2 research outputs found
QCD phase transitions from relativistic hadron models
The models of translationally invariant infinite nuclear matter in the
relativistic mean field models are very interesting and simple, since the
nucleon can connect only to a constant vector and scalar meson field. Can one
connect these to the complicated phase transitions of QCD ? For an affirmative
answer to this question, one must consider models where the coupling constants
to the scalar and vector fields must depend on density in a non-linear way,
since as such the models are not explicitly chirally invariant. Once this is
ensured, indeed one can derive a quark condensate indirectly from the energy
density of nuclear matter which goes to zero at large density and temperature.
The change to zero condensate indicates a smooth phase transition.Comment: 12 pages latex file, 1 table, 12 Postscript figures. To appear in
Zeit. f. Phys.
QCD Sum Rules and Applications to Nuclear Physics
Applications of QCD sum-rule methods to the physics of nuclei are reviewed,
with an emphasis on calculations of baryon self-energies in infinite nuclear
matter. The sum-rule approach relates spectral properties of hadrons
propagating in the finite-density medium, such as optical potentials for
quasinucleons, to matrix elements of QCD composite operators (condensates). The
vacuum formalism for QCD sum rules is generalized to finite density, and the
strategy and implementation of the approach is discussed. Predictions for
baryon self-energies are compared to those suggested by relativistic nuclear
physics phenomenology. Sum rules for vector mesons in dense nuclear matter are
also considered.Comment: 92 pages, ReVTeX, 9 figures can be obtained upon request (to Xuemin
Jin