122 research outputs found
On the formation of Hubble flow in Little Bangs
A dynamical appearance of scaling solutions in the relativistic hydrodynamics
applied to describe ultra-relativistic heavy-ion collisions is studied. We
consider the boost-invariant cylindrically symmetric systems and the effects of
the phase transition are taken into account by using a temperature dependent
sound velocity inferred from the lattice simulations of QCD. We find that the
transverse flow acquires the scaling form r/t within the short evolution times,
10 - 15 fm, only if the initial transverse flow originating from the
pre-equilibrium collective behavior is present at the initial stage of the
hydrodynamic evolution. The amount of such pre-equilibrium flow is correlated
with the initial pressure gradient; larger gradients require smaller initial
flow. The results of the numerical calculations support the phenomenological
parameterizations used in the Blast-Wave, Buda-Lund, and Cracow models of the
freeze-out process.Comment: 11 page
A Bose-Einstein Model of Particle Multiplicity Distributions
A model of particle production is developed based on a parallel with a theory
of Bose-Einstein condensation and similarities with other critical phenomena
such as critical opalescence. The role of a power law critical exponent tau and
Levy index alpha are studied. Various features of this model are developed and
compared with other commonly used models of particle production which are shown
to differ by having different values for tau, alpha. While void scaling is a
feature of this model, hierarchical structure is not a general property of it.
The value of the exponent tau=2 is a transition point associated with void and
hierarchical scaling features. An exponent gamma is introduced to describe
enhanced fluctuations near a critical point. Experimentally determined
properties of the void scaling function can be used to determine tau.Comment: Accepted for publication in Nucl. Phys.
Quantum-Statistical Correlations and Single Particle Distributions for Slowly Expanding Systems with Temperature Profile
Competition among particle evaporation, temperature gradient and flow is
investigated in a phenomenological manner, based on a simultaneous analysis of
quantum statistical correlations and momentum distributions for a
non-relativistic, spherically symmetric, three-dimensionally expanding, finite
source. The parameters of the model emission function are constrained by fits
to neutron and proton momentum distributions and correlation functions in
intermediate energy heavy-ion collisions. The temperature gradient is related
to the momentum dependence of the radius parameters of the two-particle
correlation function, as well as to the momentum-dependent temperature
parameter of the single particle spectrum, while a long duration of particle
evaporation is found to be responsible for the low relative momentum behavior
of the two-particle correlations.Comment: 20 pages + 5 ps figures, ReVTeX, uses psfig.sty, the description is
extended to include final state interactions, phenomenological evaporation
and to fit intermediate energy heavy ion proton and neutron spectrum and
correlation dat
A method of eta' decay product selection to study partial chiral symmetry restoration
In case of chiral U_A(1) symmetry restoration the mass of the eta' boson (the
ninth, would-be Goldstone boson) is decreased, thus its production cross
section is heavily enhanced. The eta' decays (through one of its decay
channels) into five pions. These pions will not be correlated in terms of
Bose-Einsten correlations, thus the production enhancement changes the strength
of two-pion correlation functions at low momentum. Preliminary results strongly
support the mass decrease of the eta' boson. In this paper we propose a method
to select pions coming from eta' decays. We investigate the efficiency of the
proposed kinematical cut in several collision systems and energies with several
simulators. We prove that our method can be used in all investigeted collision
systems.Comment: Talk at the VI Workshop on Particle Correlations and Femtoscopy,
Kiev, September 14-18, 2010. 6 pages, 3 figures. This work was supported by
the OTKA grant NK73143 and M. Csanad's Bolyai scholarshi
Femtoscopic results in Au+Au and p+p from PHENIX at RHIC
Ultra-relativistic gold-gold and proton-proton collisions are investigated in
the experiments of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). In the last
several years large amount of results were revealed about the matter created in
these collisions. The latest PHENIX results for femtoscopy and correlations are
reviewed in this paper. Bose-Einstein correlations of charged kaons in 200 GeV
Au+Au collisions and of charged pions in 200 GeV p+p collisions are shown. They
are both compatible with previous measurements of charged pions in gold-gold
collisions, with respect to transverse mass or number of participants scaling.Comment: Talk given at the VI Workshop on Particle Correlations and
Femtoscopy, Kiev, September 14-18, 2010. 6 pages, 4 figures. This work was
supported by the OTKA grant NK73143 and M. Csanad's Bolyai scholarshi
Review of HBT or Bose-Einstein correlations in high energy heavy ion collisions
A brief review is given on the discovery and the first five decades of the
Hanbury Brown - Twiss effect and its generalized applications in high energy
nuclear and particle physics, that includes a meta-review. Interesting and
inspiring new directions are also highlighted, including for example source
imaging, lepton and photon interferometry, non-Gaussian shape analysis as well
as many other new directions. Existing models are compared to two-particle
correlation measurements and the so-called RHIC HBT puzzle is resolved.
Evidence for a (directional) Hubble flow is presented and the conclusion is
confirmed by a successful description of the pseudorapidity dependence of the
elliptic flow as measured in Au+Au collisions by the PHOBOS Collaboration.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure, 8 sub-figures, invited plenary talk at the
ICPA-QGP 2005 conference in Kolkata, Indi
Testing the Resolving Power of 2-D K^+ K^+ Interferometry
Adopting a procedure previously proposed to quantitatively study
two-dimensional pion interferometry, an equivalent 2-D chi^2 analysis was
performed to test the resolving power of that method when applied to less
favorable conditions, i.e., if no significant contribution from long lived
resonances is expected, as in kaon interferometry. For that purpose, use is
made of the preliminary E859 K^+ K^+ interferometry data from Si+Au collisions
at 14.6 AGeV/c. As expected, less sensitivity is achieved in the present case,
although it still is possible to distinguish two distinct decoupling
geometries. The present analysis seems to favor scenarios with no resonance
formation at the AGS energy range, if the preliminary K^+ K^+ data are
confirmed. The possible compatibility of data with zero decoupling proper time
interval, conjectured by the 3-D experimental analysis, is also investigated
and is ruled out when considering more realistic dynamical models with
expanding sources. These results, however, clearly evidence the important
influence of the time emission interval on the source effective transverse
dimensions. Furthermore, they strongly emphasize that the static Gaussian
parameterization, commonly used to fit data, cannot be trusted under more
realistic conditions, leading to distorted or even wrong interpretation of the
source parameters!Comment: 11 pages, RevTeX, 4 Postscript figures include
Initial temperature and EoS of quark matter from direct photons
The time evolution of the quark gluon plasma created in gold-gold collisions
of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) can be described by
hydrodynamical models. Distribution of hadrons reflects the freeze-out state of
the matter. To investigate the time evolution one needs to analyze penetrating
probes, such as direct photon spectra. Distributions of low energy photons was
published in 2010 by PHENIX. In this paper we analyze a 3+1 dimensional
solution of relativistic hydrodynamics and calculate momentum distribution of
direct photons. Using earlier fits of this model to hadronic spectra, we
compare photon calculations to measurements and find that the initial
temperature of the center of the fireball is at least 519+-12 MeV, while for
the equation of state we get c_s= 0.36+-0.02.Comment: Talk at the VI Workshop on Particle Correlations and Femtoscopy,
Kiev, September 14-18, 2010. 6 pages, 1 figure. This work was supported by
the OTKA grant NK73143 and M. Csanad's Bolyai scholarshi
On Sums of Overlapping Products of Independent Bernoulli Random Variables
We find the exact distribution of an arbitrary remainder of an infinite sum of overlapping products of a sequence of independent Bernoulli random variables.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/41634/1/11253_2004_Article_340347.pd
- …