67 research outputs found
Low-momentum pion enhancement from schematic hadronization of a gluon-saturated initial state
We study the particle production in the early stage of the ultrarelativistic
heavy-ion collisions. To this end the Boltzmann kinetic equations for gluons
and pions with elastic rescattering are considered together with a simple model
for the parton-hadron conversion process (hadronisation). It is shown that the
overpopulation of the gluon phase space in the initial state leads to an
intermediate stage of Bose enhancement in the low-momentum gluon sector which
due to the gluon-pion conversion process is then reflected in the final
distribution function of pions. This pattern is very similar to the
experimental finding of a low-momentum pion enhancement in the ALICE experiment
at CERN LHC. Relations to the thermal statistical model of hadron production
and the phenomenon of thermal and chemical freeze-out are discussed in this
context
Towards a Unified Quark-Hadron Matter Equation of State for Applications in Astrophysics and Heavy-Ion Collisions
We outline an approach to a unified equation of state for quark-hadron matter
on the basis of a derivable approach to the generalized Beth-Uhlenbeck
equation of state for a cluster decomposition of thermodynamic quantities like
the density. To this end we summarize the cluster virial expansion for nuclear
matter and demonstrate the equivalence of the Green's function approach and the
derivable formulation. For an example, the formation and dissociation of
deuterons in nuclear matter is discussed. We formulate the cluster
derivable approach to quark-hadron matter which allows to take into
account the specifics of chiral symmetry restoration and deconfinement in
triggering the Mott-dissociation of hadrons. This approach unifies the
description of a strongly coupled quark-gluon plasma with that of a
medium-modified hadron resonance gas description which are contained as
limiting cases. The developed formalism shall replace the common two-phase
approach to the description of the deconfinement and chiral phase transition
that requires a phase transition construction between separately developed
equations of state for hadronic and quark matter phases. Applications to the
phenomenology of heavy-ion collisions and astrophysics are outlined.Comment: 35 pages, 3 figures, Special Issue "Compact Stars in the QCD Phase
Diagram
Virial coefficients of the Uniform Electron Gas from Path Integral Monte Carlo Simulations
The properties of plasmas in the low-density limit are described by virial
expansions. Analytical expressions are known from Green's function approaches
only for the first three virial coefficients. Accurate path integral Monte
Carlo (PIMC) simulations have recently been performed for the uniform electron
gas, allowing the virial expansions to be analyzed and interpolation formulas
to be derived. The exact expression for the second virial coefficient is used
to test the accuracy of the PIMC simulations and the range of validity of the
interpolation formula of Groth {\it et al.}~[Phys.~Rev.~Lett.~\textbf{119},
135001 (2017)]. We discuss the fourth virial coefficient, which is of interest,
e.g., for properties of solar plasmas, but has not yet been precisely known.
Combining PIMC simulations with benchmarks from exact results of the virial
expansion would allow us to obtain precise results for the equation of state
(EoS) in a wide range of parameters
Strange matter prospects within the string-flip model
In this contribution we extend the recently developed two-flavor quark-matter
string-flip model by including strange quarks. We discuss implications for
compact stars.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, proceedings to SQM201
Ab initio Computation of the Static Exchange--Correlation Kernel of Real Materials: From Ambient Conditions to Warm Dense Matter
The electronic exchange-correlation (XC) kernel constitutes a fundamental
input for the estimation of a gamut of material properties such as the
dielectric characteristics, the thermal and electrical conductivity, the
construction of effective potentials, or the response to an external
perturbation. In practice, no reliable method has been known that allows to
compute the kernel of real materials. In this work, we overcome this
long-standing limitation by introducing a new, formally exact methodology for
the computation of the static XC kernel of arbitrary materials exclusively
within the framework of density functional theory (DFT) -- no external input
apart from the usual XC-functional is required. As a first practical
demonstration of the utility and flexibility of our methodology, we compare our
new results with exact quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) data for the archetypical
uniform electron gas model at both ambient and warm dense matter conditions.
