2,501 research outputs found
The Primakoff effect on a proton target
Primakoff effect offers us with a way to determine the radiative decay width
of pseudo-scalar mesons when they are photo-produced in the electromagnetic
field of hadronic systems. Taking advantage of recent developments in the Regge
description of the production of mesons in the strong hadronic field, this
paper evaluates the relative importance of the electromagnetic and the strong
amplitudes, and assesses the possibilities which become opened by modern
experimental facilities.Comment: 4 pages; 5 Figure
Searching for the Critical Point of QCD: Theoretical Benchmark Calculations
We present a comprehensive study of event-by-event multiplicity fluctuations
in nucleon-nucleon and nucleus-nucleus interactions from AGS/FAIR to RHIC
energies within the UrQMD transport approach. The scaled variances of negative,
positive, and all charged hadrons are analysed. The scaled variance in central
Pb+Pb collisions increases with energy and behaves similar to inelastic p+p
interactions. We find a non-trivial dependence of multiplicity fluctuations on
the rapidity and transverse momentum interval used for the analysis and on the
centrality selection procedure. Quantitative predictions for the NA49
experiment are given, taking into account the acceptance of the detector and
the selection procedure of central events.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
High energy Scattering in 2+1 QCD: A Dipole Picture
A dipole picture of high energy scattering is developed in the 2+1
dimensional QCD, following Mueller. A generalized integral equation for the
dipole density with a given separation and center of mass position is derived,
and meson-meson non-forward scattering amplitude is therefore calculated. We
also calculate the amplitude due to two pomeron exchange, and the triple
pomeron coupling. We compare the result obtained by this method to our previous
result based on an effective action approach, and find the two results agree at
the one pomeron exchange level.Comment: minor typos corrected. Postscript files are available through
anonymous ftp quark.het.brown.edu, in the directory /pub/preprints, file name
is 9407299. Hard copy is available upon reques
Baryon Number Transfer in Hadronic Interaction
The process of baryon number transfer due to string junction propagation in
rapidity is considered. It has a significant effect in the net baryon
production in collisions at mid-rapidities and an even larger effect in
the forward hemisphere in the cases of and interactions. The
results of numerical calculations in the framework of the Quark-Gluon String
model are in reasonable agreement with the data.Comment: Latex, 17 figs. in ps files, 1 table. Submitted to EPJ C The title of
paper were changed, some proovings in the text, references and in figs were
mad
A model-independent analysis of the dependence of the anomalous J/psi suppression on the number of participant nucleons
A recently published experimental dependence of the J/psi to Drell-Yan ratio
on the measured, by a zero degree calorimeter, forward energy E_ZDC in Pb+Pb
collisions at the CERN SPS is analyzed. Using a model-independent approach it
is shown that the data are at variance with an earlier published experimental
dependence of the same quantity on the transverse energy of neutral hadrons
E_T. The discrepancy is related to a moderate centrality region: 100 < N_p <
200 (N_p is the number of participant nucleons) and is peculiar only to the
data obtained within the `minimum bias' analysis (using the `theoretical
Drell-Yan'). This could result from systematic experimental errors in the
minimum bias sample. A possible source of the errors is discussed.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, 3 PS-figures. V2: Misprints are correcte
Baryon Junction Stopping at the SPS and RHIC via HIJING/B
Baryon stopping at the SPS and RHIC energies is calculated by introducing a
new baryon junction mechanism into HIJING. The exchange of a baryon junction,
according to Regge phenomenology, leads to a cosh(y/2) rapidity dependence and
an s^(-1/4) energy dependence of the inclusive baryon cross section. This
baryon junction dynamics also leads naturally to enhanced p_T broadening in pA
and AA together with enhanced mid-rapidity hyperon production.Comment: Proceedings for Quark Matter 97; 4 pages, 1 eps-figur
How coloniality shapes the making of Latin American psychologists: ethnographic evidence from Ecuador
This paper provides ethnographic evidence on how coloniality shapes the making of Latin American psychologists. A critical ethnography was conducted at a psychology training institution in Ecuador, consisting of twelve months of participant observation; forty-one semi-structured interviews; and analysis of academic discourse, photos, videos and relevant social media content. The research was guided by the tradition of Critical Psychology – specifically Liberation Psychology – and Critical Discourse Analysis. Findings suggest the pervasiveness of coloniality in the making of Ecuadorian psychologists and, hypothetically, of others in Latin America and the wider Global South. Interpretations also highlight the non-essentialist, non-dichotomist, ‘messy’ nature of such processes, a consideration which may advance current ethical and analytical debates on decolonisation. Echoing ongoing critical arguments, authors suggest that a ‘help-as-war’ metaphor is a category with potential value to contribute to such advancement, an approach that has important theoretical and pragmatic implications for researchers and practitioners
Multiplicity fluctuations in the string clustering approach
We present our results on multiplicity fluctuations in the framework of the
string clustering approach. We compare our results --with and without
clustering formation-- with CERN SPS NA49 data. We find a non-monotonic
behaviour of these fluctuations as a function of the collision centrality,
which has the same origin as the observed fluctuations of transverse momentum:
the correlations between the produced particles due to the cluster formation.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, revte
History, Violence and Collective Memory: Implications for Mental Health in Ecuador
National histories of violence shape experiences of suffering and professional
responses. In Ecuador, mental health literature addressing this crucial issue is scarce
and little debated. In contrast, local psychiatrists and psychologists within the country
face contemporary challenges that are deeply rooted in a violent colonial past and the
perpetuation of its fundamental ethos. This paper critically reviews relevant literature
on collective memory and historical trauma, and focuses on Ecuador as a case study
on how to incorporate history into modern mental health challenges. The discussion
poses key questions and outlines possible ways for Ecuador to address the link
between history and mental health, including insights from countries that have
struggled with their violent pasts. This paper contributes to ongoing international
debate on the role of cultural history in mental health with implications for social
scientists and practising clinicians in former colonised nations
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