7,940 research outputs found
Comment on Transverse Mass Dependence of Partonic Dilepton Production in Ultra-Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
Comment on scale breaking effects in dilepton emission from partons during
the early stage of ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisionsComment: 6 pages, RevTe
Parton Cascade Description of Heavy-Ion Collisions at CERN ?
There seems to be a general consensus now that a first glimpse of a QGP-like
effect has become visible in the beautiful NA50 data on J/\psi production and
the `anomalous supression' phenomenon. On the other hand, it is still widely
believed that the dynamics of heavy-ion collisions at CERN SPS energy is
predominantly governed by soft, non-perturbative physics. This is ironic: after
all, it is unlikely that a QGP could be formed if the underlying dynamics were
essentyially soft, rather than that it requires intense quark-gluon production
with sufficient cascade-like reinteractions which drive the matter to large
density and equilibrium. Therefore, I advocate in this contribution that for
ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions a description based on the pQCD
interactions and cascade evolution of involved partons can and should be used,
owing to the claim that short-range parton interactions play an important role
at sufficiently high beam energies, including CERN energy sqrt(s) = 20 A GeV.
Here mini-jet production which liberates of quarks and gluons cannot be
considered as an isolated rare phenomenon, but can occur quite copiously and
may lead to complex multiple cascade-type processes.Comment: Proceedings for Quark Matter 97; 4 pages including 6 postscript
figure
Dynamic Gluon Confinement in High Energy Processes within Effective QCD Field Theory
An effective Lagrangian approach to describe the dynamics of confinement and
symmetry breaking in the process of quark-gluon to hadron conversion is
proposed. The deconfined quark and gluon degrees of freedom of the perturbative
QCD vacuum are coupled to color neutral condensate fields representing the
non-perturbative vacuum with broken scale and chiral symmetry. As a first
application the evolution of gluons emitted by a fragmenting high energy pair from the perturbative to the non-perturbative regime with confinement
is studied. For reasonable parameter choice the solution of the equations of
motion leads to flux tube configurations with a string tension
GeV/fm.Comment: CERN-TH. 7409/94, 9 pages, 4 figures, postscript encoded with uufile
Flash of photons from the early stage of heavy-ion collisions
The dynamics of partonic cascades may be an important aspect for particle
production in relativistic collisions of nuclei at CERN SPS and BNL RHIC
energies. Within the Parton-Cascade Model, we estimate the production of single
photons from such cascades due to scattering of quarks and gluons q g -> q
gamma, quark-antiquark annihilation q qbar -> g gamma, or gamma gamma, and from
electromagnetic brems-strahlung of quarks q -> q gamma. We find that the latter
QED branching process plays the dominant role for photon production, similarly
as the QCD branchings q -> q g and g -> g g play a crucial role for parton
multiplication. We conclude therefore that photons accompanying the parton
cascade evolution during the early stage of heavy-ion collisions shed light on
the formation of a partonic plasma.Comment: 4 pages including 3 postscript figure
Comment on: "Transverse-Mass Dependence of Dilepton Emission from Preequilibrium and Quark-Gluon Plasma in High Energy Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions"
In a recent Letter, Geiger presents calculations of the dilepton emission
from the early stage of ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions using the parton
cascade model (PCM). He shows that the scaling is not observed. In
this Comment, we point out that this is largely due to a defect in the PCM.Comment: 3 pages, LaTex, LBL-3526
Parton cascade description of relativistic heavy-ion collisions at CERN SPS energies ?
We examine Pb+Pb collisions at CERN SPS energy 158 A GeV, by employing the
earlier developed and recently refined parton-cascade/cluster-hadronization
model and its Monte Carlo implementation. This space-time model involves the
dynamical interplay of perturbative QCD parton production and evolution, with
non-perturbative parton-cluster formation and hadron production through cluster
decays. Using computer simulations, we are able to follow the entwined
time-evolution of parton and hadron degrees of freedom in both position and
momentum space, from the instant of nuclear overlap to the final yield of
particles. We present and discuss results for the multiplicity distributions,
which agree well with the measured data from the CERN SPS, including those for
K mesons. The transverse momentum distributions of the produced hadrons are
also found to be in good agreement with the preliminary data measured by the
NA49 and the WA98 collaboration for the collision of lead nuclei at the CERN
SPS. The analysis of the time evolution of transverse energy deposited in the
collision zone and the energy density suggests an existence of partonic matter
for a time of more than 5 fm.Comment: 16 pages including 7 postscript figure
Multiple parton interactions in high-density QCD matter
Multiple interactions of quarks and gluons in high-energy heavy-ion
collisions may give rise to interesting phemomena of color charges propagating
in high-density QCD matter. We study the dynamics of multi-parton systems
produced in nucleus-nucleus collisions at energies corresponding the the CERN
SPS and the future BNL RHIC experiments. Due to the complexity of the
multi-particle dynamics we choose to employ the parton cascade model in order
to simulate the development of multiple parton scatterings and associated
stimulated emision processes. Our results indicate a non-linear increase with
nuclear mass A of, e.g., parton multiplicity, energy density, strangeness, and
contrast a linear A-scaling as in Glauber-type approaches. If multiple
interactions are suppressed and only single parton scatterings (no
re-interactions) are considered, we recover such a linear behavior. It remains
to be studied whether these results on the parton level can be experimentally
seen in final-state observables, such as the charged particle multiplicity, the
magnitude of produced transverse energy, or the number of produced strange
hadrons.Comment: 15 pages including 9 postscript figure
Quantum Field Kinetics
Using the general framework of quantum field theory, we derive basic
equations of quantum field kinetics. The main goal of this approach is to
compute the observables associated with a quark-gluon plasma at different
stages of its evolution. We start by rewriting the integral equations for the
field correlators in different forms, depending on the relevant dynamical
features at each different stage. Next, two versions of perturbation expansion
are considered. The first is best suited for the calculation of electromagnetic
emission from chaotic, but not equilibrated, strongly interacting matter. The
second version allows one to derive evolution equations, which are
generalizations of the familiar QCD evolution equations, and provide a basis
for the calculation of the initial quark and gluon distributions after the
first hard interaction of the heavy ions.Comment: 13 pages, REVTeX, 2 postscript figures appende
Advanced recovery systems wind tunnel test report
Pioneer Aerospace Corporation (PAC) conducted parafoil wind tunnel testing in the NASA-Ames 80 by 120 test sections of the National Full-Scale Aerodynamic Complex, Moffett Field, CA. The investigation was conducted to determine the aerodynamic characteristics of two scale ram air wings in support of air drop testing and full scale development of Advanced Recovery Systems for the Next Generation Space Transportation System. Two models were tested during this investigation. Both the primary test article, a 1/9 geometric scale model with wing area of 1200 square feet and secondary test article, a 1/36 geometric scale model with wing area of 300 square feet, had an aspect ratio of 3. The test results show that both models were statically stable about a model reference point at angles of attack from 2 to 10 degrees. The maximum lift-drag ratio varied between 2.9 and 2.4 for increasing wing loading
- âŠ