418 research outputs found
Particle production in quantum transport theories
The particle production in the intermediate energy heavy ion collisions is
discussed in the framework of the nonequilibrium Green's functions formalism.
The evolution equations of the Green's functions for fermions allows for the
discussion of the off-shell fermion propagator and of the large momentum
component in the initial state. For the case of a homogeneous system numerical
calculations of the meson production rate are performed and compared with the
semiclassical production rate.Comment: 45 pages, figures included, uses FEYNMAN macro
Spinodal decomposition: An alternate mechanism of phase conversion
The scenario of homogeneous nucleation is investigated for a first order
quark-hadron phase transition in a rapidly expanding background of quark gluon
plasma. It is found that significant supercooling is possible before
hadronization begins. This study also suggests that spinodal decomposition
competes with nucleation and may provide an alternative mechanism for phase
conversion.Comment: LaTeX, 4 pages with 3 Postscript figures. Talk given at International
Conference on Physics and Astrophysics of Quark Gluon Plasma (ICPAQGP 2001),
Nov. 26-30, 2001, Jaipur, Indi
Photoexcited transients in disordered semiconductors: Quantum coherence at very short to intermediate times
We study theoretically electron transients in semiconductor alloys excited by
light pulses shorter than 100 femtoseconds and tuned above the absorption edge
during and shortly after the pulse, when disorder scattering is dominant.
We use non-equilibrium Green functions employing the field-dependent
self-consistent Born approximation. The propagators and the particle
correlation function are obtained by a direct numerical solution of the Dyson
equations in differential form. For the purely elastic scattering in our model
system the solution procedures for the retarded propagator and for the
correlation function can be decoupled.The propagator is used as an input in
calculating the correlation function. Numerical results combined with a
cumulant expansion permit to separate in a consistent fashion the dark and the
induced parts of the self-energy. The dark behavior reduces to propagation of
strongly damped quasi-particles; the field induced self-energy leads to an
additional time non-local coherence. The particle correlation function is
formed by a coherent transient and an incoherent back-scattered component. The
particle number is conserved only if the field induced coherence is fully
incorporated. The transient polarization and the energy balance are also
obtained and interpreted.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B; 37 pages,17 figure
Disappearance of Elliptic Flow: A New Probe for the Nuclear Equation of State
Using a relativistic hadron transport model, we investigate the utility of
the elliptic flow excitation function as a probe for the stiffness of nuclear
matter and for the onset of a possible quark-gluon-plasma (QGP)
phase-transition at AGS energies 1 < E_Beam < 11 AGeV. The excitation function
shows a strong dependence on the nuclear equation of state, and exhibits
characteristic signatures which could signal the onset of a phase transition to
the QGP.Comment: 11 pages, 4 Postscript figures, uses epsf.sty, submitted to Physical
Review Letter
Nuclear Isospin Diffusivity
The isospin diffusion and other irreversible phenomena are discussed for a
two-component nuclear Fermi system. The set of Boltzmann transport equations,
such as employed for reactions, are linearized, for weak deviations of a system
from uniformity, in order to arrive at nonreversible fluxes linear in the
nonuniformities. Besides the diffusion driven by a concentration gradient, also
the diffusion driven by temperature and pressure gradients is considered.