This gives us unprecedented insights into the performance of different
XC-functionals, and has important implications for the development of new
functionals that are designed for the application at extreme temperatures. In
addition, we obtain new DFT results for the XC kernel of warm dense hydrogen as
it occurs in fusion applications and astrophysical objects such as planetary
interiors. The observed excellent agreement to the recent QMC results by
B\"ohme \emph{et al.}~[Phys.~Rev.~Lett.~\textbf{129}, 066402 (2022)] clearly
demonstrates that our framework is capable to even capture nontrivial effects
such as XC-induced isotropy breaking in the density response of hydrogen at
large wave numbers. Our method can easily be applied using standard DFT codes
and will open up new avenues for the computation of the properties of real
materials
Effects of a strong phase transition on supernova explosions, compact stars and their mergers
We outline a theoretical approach supporting strong phase transitions from
normal nuclear matter to the deconfined quark-gluon plasma, in the equation of
state (EOS) for compact star matter. Implications of this hypothesis are
discussed for astrophysical applications. Special emphasis is devoted to
potentially detectable signatures, which can be directly related with the
occurrence of a sufficiently strong phase transition. Therefore, simulations of
core-collapse supernovae and binary compact star mergers are considered,
including the subsequent emission of gravitational waves and, in the case of
supernova, in addition the neutrinos play the role of messengers.Comment: 39 pages, 13 figures, contribution submitted on 20.02.2022 to the
Book "Astrophysics in the XXI Century with Compact Stars", edited by Cesar
Augusto Zen Vasconcellos and Fridolin Weber, World Scientifi
A new quark-hadron hybrid equation of state for astrophysics - I. High-mass twin compact stars
Aims: We present a new microscopic hadron-quark hybrid equation of state
model for astrophysical applications, from which compact hybrid star
configurations are constructed. These are composed of a quark core and a
hadronic shell with a first-order phase transition at their interface. The
resulting mass-radius relations are in accordance with the latest astrophysical
constraints. Methods: The quark matter description is based on a quantum
chromodynamics (QCD) motivated chiral approach with higher-order quark
interactions in the Dirac scalar and vector coupling channels. For hadronic
matter we select a relativistic mean-field equation of state with
density-dependent couplings. Since the nucleons are treated in the
quasi-particle framework, an excluded volume correction has been included for
the nuclear equation of state at suprasaturation density which takes into
account the finite size of the nucleons. Results: These novel aspects, excluded
volume in the hadronic phase and the higher-order repulsive interactions in the
quark phase, lead to a strong first-order phase transition with large latent
heat, i.e. the energy-density jump at the phase transition, which fulfils a
criterion for a disconnected third-family branch of compact stars in the
mass-radius relationship. These twin stars appear at high masses ( 2
M) that are relevant for current observations of high-mass pulsars.
Conclusions: This analysis offers a unique possibility by radius observations
of compact stars to probe the QCD phase diagram at zero temperature and large
chemical potential and even to support the existence of a critical point in the
QCD phase diagram.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astron. & Astrophy
Early deconfinement of asymptotically conformal color-superconducting quark matter in neutron stars
We present a relativistic density functional approach to color superconducting quark matter that mimics quark confinement by a fast growth of the quasiparticle selfenergy in the confining region. The approach is shown to be equivalent to a chiral model of quark matter with medium dependent couplings. While the (pseudo)scalar sector of the model is fitted to the vacuum phenomenology of quantum chromodynamics, the strength of interaction in the vector and diquark channels is varied in order to provide the best agreement with the observational constraints on the mass-radius relation and tidal deformability of neutron stars modelled with our approach. In order to recover the conformal behavior of quark matter at asymptotically high densities we introduce a medium dependence of the vector and diquark couplings motivated by the non-perturbative gluon exchange. Our analysis signals that the onset of deconfinement to color superconducting quark matter is likely to occur in neutron stars with masses below 1.0 M⊙
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