86,383 research outputs found
Direct photons at low measured in PHENIX
Direct photon spectra measured at small in p+p, d+Au and Au+Au
collisions at GeV are presented. Several measurement
techniques including statistical subtraction, tagging, and internal and
external conversion were applied and found to produce consistent results. The
p+p and d+Au results are found to be in very good agreement with pQCD
predictions over the entire range. No excess of direct photons in Au+Au
collisions with respect to binary scaled d+Au data is observed within
systematic errors.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, proceedings for Quark Matter 200
Nuclear Reactions Rates Governing the Nucleosynthesis of Ti44
Large excesses of Ca44 in certain presolar graphite and silicon carbide
grains give strong evidence for Ti44 production in supernovae. Furthermore,
recent detection of the Ti44 gamma-line from the Cas A SNR by CGRO/COMPTEL
shows that radioactive Ti44 is produced in supernovae. These make the Ti44
abundance an observable diagnostic of supernovae. Through use of a nuclear
reaction network, we have systematically varied reaction rates and groups of
reaction rates to experimentally identify those that govern Ti44 abundance in
core-collapse supernova nucleosynthesis. We survey the nuclear-rate dependence
by repeated calculations of the identical adiabatic expansion, with peak
temperature and density chosen to be 5.5xE9 K and 1E7 g/cc, respectively, to
approximate the conditions in detailed supernova models. We find that, for
equal total numbers of neutrons and protons (eta=0), Ti44 production is most
sensitive to the following reaction rates: Ti44(alpha,p)V47,
alpha(2alpha,gamma)C12, Ti44(alpha,gamma)Cr48, V45(p,gamma)Cr46. We tabulate
the most sensitive reactions in order of their importance to the Ti44
production near the standard values of currently accepted cross-sections, at
both reduced reaction rate (0.01X) and at increased reaction rate (100X)
relative to their standard values. Although most reactions retain their
importance for eta > 0, that of V45(p,gamma)Cr46 drops rapidly for eta >=
0.0004. Other reactions assume greater significance at greater neutron excess:
C12(alpha,gamma)O16, Ca40(alpha,gamma)Ti44, Al27(alpha,n)P30, Si30(alpha,n)S33.
Because many of these rates are unknown experimentally, our results suggest the
most important targets for future cross section measurements governing the
value of this observable abundance.Comment: 37 pages, LaTex, 17 figures, 8 table
First-Order Transition in XY Fully Frustrated Simple Cubic Lattice
We study the nature of the phase transition in the fully frustrated simple
cubic lattice with the XY spin model. This system is the Villain's model
generalized in three dimensions. The ground state is very particular with a
12-fold degeneracy. Previous studies have shown unusual critical properties.
With the powerful Wang-Landau flat-histogram Monte Carlo method, we carry out
in this work intensive simulations with very large lattice sizes. We show that
the phase transition is clearly of first order, putting an end to the
uncertainty which has lasted for more than twenty years
Status of the joint LIGO--TAMA300 inspiral analysis
We present the status of the joint search for gravitational waves from
inspiraling neutron star binaries in the LIGO Science Run 2 and TAMA300 Data
Taking Run 8 data, which was taken from February 14 to April 14, 2003, by the
LIGO and TAMA collaborations. In this paper we discuss what has been learned
from an analysis of a subset of the data sample reserved as a ``playground''.
We determine the coincidence conditions for parameters such as the coalescence
time and chirp mass by injecting simulated Galactic binary neutron star signals
into the data stream. We select coincidence conditions so as to maximize our
efficiency of detecting simulated signals. We obtain an efficiency for our
coincident search of 78 %, and show that we are missing primarily very distant
signals for TAMA300. We perform a time slide analysis to estimate the
background due to accidental coincidence of noise triggers. We find that the
background triggers have a very different character from the triggers of
simulated signals.Comment: 10 page, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Classical and Quantum
Gravity for the special issue of the GWDAW9 Proceedings ; Corrected typos,
minor change
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