286 research outputs found
QGP flow fluctuations and the characteristics of higher moments
The dynamical development of expanding Quark-gluon Plasma (QGP) flow is
studied in a 3+1D fluid dynamical model with a globally symmetric, initial
condition. We minimize fluctuations arising from complex dynamical processes at
finite impact parameters and from fluctuating random initial conditions to have
a conservative fluid dynamical background estimate for the statistical
distributions of the thermodynamical parameters. We also avoid a phase
transition in the equation of state, and we let the matter supercool during the
expansion.
Then central Pb+Pb collisions at TeV are studied in an
almost perfect fluid dynamical model, with azimuthally symmetric initial state
generated in a dynamical flux-tube model. The general development of
thermodynamical extensives are also shown for lower energies.
We observe considerable deviations from a thermal equilibrium source as a
consequence of the fluid dynamical expansion arising from a least fluctuating
initial state
Nucleation Rate of Hadron Bubbles in Baryon-Free Quark-Gluon Plasma
We evaluate the factor appearing in Langer's expression for the
nucleation rate extended to the case of hadron bubbles forming in zero baryon
number cooled quark-gluon plasma. We consider both the absence and presence of
viscosity and show that viscous effects introduce only small changes in the
value of Comment: 9 pages, revtex, no figures Full postscript version available at via
the WWW at http://nucth.physics.wisc.edu/preprints/ or by via from
ftp://nucth.physics.wisc.edu/pub/preprints/mad-nt-95-06.p
Simple solutions of fireball hydrodynamics for self-similar elliptic flows
Simple, self-similar, elliptic solutions of non-relativistic fireball
hydrodynamics are presented, generalizing earlier results for spherically
symmetric fireballs with Hubble flows and homogeneous temperature profiles. The
transition from one dimensional to three dimensional expansions is investigated
in an efficient manner.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures in 8 .eps files, references to recent data added,
accepted in Physics Letters
Relativistic Theory of Hydrodynamic Fluctuations with Applications to Heavy Ion Collisions
We develop the relativistic theory of hydrodynamic fluctuations for
application to high energy heavy ion collisions. In particular, we investigate
their effect on the expanding boost-invariant (Bjorken) solution of the
hydrodynamic equations. We discover that correlations over a long rapidity
range are induced by the propagation of the sound modes. Due to the expansion,
the dispersion law for these modes is non-linear and attenuated even in the
limit of zero viscosity. As a result, there is a non-dissipative wake behind
the sound front which is generated by any instantaneous point-like fluctuation.
We evaluate the two-particle correlators using the initial conditions and
hydrodynamic parameters relevant for heavy-ion collisions at RHIC and LHC. In
principle these correlators can be used to obtain information about the
viscosities because the magnitudes of the fluctuations are directly
proportional to them.Comment: 39 pages, 6 figures; references adde
The initial state of ultra-relativistic heavy ion collision
A model for energy, pressure and flow velocity distributions at the beginning
of ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions is presented, which can be used as
an initial condition for hydrodynamic calculations. Our model takes into
account baryon recoil for both target and projectile, arising from the
acceleration of partons in an effective field, produced in the collision. The
typical field strength (string tension) for RHIC energies is about 5-12 GeV/fm,
what allows us to talk about "string ropes". The results show that a QGP forms
a tilted disk, such that the direction of the largest pressure gradient stays
in the reaction plane, but deviates from both the beam and the usual transverse
flow directions. Such initial conditions may lead to the creation of "antiflow"
or "third flow component".Comment: 28 pages, 9 figures. The presentation has been changed considerably.
Some parts of the model have been reformulated, what led to modifications in
several equations: (20-38), Apps. A, B. All the figures have been changed
from 100 GeV/nucl initial energy to the achieved RHIC energy of 65 GeV/nucl.
The last subplots in the Figs. 3, 4, 5, 6 present E=T^{00} in the laboratory
frame now, instead of the energy density in the local rest frame, e, shown in
the initial version. We also added the App. C to clarify the transformation
from space-time to lightcone coordinates and bac
Entropy production in chemically non-equilibrium quark-gluon plasma created in central Pb+Pb collisions at LHC energies
We study the possibility that partonic matter produced at early stage of
ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions is out of chemical equilibrium. It is
assumed that initially this matter is mostly composed of gluons, but quarks and
antiquarks are produced at later times. The dynamical evolution of partonic
system is described by the Bjorken-like ideal hydrodynamics with a time
dependent quark fugacity. The results of this model are compared with those
obtained by assuming the complete chemical equilibrium of partons already at
the initial stage. It is shown that in a chemically non-equilibrium scenario
the entropy gradually increases, and about 25% of the total final entropy is
generated during the hydrodynamic evolution of deconfined matter. We argue that
the (anti)quark suppression included in this approach may be responsible for
reduced (anti)baryon to meson ratios observed in heavy-ion collisions at LHC
energies.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, minor changes to match published versio
Canonical Ensemble of Initial States Leading to Chiral Fluctuations
In energetic heavy ion collisions, if quark-gluon plasma is formed, its
hadronization may lead to observable critical fluctuations, i.e., DCC
formation. The strength and observability of these fluctuations depend on the
initial state. Here we study the canonical ensemble of initial states of chiral
fluctuations in heavy ion collisions and the probability to obtain observable
domains of chiral condensates.Comment: 13 pages (figures included) Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Impact of Nucleon Mass Shift on the Freeze Out Process
The freeze out of a massive nucleon gas through a finite layer with time-like
normal is studied. The impact of in-medium nucleon mass shift on the freeze out
process is investigated. A considerable modification of the thermodynamical
variables temperature, flow-velocity, energy density and particle density has
been found. Due to the nucleon mass shift the freeze out particle distribution
functions are changed noticeably in comparison with evaluations, which use
vacuum nucleon mass.Comment: submitted to Physical Review
Dynamical Evolution of the Scalar Condensate in Heavy Ion Collisions
We derive the effective coarse-grained field equation for the scalar
condensate of the linear sigma model in a simple and straightforward manner
using linear response theory. The dissipative coefficient is calculated at tree
level on the basis of the physical processes of sigma-meson decay and of
thermal sigma-mesons and pions knocking sigma-mesons out of the condensate. The
field equation is solved for hot matter undergoing either one or three
dimensional expansion and cooling in the aftermath of a high energy nuclear
collision. The results show that the time constant for returning the scalar
condensate to thermal equilibrium is of order 2 fm/c.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures are embedded at the end. The effect of the time
dependence of the condensate v is included in this revised version. Numerical
work is redone accordingl
Coherence Time in High Energy Proton-Nucleus Collisions
Precisely measured Drell-Yan cross sections for 800 GeV protons incident on a
variety of nuclear targets exhibit a deviation from linear scaling in the
atomic number A. We show that this deviation can be accounted for by energy
degradation of the proton as it passes through the nucleus if account is taken
of the time delay of particle production due to quantum coherence. We infer an
average proper coherence time of 0.4 +- 0.1 fm/c, corresponding to a coherence
path length of 8 +- 2 fm in the rest frame of the nucleus.Comment: 11 pages in LaTeX. Includes 6 eps figures. Uses epsf.st
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