3,132 research outputs found
Nuclear Modification Factor for Charged Pions and Protons at Forward Rapidity in Central Au+Au Collisions at 200 GeV
We present spectra of charged pions and protons in 0-10% central Au+Au collisions at GeV at mid-rapidity () and forward pseudorapidity () measured with the BRAHMS experiment at RHIC. The spectra are compared to spectra from p+p collisions at the same energy scaled by the number of binary collisions. The resulting nuclear modification factors for central Au+Au collisions at both and exhibit suppression for charged pions but not for (anti-)protons at intermediate . The ratios have been measured up to GeV/ at the two rapidities and the results indicate that a significant fraction of the charged hadrons produced at intermediate range are (anti-)protons at both mid-rapidity and
The Shear Viscosity to Entropy Density Ratio of Trapped Fermions in the Unitarity Limit
We extract the shear viscosity to entropy density ratio \eta/s of cold
fermionic atoms in the unitarity limit from experimental data on the damping of
collective excitations. We find that near the critical temperature \eta/s is
roughly equal to 1/2 in units of \hbar/k_B. With the possible exception of the
quark gluon plasma, this value is closer to the conjectured lower bound
1/(4\pi) than any other known liquid.Comment: published versio
Recent results from BRAHMS
The BRAHMS collaboration ended its data collection program in 2006. We are
now well advanced in the analysis of a comprehensive set of data that spans
systems ranging in mass from p+p to Au+Au and in energy from to 200 GeV. Our analysis has taken two distinct paths: we explore the
rapidity dependence of intermediate and high-transverse-momentum,
identified-particle production, thus helping to characterize the
strongly-interacting quark-gluon plasma (sQGP) formed at RHIC; we also explore
particle yields at lower transverse momentum to develop a systematic
understanding of bulk particle production at RHIC energies.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, presented at the 20th International Conference on
Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, "Quark Matter 2008", Jaipur,
India, February 4-10, 200
Gluon shadowing in the Glauber-Gribov model at HERA
We calculate shadowing using new data on the gluon density of the Pomeron
recently measured with high precision at HERA. The calculations are made in a
Glauber-Gribov framework and Pomeron tree-diagrams are summed up within a
unitarity-conserving procedure. The total cross section of \vphot A
interaction is then found in a parameter-free description, employing gluon
diffractive and inclusive distribution functions as input. A strong shadowing
effect is obtained, in good agreement with several other models. Impact
parameter dependence of gluon shadowing is also presented.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures; references added, discussion of model enlarged,
calculation of low-x contribution corrected; to appear in Phys. Let
Gluon shadowing and unitarity effects
New data from HERA experiment on deep inelastic scattering have been used to
parametrize nucleon and Pomeron structure functions. Within the Gribov theory,
the parameterizations were employed to calculate gluon shadowing for various
heavy ions. The latter was compared with predictions from other models.
Calculations of multiplicity reduction due to gluon shadowing for d+Au
collisions at forward rapidities at =200 GeV are in good agreement
with BRAHMS data on the nuclear modification factor.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Acta Physica Hungarica A, Quark
Matter 2005 poster session proceedings; minor changes in the text adde
Modeling the jet quenching, thermal resonance production and hydrodynamical flow in relativistic heavy ion collisions
The event topology in relativistic heavy ion collisions is determined by
various multi-particle production mechanisms. The simultaneous model treatment
of different collective nuclear effects at high energies (such as a hard
multi-parton fragmentation in hot QCD-matter, thermal resonance production,
hydrodynamical flows, etc.) is actual but rather complicated task. We discuss
the simulation of the above effects by means of Monte-Carlo model HYDJET++.Comment: Talk given at Workshop "Hot Quarks 2010" (La Londe Les Maures,
France, June 21-26, 2010); 4 pages including 2 figures as EPS-files; prepared
using LaTeX package for publication in Journal of Physics: Conference Serie
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