5,030 research outputs found
Energy Level Diagrams for Black Hole Orbits
A spinning black hole with a much smaller black hole companion forms a
fundamental gravitational system, like a colossal classical analog to an atom.
In an appealing if imperfect analogy to atomic physics, this gravitational atom
can be understood through a discrete spectrum of periodic orbits. Exploiting a
correspondence between the set of periodic orbits and the set of rational
numbers, we are able to construct periodic tables of orbits and energy level
diagrams of the accessible states around black holes. We also present a closed
form expression for the rational q, thereby quantifying zoom-whirl behavior in
terms of spin, energy, and angular momentum. The black hole atom is not just a
theoretical construct, but corresponds to extant astrophysical systems
detectable by future gravitational wave observatories.Comment: 8 page
Pomeron intercept and slope: the QCD connection
The ratio of intercept to slope of the Pomeron trajectory is derived in a
phenomenological model based on a QCD approach to diffraction.Comment: [Made some minor corrections] 11 pages, 2 figures; appeared in
Proceedings of 12th International Conference of Elastic and Diffractive
Scattering - Forward Physics and QCD (EDS07), DESY, Hamburg, Germany, 21-25
May 200
Factorization and Scaling in Hadronic Diffraction
In standard Regge theory with a pomeron intercept a(0)=1+\epsilon, the
contribution of the tripe-pomeron amplitude to the t=0 differential cross
section for single diffraction dissociation has the form d\sigma/dM^2(t=0) \sim
s^{2\epsilon}/(M^2)^{1+\epsilon}. For \epsilon>0, this form, which is based on
factorization, does not scale with energy. From an analysis of p-p and p-pbar
data from fixed target to collider energies, we find that such scaling actually
holds, signaling a breakdown of factorization. Phenomenologically, this result
can be obtained from a scaling law in diffraction, which is embedded in the
hypothesis of pomeron flux renormalization introduced to unitarize the triple
pomeron amplitude.Comment: 39 pages, Latex, 16 figure
Experimental study of Pomeron
A Pomeron phenomenon remains a mystery. A short review of the experimental
situation in diffractive physics and an account of some spectacular
manifestations of the Pomeron are given.Comment: 17 pages, 7 Figs, LATEX. Talk given at the conference "From the
smallest to largest distances", ITEP, Moscow, 24-26 May 2001. Changes: Fig.2
replace
Behavior of the diffractive cross section in hadron-nucleus collisions
A phenomenological analysis of diffractive dissociation of nuclei in
proton-nucleus and meson-nucleus collisions is presented. The theoretical
approach employed here is able to take into account at once data of the HELIOS
and EHS/NA22 collaborations that exhibit quite different atomic mass
dependences. Possible extensions of this approach to hard diffraction in
nuclear processes are also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Diffractive Photoproduction in the Framework of Fracture Functions
Recent data on diffractive photoproduction of dijets are analyzed within the
framework of fracture functions and paying special attention to the
consequences of the use of different rapidity gap definitions in order to
identify diffractive events. Although these effects are found to be
significant, it is shown that once they are properly taken into account, a very
precise agreement between diffractive DIS and diffractive dijet photoproduction
emerges without any significant hint of hard factorization breaking.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys.Rev.
Diffractive production of dijets by double Pomeron exchange processes
A phenomenological description of diffractive dijet hadroproduction via
double Pomeron exchange is presented. This description is based on a modified
version of the Ingelman-Schlein model which includes the evolution of the
Pomeron structure function and corrections regarding rapidity gap suppression
effects. The same quark-dominant Pomeron structure function employed in a
previous report to describe diffractive dijet and W production via single
Pomeron processes is shown here to yield results consistent with the available
data for double Pomeron processes as well.Comment: 4 pages, REVTEX4.
Diffractive Dissociation in Deep Inelastic Scattering at HERA
The diffraction dissociation of virtual photons is considered in the
framework of conventional Regge theory. It is shown that the recent HERA data
on large rapidity gap events can be successfully described in terms of the
Pomeron structure function. Using Regge factorization, the latter can be
related to the deuteron structure function. The parameters which relate these
two structure functions are determined from soft hadronic diffraction data. The
size of the shadowing corrections at low x and large Q**2 is also obtained.Comment: 17 pages, TEX, preprint LPTHE Orsay 94-4
Soft Color Interactions and Diffractive Hard Scattering at the Fermilab Tevatron
An improved understanding of nonperturbative QCD can be obtained by the
recently developed soft color interaction models. Their essence is the
variation of color string-field topologies, giving a unified description of
final states in high energy interactions, e.g., diffractive and nondiffractive
events in ep and ppbar. Here we present a detailed study of such models (the
soft color interaction model and the generalized area law model) applied to
ppbar, considering also the general problem of the underlying event including
beam particle remnants. With models tuned to HERA ep data, we find a good
description also of Tevatron data on production of W, beauty and jets in
diffractive events defined either by leading antiprotons or by one or two
rapidity gaps in the forward or backward regions. We also give predictions for
diffractive J/psi production where the soft exchange mechanism produces both a
gap and a color singlet ccbar state in the same event. This soft color
interaction approach is also compared with Pomeron-based models for
diffraction, and some possibilities to experimentally discriminate between
these different approaches are discussed.Comment: 35 pages, 15 figures, uses REVTeX. Minor changes, version to appear
in Phys. Rev.
Rapidity gaps at HERA and the Tevatron from soft colour exchanges
Models based on soft colour exchanges to rearrange colour strings in the
final state provide a general framework for both diffractive and
non-diffractive events in ep and hadron-hadron collisions. We study two such
models and find that they can reproduce rapidity gap data from both HERA and
the Tevatron. We also discuss the influence of parton cascades and multiple
interactions on the results.Comment: 4 pages, 4 EPS figures, presented at UK Phenomenology Workshop on
Collider Physics, Durham. Uses iopart.cl
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