73 research outputs found
Quantum corrections for pion correlations involving resonance decays
A method is presented to include quantum corrections into the calculation of
two-pion correlations for the case where particles originate from resonance
decays. The technique uses classical information regarding the space-time
points at which resonances are created. By evaluating a simple thermal model,
the method is compared to semiclassical techniques that assume exponential
decaying resonances moving along classical trajectories. Significant
improvements are noted when the resonance widths are broad as compared to the
temperature.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Dynamic buckling and fragmentation in brittle rods
We present experiments on the dynamic buckling and fragmentation of slender
rods axially impacted by a projectile. By combining the results of Saint-Venant
and elastic beam theory, we derive a preferred wavelength lambda for the
buckling instability, and experimentally verify the resulting scaling law for a
range of materials including teflon, dry pasta, glass, and steel. For brittle
materials, buckling leads to the fragmentation of the rod. Measured fragment
length distributions show two clear peaks near lambda/2 and lambda/4. The
non-monotonic nature of the distributions reflect the influence of the
deterministic buckling process on the more random fragmentation processes.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Imaging Sources with Fast and Slow Emission Components
We investigate two-proton correlation functions for reactions in which fast
dynamical and slow evaporative proton emission are both present. In such cases,
the width of the correlation peak provides the most reliable information about
the source size of the fast dynamical component. The maximum of the correlation
function is sensitive to the relative yields from the slow and fast emission
components. Numerically inverting the correlation function allows one to
accurately disentangle fast dynamical from slow evaporative emission and
extract details of the shape of the two-proton source.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Optimized Discretization of Sources Imaged in Heavy-Ion Reactions
We develop the new method of optimized discretization for imaging the
relative source from two particle correlation functions. In this method, the
source resolution depends on the relative particle separation and is adjusted
to available data and their errors. We test the method by restoring assumed pp
sources and then apply the method to pp and IMF data. In reactions below 100
MeV/nucleon, significant portions of the sources extend to large distances (r >
20 fm). The results from the imaging show the inadequacy of common Gaussian
source-parametrizations. We establish a simple relation between the height of
the pp correlation function and the source value at short distances, and
between the height and the proton freeze-out phase-space density.Comment: 36 pages (inc. 9 figures), RevTeX, uses epsf.sty. Submitted to Phys.
Rev.
Probing Transport Theories via Two-Proton Source Imaging
Imaging technique is applied to two-proton correlation functions to extract
quantitative information about the space-time properties of the emitting source
and about the fraction of protons that can be attributed to fast emission
mechanisms. These new analysis techniques resolve important ambiguities that
bedeviled prior comparisons between measured correlation functions and those
calculated by transport theory. Quantitative comparisons to transport theory
are presented here. The results of the present analysis differ from those
reported previously for the same reaction systems. The shape of the two-proton
emitting sources are strongly sensitive to the details about the in-medium
nucleon-nucleon cross sections and their density dependence.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures. Figures are in GIF format. If you need
postscript format, please contact: [email protected]
Deuteron life-time in hot and dense nuclear matter near equilibrium
We consider deuteron formation in hot and dense nuclear matter close to
equilibrium and evaluate the life-time of the deuteron fluctuations within the
linear response theory. To this end we derive a generalized linear Boltzmann
equation where the collision integral is related to equilibrium correlation
functions. In this framework we then utilize finite temperature Green functions
to evaluate the collision integrals. The elementary reaction cross section is
evaluated within the Faddeev approach that is suitably modified to reflect the
properties of the surrounding hot and dense matter.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Light cluster production in intermediate energy heavy-ion collisions induced by neutron-rich nuclei
The coalescence model based on nucleon distribution functions from an
isospin-dependent transport model is used to study the production of light
clusters such as deuteron, triton, and He from heavy-ion collisions
induced by neutron-rich nuclei at intermediate energies. It is found that the
emission time of light clusters depends on their masses. For clusters with the
same momentum per nucleon, heavier ones are emitted earlier. Both the yield and
energy spectrum of light clusters are sensitive to the density dependence of
nuclear symmetry energy, with more light clusters produced in the case of a
stiff symmetry energy. On the other hand, effects due to the stiffness of the
isoscalar part of nuclear equation of state and the medium dependence of
nucleon-nucleon cross sections on light cluster production are unimportant. We
have also studied the correlation functions of clusters, and they are affected
by the density dependence of nuclear symmetry energy as well, with the stiff
symmetry energy giving a stronger anti-correlation of light clusters,
particularly for those with large kinetic energies. Dependence of light cluster
production on the centrality and incident energy of heavy ion collisions as
well as the mass of the reaction system is also investigated.Comment: Revised version, typos corrected and discussions added, 14 pages, 15
figures, 1 table, REVTeX4.
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