical opalescence, a clear signature of second-order phase
transition in conventional matter, manifests itself as critical intermittency
in QCD matter produced in experiments with nuclei. This behaviour is revealed
in transverse momentum spectra as a pattern of power laws in factorial moments,
to all orders, associated with baryon production. This phenomenon together with
a similar effect in the isoscalar sector of pions (sigma mode) provide us with
a set of observables associated with the search for the QCD critical point in
experiments with nuclei at high energies.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Classical evolution of fractal measures generated by a scalar field on the lattice
We investigate the classical evolution of a scalar field theory,
using in the initial state random field configurations possessing a fractal
measure expressed by a non-integer mass dimension. These configurations
resemble the equilibrium state of a critical scalar condensate. The measures of
the initial fractal behavior vary in time following the mean field motion. We
show that the remnants of the original fractal geometry survive and leave an
imprint in the system time averaged observables, even for large times compared
to the approximate oscillation period of the mean field, determined by the
model parameters. This behavior becomes more transparent in the evolution of a
deterministic Cantor-like scalar field configuration. We extend our study to
the case of two interacting scalar fields, and we find qualitatively similar
results. Therefore, our analysis indicates that the geometrical properties of a
critical system initially at equilibrium could sustain for several periods of
the field oscillations in the phase of non-equilibrium evolution.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, version published at Int. J. Mod. Phys.
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