Diffusivity, conductivity, heat conduction and shear viscosity coefficients are
formally expressed in terms of the responses of distribution functions to the
nonuniformities. The linearized Boltzmann-equation set is solved, under the
approximation of constant form-factors in the distribution-function responses,
to find concrete expressions for the transport coefficients in terms of
weighted collision integrals. The coefficients are calculated numerically for
nuclear matter, using experimental nucleon-nucleon cross sections. The isospin
diffusivity is inversely proportional to the neutron-proton cross section and
is also sensitive to the symmetry energy. At low temperatures in symmetric
matter, the diffusivity is directly proportional to the symmetry energy.Comment: 35 pages, 1 table, 5 figures, accepted by PRC, (v3) changes in
response to the referee's comments, discussion for isospin diffusion process
in heavy-ion reactions, fig. 5 shows results from a two different isospin
depndent uclear equation of state, and a new reference adde
Probing the symmetry energy with isospin ratio from nucleons to fragments
Within the framework of ImQMD05, we study several isospin sensitive
observables, such as DR(n/p) ratios, isospin transport ratio (isospin
diffusion), yield ratios for LCPs between the projectile region and
mid-rapidity region for the reaction systems Ni+Ni, Zn+Zn, Sn+Sn at
low-intermediate energies. Our results show that those observables are
sensitive to the density dependence of symmetry energy, and also depend on the
cluster formation mechanism. By comparing these calculations to the data, the
information of the symmetry energy and reaction mechanism is obtained.Comment: Talk given by Yingxun Zhang at the 11th International Conference on
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (NN2012), San Antonio, Texas, USA, May 27-June 1,
2012. To appear in the NN2012 Proceedings in Journal of Physics: Conference
Series (JPCS
Effects of Compression and Collective Expansion on Particle Emission from Central Heavy-Ion Reactions
Conditions under which compression occurs and collective expansion develops
in energetic reactions of heavy nuclei, are analyzed, together with their
effects on emitted light baryons and pions. Within transport simulations, it is
shown that shock fronts perpendicular to beam axis form in head-on reactions.
The fronts separate hot compressed matter from normal. As impact parameter
increases, the angle of inclination of the fronts relative to beam axis
decreases, and in-between the fronts a weak tangential discontinuity develops.
Hot matter exposed to the vacuum in directions perpendicular to shock motion
(and parallel to fronts), starts to expand sideways, early within reactions.
Expansion in the direction of shock motion follows after the shocks propagate
through nuclei, but due to the delay does not acquire same strength. Expansion
affects angular distributions, mean-energy components, shapes of spectra and
mean energies of different particles emitted into any one direction, and
further particle yields. Both the expansion and a collective motion associated
with the weak discontinuity, affect the magnitude of sideward flow within
reaction plane. Differences in mean particle energy components in and out of
the reaction plane in semicentral collisions, depend sensitively on the
relative magnitude of shock speed in normal matter and speed of sound in hot
matter.Comment: 71 pages, 33 figures (available on request), report MSUCL-94
Non-instant collisions and two concepts of quasiparticle
The kinetic theory recently implemented in heavy ion reactions combines a
non-local and non-instant picture of binary collisions with quasiparticle
features. We show that the non-instant description is compatible with the
spectral concept of quasiparticles while the commonly used variational concept
is consistent only with instant collisions. The rearrangement energy, by which
the variational concept surpasses the spectral one, is shown to be covered by a
medium effect on non-instant collisions.Comment: PRE 59,1 rap. com
New method for measuring azimuthal distributions in nucleus-nucleus collisions
The methods currently used to measure azimuthal distributions of particles in
heavy ion collisions assume that all azimuthal correlations between particles
result from their correlation with the reaction plane. However, other
correlations exist, and it is safe to neglect them only if azimuthal
anisotropies are much larger than 1/sqrt(N), with N the total number of
particles emitted in the collision. This condition is not satisfied at
ultrarelativistic energies. We propose a new method, based on a cumulant
expansion of multiparticle azimuthal correlations, which allows to measure much
smaller values of azimuthal anisotropies, down to 1/N. It is simple to
implement and can be used to measure both integrated and differential flow.
Furthermore, this method automatically eliminates the major systematic errors,
which are due to azimuthal asymmetries in the detector acceptance.Comment: final version (misprints corrected), to be published in Phys.Rev.
Fragment Flow and the Nuclear Equation of State
We use the Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck model with a momentum-dependent
nuclear mean field to simulate the dynamical evolution of heavy ion collisions.
We re-examine the azimuthal anisotropy observable, proposed as sensitive to the
equation of state of nuclear matter. We obtain that this sensitivity is maximal
when the azimuthal anisotropy is calculated for nuclear composite fragments, in
agreement with some previous calculations. As a test case we concentrate on
semi-central collisions at 400 MeV.Comment: 12 pages, ReVTeX 3.0. 12 Postscript figures, uuencoded and appende
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