7,435 research outputs found
Radial flow afterburner for event generators and the baryon puzzle
A simple afterburner including radial flow to the randomized transverse
momentum obtained from event generators, Pythia and Hijing, has been
implemented to calculate the ratios and compare them with available
data. A coherent trend of qualitative agreement has been obtained in
collisions and in for various centralities. Those results indicate that
the radial flow does play an important role in the so called baryon puzzle
anomaly.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Journal of Physics
Evidence for a parsec scale X-ray jet from the accreting neutron star Circinus X-1
We analyzed the zero-order image of a 50 ks Chandra gratings observation of
Circinus X-1, taken in 2005 during the source's low-flux state. Circinus X-1 is
an accreting neutron star that exhibits ultra-relativistic arcsecond-scale
radio jets and diffuse arcminute-scale radio jets and lobes. The image shows a
clear excess along the general direction of the north-western counter-jet,
coincident with the radio emission, suggesting that it originates either in the
jet itself or in the shock the jet is driving into its environment. This makes
Circinus X-1 the first neutron star for which an extended X-ray jet has been
detected. The kinetic jet power we infer is significantly larger than the
minimum power required for the jet to inflate the large scale radio nebula.Comment: Added journal reference, corrected on reference and typo in labels
for Fig. 1; 5 pages, 3 figures, ApJ Letter, in pres
Hydrodynamics at RHIC -- how well does it work, where and how does it break down?
I review the successes and limitations of the ideal fluid dynamic model in
describing hadron emission spectra from Au+Au collisions at the Relativistic
Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC).Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Invited talk presented at Strange Quark Matter
2004 (Cape Town, Sep. 15-20, 2004). Proceedings to appear in Journal of
Physics
Striatal dopamine and reward prediction error signaling in unmedicated schizophrenia patients
Increased striatal dopamine synthesis capacity has consistently been reported in patients with schizophrenia. However, the mechanism translating this into behavior and symptoms remains unclear. It has been proposed that heightened striatal dopamine may blunt dopaminergic reward prediction error signaling during reinforcement learning. In this study, we investigated striatal dopamine synthesis capacity, reward prediction errors, and their association in unmedicated schizophrenia patients (n = 19) and healthy controls (n = 23). They took part in FDOPA-PET and underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanning, where they performed a reversal-learning paradigm. The groups were compared regarding dopamine synthesis capacity (Kicer), fMRI neural prediction error signals, and the correlation of both. Patients did not differ from controls with respect to striatal Kicer. Taking into account, comorbid alcohol abuse revealed that patients without such abuse showed elevated Kicer in the associative striatum, while those with abuse did not differ from controls. Comparing all patients to controls, patients performed worse during reversal learning and displayed reduced prediction error signaling in the ventral striatum. In controls, Kicer in the limbic striatum correlated with higher reward prediction error signaling, while there was no significant association in patients. Kicer in the associative striatum correlated with higher positive symptoms and blunted reward prediction error signaling was associated with negative symptoms. Our results suggest a dissociation between striatal subregions and symptom domains, with elevated dopamine synthesis capacity in the associative striatum contributing to positive symptoms while blunted prediction error signaling in the ventral striatum related to negative symptoms
Relativistic hydrodynamics with strangeness production
The relativistic hydrodynamic approach is used to describe production of
strangeness and/or heavy quarks in ultrarelativistic heavy ion reactions.
Production processes are important ingredients of dissipative effects in the
hadronic liquid. Beyond viscosity also chemo- and thermo-diffusion processes
are considered. This also allows to specify chemical and thermal freeze-out
conditions.Comment: v.2 with minor editorial corrections, 7 pages, talk given on the
SQM2007 conference, Levoca, June 24-29, 2007. To appear in the proceceeding:
Journal of Physics
Interpretation of Recent SPS Dilepton Data
We summarize our current theoretical understanding of in-medium properties of
the electromagnetic current correlator in view of recent dimuon data from the
NA60 experiment in In(158 AGeV)-In collisions at the CERN-SPS. We discuss the
sensitivity of the results to space-time evolution models for the hot and dense
partonic and hadronic medium created in relativistic heavy-ion collisions and
the contributions from different sources to the dilepton-excess spectra.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the 19th International Conference on
Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (Quark Matter 2006) v2:
references added, minor typos correcte
What is the meaning of the statistical hadronization model?
The statistical model of hadronization succeeds in reproducing particle
abundances and transverse momentum spectra in high energy collisions of
elementary particles as well as of heavy ions. Despite its apparent success,
the interpretation of these results is controversial and the validity of the
approach very often questioned. In this paper, we would like to summarize the
whole issue by first outlining a basic formulation of the model and then
comment on the main criticisms and different kinds of interpretations, with
special emphasis on the so-called "phase space dominance". While the ultimate
answer to the question why the statistical model works should certainly be
pursued, we stress that it is a priority to confirm or disprove the fundamental
scheme of the statistical model by performing some detailed tests on the rates
of exclusive channels at lower energy.Comment: 14 pages, to be published in the Proceedings of the International
workshop "Focus on multiplicity", Bari (Italy) June 17-19 200
Centrality dependence of elliptic flow and QGP viscosity
In the Israel-Stewart's theory of second order hydrodynamics, we have
analysed the recent PHENIX data on charged particles elliptic flow in Au+Au
collisions.
PHENIX data demand more viscous fluid in peripheral collisions than in
central collisions. Over a broad range of collision centrality (0-10%- 50-60%),
viscosity to entropy ratio () varies between 0-0.17.Comment: Final version to be publiashed in J. Phys. G. 8 pages, 6 figures and
3 table
Resonance contributions to HBT correlation radii
We study the effect of resonance decays on intensity interferometry for heavy
ion collisions. Collective expansion of the source leads to a dependence of the
two-particle correlation function on the pair momentum K. This opens the
possibility to reconstruct the dynamics of the source from the K-dependence of
the measured HBT radii. Here we address the question to what extent resonance
decays can fake such a flow signal. Within a simple parametrization for the
emission function we present a comprehensive analysis of the interplay of flow
and resonance decays on the one- and two-particle spectra. We discuss in detail
the non-Gaussian features of the correlation function introduced by long-lived
resonances and the resulting problems in extracting meaningful HBT radii. We
propose to define them in terms of the second order q-moments of the correlator
C(q, K). We show that this yields a more reliable characterisation of the
correlator in terms of its width and the correlation strength `lambda' than
other commonly used fit procedures. The normalized fourth-order q-moments
(kurtosis) provide a quantitative measure for the non-Gaussian features of the
correlator. At least for the class of models studied here, the kurtosis helps
separating effects from expansion flow and resonance decays, and provides the
cleanest signal to distinguish between scenarios with and without transverse
flow.Comment: 23 pages, twocolumn RevTeX, 12 eps-figures included, minor changes
following referee comment
- …