25,914 research outputs found
Centrality and Energy Dependence of Proton, Light Fragment and Hyperon Production
Recent results of the NA49 collaboration are discussed. These include the
energy dependence of stopping and the production of the light fragments t and
3He. New data on the system size dependence of hyperon production at 40A and
158AGeV are also presented.Comment: 4 pages, Quark Matter 2006 proceeding
Transverse momentum distributions and their forward- backward correlations in the percolating colour string approach
The forward-backward correlations in the distributions, which present a
clear signature of non-linear effects in particle production, are studied in
the model of percolating colour strings. Quantitative predictions are given for
these correlations at SPS, RHIC and LHC energies. Interaction of strings also
naturally explains the flattening of distributions and increase of
with energy and atomic number for nuclear collisionsComment: 6 pages in LaTex, 3 figures in Postscrip
Modeling the Void H I Column Density Spectrum
The equivalent width distribution function (EWDF) of \hone absorbers specific
to the void environment has been recently derived (Manning 2002), revealing a
large line density of clouds (dN/dz ~500 per unit z for Log (N_HI)> 12.4). I
show that the void absorbers cannot be diffuse (or so-called filamentary)
clouds, expanding with the Hubble flow, as suggested by N-body/hydro
simulations. Absorbers are here modeled as the baryonic remnants of
sub-galactic perturbations that have expanded away from their dark halos in
response to reionization at z ~ 6.5. A 1-D Lagrangian hydro/gravity code is
used to follow the dynamic evolution and ionization structure of the baryonic
clouds for a range of halo circular velocities. The simulation products at z=0
can be combined according to various models of the halo velocity distribution
function to form a column density spectrum that can be compared with the
observed. I find that such clouds may explain the observed EWDF if the halo
velocity distribution function is as steep as that advanced by Klypin (1999),
and the halo mass distribution is closer to isothermal than to NFW.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures. Paper in press; ApJ 591, n
On the relation of quark confinement and chiral symmetry breaking
We study the phase diagram of QCD with the help of order parameters for
chiral symmetry breaking and quark confinement. We also introduce a new order
parameter for the confinement phase transition, which is related to the quark
density. It is easily accessible by different theoretical approaches, such as
functional approaches or lattice simulations. Its relation to the Polyakov loop
expectation value is discussed and the QCD phase diagram is analysed. Our
results suggest a close relation between the chiral and the confinement phase
transition.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dynamical phase diagram of the dc-driven underdamped Frenkel-Kontorova chain
Multistep dynamical phase transition from the locked to the running state of
atoms in response to a dc external force is studied by MD simulations of the
generalized Frenkel-Kontorova model in the underdamped limit. We show that the
hierarchy of transition recently reported [Braun et al, Phys. Rev. Lett. 78,
1295 (1997)] strongly depends on the value of the friction constant. A simple
phenomenological explanation for the friction dependence of the various
critical forces separating intermediate regimes is given.Comment: 12 Revtex Pages, 4 EPS figure
Cumulative structure function in terms of nucleonic wave function of the nucleus
The structure function of the nucleus in the cumulative region is
studied in terms of nucleon degrees of freedom. At high the resulting
expressions are presented as a sum of contributions from few-nucleon
correlations. Two-nucleon correlations are studied in some detail. Spin
variables are averaged out. In the region the structure functions are
calculated for the relativistic interaction proposed by F.Gross {\it et al}.
They are found to fall with faster than the exponential. For Carbon at
, where the method is not rigorously applicable, they turn out to be
rougly twice larger than the experimental data.Comment: text and 2 figures in LaTex, 7 figures in P
Superconductivity in iron silicide Lu2Fe3Si5 probed by radiation-induced disordering
Resistivity r(T), Hall coefficient RH(T), superconducting temperature Tc, and
the slope of the upper critical field -dHc2/dT were studied in poly- and
single-crystalline samples of the Fe-based superconductor Lu2Fe3Si5 irradiated
by fast neutrons. Atomic disordering induced by the neutron irradiation leads
to a fast suppression of Tc similarly to the case of doping of Lu2Fe3Si5 with
magnetic (Dy) and non-magnetic (Sc, Y) impurities. The same effect was observed
in a novel FeAs-based superconductor La(O-F)FeAs after irradiation. Such
behavior is accounted for by strong pair breaking that is traceable to
scattering at non-magnetic impurities or radiation defects in unconventional
superconductors. In such superconductors the sign of the order parameter
changes between the different Fermi sheets (s+- model). Some relations that are
specified for the properties of the normal and superconducting states in
high-temperature superconductors are also observed in Lu2Fe3Si5. The first is
the relationship -dHc2/dT ~ Tc, instead of the one expected for dirty
superconductors -dHc2/dT ~ r0. The second is a correlation between the
low-temperature linear coefficient a in the resistivity r = r0 + a1T, which
appears presumably due to the scattering at magnetic fluctuations, and Tc; this
correlation being an evidence of a tight relation between the superconductivity
and magnetism. The data point to an unconventional (non-fononic) mechanism of
superconductivity in Lu2Fe3Si5, and, probably, in some other Fe-based
compounds, which can be fruitfully studied via the radiation-induced
disordering.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Solitonic-exchange mechanism of surface~diffusion
We study surface diffusion in the framework of a generalized
Frenkel-Kontorova model with a nonconvex transverse degree of freedom. The
model describes a lattice of atoms with a given concentration interacting by
Morse-type forces, the lattice being subjected to a two-dimensional substrate
potential which is periodic in one direction and nonconvex (Morse) in the
transverse direction. The results are used to describe the complicated
exchange-mediated diffusion mechanism recently observed in MD simulations [J.E.
Black and Zeng-Ju Tian, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 71}, 2445-2448(1993)].Comment: 22 Revtex pages, 9 figures to appear in Phys. Rev.
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