3,371 research outputs found
High energy nucleus-nucleus collisions
Experimental results on high energy nucleus-nucleus interactions are presented. The data are discussed within the framework of standard super-position models and from the point-of-view of the possible formation of new states of matter in heavy ion collisions
Intermittency and QCD jets
Multiplicity distributions in rapidity bins are studied in the Marchesini–Webber model for ee annihilation. The intermittent, power-like growth of the scaled factorial moments for small rapidity bins is found. Corrections accounting for the rapidity dependence of the single particle density are analyzed and shown to lead to the universal behaviour for various choices of the studied rapidity range
Latest results from the PHOBOS experiment
Over the past years PHOBOS has continued to analyze the large datasets
obtained from the first five runs of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC)
at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The two main analysis streams have been
pursued. The first one aims to obtain a broad and systematic survey of global
properties of particle production in heavy ion collisions. The second class
includes the study of fluctuations and correlations in particle production.
Both type of studies have been performed for a variety of the collision
systems, covering a wide range in collision energy and centrality. The uniquely
large angular coverage of the PHOBOS detector and its ability to measure
charged particles down to very low transverse momentum is exploited. The latest
physics results from PHOBOS, as presented at Quark Matter 2008 Conference, are
contained in this report.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, presented at the 20th International Conference on
Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, "Quark Matter 2008", Jaipur,
India, Feb.4-10, 200
Heavy Ion Physics with the ATLAS Detector
This talk reports on the studies of the ATLAS experiment capability for heavy-ion physics. These studies show a very good potential of the ATLAS detector for measurements of global properties of nucleus-nucleus collisions such as charged particle multiplicities and azimuthal anisotropies as well as heavy quark and quarkonia production and jet quenching. The results from the first round of studies obtained with the full-simulation of the detector response are presented and on going activities are briefly summarized
Direct Calculations of the Odderon Intercept in the Perturbative QCD
The odderon intercept is calculated directly, from its expression via an
average energy of the odderon Hamiltonian, using both trial wave functions in
the variational approach and the wave function recently constructed by
R.A.Janik and J.Wosiek.
The results confirm their reported value for the energy. The odderon
intercept is calculated directly, from its expression via an average energy of
the odderon Hamiltonian, using both trial wave functions in the variational
approach and the wave function recently constructed by R.A.Janik and
J.Wosiek.The results confirm their reported value for the energy. Variational
calculations give energies some 30% higher. However they also predict the
odderon intercept to be quite close to unity. In fact, for realistic values of
, the intercept calculated variationally is at most 2% lower than the
exact one: 0.94 instead of 0.96. It is also found that the solution for
does not belong to the odderon spectrum. The diffusion parameter is found to be
of the order 0.6.Comment: 20 page
Direct solution of the hard pomeron problem for arbitrary conformal weight
A new method is applied to solve the Baxter equation for the one dimensional
system of noncompact spins. Dynamics of such an ensemble is equivalent to that
of a set of reggeized gluons exchanged in the high energy limit of QCD
amplitudes. The technique offers more insight into the old calculation of the
intercept of hard Pomeron, and provides new results in the odderon channel.Comment: Contribution to the ICHEP96 Conference, July 1996, Warsaw, Poland.
LaTeX, 4 pages, 3 epsf figures, includes modified stwol.sty file. Some
references were revise
The Bose-Einstein effect in Monte-Carlo generators: weight methods
We present a method which incorporates the Bose-Einstein effect into Monte
Carlo generators for multiple production by weighting the events. Various
aspects of weight calculations are discussed in detail. We show that our method
allows to describe reasonably well a sample of data and we outline the future
tests and applications.Comment: Latex, 10 pages including 4 .eps figure
The Importance of Correlations and Fluctuations on the Initial Source Eccentricity in High-Energy Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions
In this paper, we investigate various ways of defining the initial source
eccentricity using the Monte Carlo Glauber (MCG) approach. In particular, we
examine the participant eccentricity, which quantifies the eccentricity of the
initial source shape by the major axes of the ellipse formed by the interaction
points of the participating nucleons. We show that reasonable variation of the
density parameters in the Glauber calculation, as well as variations in how
matter production is modeled, do not significantly modify the already
established behavior of the participant eccentricity as a function of collision
centrality. Focusing on event-by-event fluctuations and correlations of the
distributions of participating nucleons we demonstrate that, depending on the
achieved event-plane resolution, fluctuations in the elliptic flow magnitude
lead to most measurements being sensitive to the root-mean-square, rather
than the mean of the distribution. Neglecting correlations among
participants, we derive analytical expressions for the participant eccentricity
cumulants as a function of the number of participating nucleons,
\Npart,keeping non-negligible contributions up to \ordof{1/\Npart^3}. We
find that the derived expressions yield the same results as obtained from
mixed-event MCG calculations which remove the correlations stemming from the
nuclear collision process. Most importantly, we conclude from the comparison
with MCG calculations that the fourth order participant eccentricity cumulant
does not approach the spatial anisotropy obtained assuming a smooth nuclear
matter distribution. In particular, for the Cu+Cu system, these quantities
deviate from each other by almost a factor of two over a wide range in
centrality.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, submitted to PR
Automated track recognition and event reconstruction in nuclear emulsion
The major advantages of nuclear emulsion for detecting charged particles are its submicron position resolution and sensitivity to minimum ionizing particles. These must be balanced, however, against the difficult manual microscope measurement by skilled observers required for the analysis. We have developed an automated system to acquire and analyze the microscope images from emulsion chambers. Each emulsion plate is analyzed independently, allowing coincidence techniques to be used in order to reject background and estimate error rates. The system has been used to analyze a sample of high-multiplicity Pb-Pb interactions (charged particle multiplicities ∼1100) produced by the 158 GeV/c per nucleon 208Pb beam at CERN. Automatically measured events agree with our best manual measurements on 97% of all the tracks. We describe the image analysis and track reconstruction techniques, and discuss the measurement and reconstruction uncertainties
Intermittency in Branching Processes
We study the intermittency properties of two branching processes, one with a
uniform and another with a singular splitting kernel. The asymptotic
intermittency indices, as well as the leading corrections to the asymptotic
linear regime are explicitly computed in an analytic framework. Both models are
found to possess a monofractal spectrum with . Relations with
previous results are discussed.Comment: 20 pages, UCLA93/TEP/2
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