24,113 research outputs found
Beam energy dependence of Hanbury-Brown-Twiss radii from a blast-wave model
The beam energy dependence of correlation lengths (the Hanbury-Brown-Twiss
radii) is calculated by using a blast-wave model and the results are comparable
with those from RHIC-STAR beam energy scan data as well as the LHC-ALICE
measurements. A set of parameter for the blast-wave model as a function of beam
energy under study are obtained by fit to the HBT radii at each energy point.
The transverse momentum dependence of HBT radii is presented with the extracted
parameters for Au + Au collision at 200 GeV and for Pb+Pb
collisions at 2.76 TeV. From our study one can learn that particle emission
duration can not be ignored while calculating the HBT radii with the same
parameters. And tuning kinetic freeze-out temperature in a range will result in
system lifetime changing in the reverse direction as it is found in RHIC-STAR
experiment measurements.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
A large sample of low surface brightness disk galaxies from the SDSS. I: The sample and the stellar populations
We present the properties of a large sample (12,282) of nearly face-on low
surface brightness (LSB) disk galaxies selected from the main galaxy sample of
SDSS-DR4. These properties include B-band central surface brightness mu_0(B),
scale lengths h, integrated magnitudes, colors, and distances D. This sample
has mu_0(B) values from 22 to 24.5 mag arcsec^{-2} with a median value of 22.42
mag arcsec^{-2}, and disk scale lengths ranging from 2 to 19 kpc. They are
quite bright with M_B taking values from -18 to -23 mag with a median value of
-20.08 mag. There exist clear correlations between logh and M_B, logh and logD,
logD and M_B. However, no obvious correlations are found between mu_0(B) and
logh, colors etc. The correlation between colors and logh is weak even though
it exists. Both the optical-optical and optical-NIR color-color diagrams
indicate that most of them have a mixture of young and old stellar populations.
They also satisfy color-magnitude relations, which indicate that brighter
galaxies tend generally to be redder. The comparison between the LSBGs and a
control sample of nearly face-on disk galaxies with higher surface brightness
(HSB) with mu_0(B) from 18.5 to 22 mag arcsec^{-2} show that, at a given
luminosity or distance, the observed LSB galaxies tend to have larger scale
lengths. These trends could be seen gradually by dividing both the LSBGs and
HSBGs into two sub-groups according to surface brightness. A volume-limited
sub-sample was extracted to check the incompleteness of surface brightness. The
only one of the property relations having an obvious change is the relation of
logh versus mu_0(B), which shows a correlation in this sub-sample.Comment: 14 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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