49 research outputs found
Theoretical Approach to Alignment Phenomenon
An explanation of the puzzling alignment effect observed in cosmic ray
experiments is suggestedComment: 7 pages, LaTEX, 4 figures (available from the author upon request
Color deconfinement and subhadronic matter: phase states and the role of constituent quarks
Major aspects of the subhadronic state of nuclear matter populated with
deconfined color particles are reviewed. At high and even at rather low nuclear
collision energies, this is expected to be a short-term quark-gluon plasma
(QGP), but, seemingly, not only this. Emphasis is put on the self-consistency
requirement that must be imposed on any phenomenological description of the
evolution of a hot and dense nuclear medium as it expands (cools down) to the
point where the final scattering of secondary particles starts. The view is
argued and analyzed that massive constituent quarks should then play a major
role at a certain cooling stage. A hypothesis is discussed regarding the
existence of an intermediate stage (a valon plasma), allowing a consistent
explanation of data on the mid-rapidity yields of various kinds of hadrons and
direct dileptons (e+e- -pairs) in high-energy heavy-ion collisions.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figure
On the Possible Common Nature of Double Extensive Air Showers and Aligned Events
Double Extensive Air Showers and aligned events were discovered at energies E
{\gtsim} 1016 eV over fourth century back. But up to now there is no
sufficiently identical explanation of their nature. In this paper it is
expected that both types of events are the result of breakup of the string
formed in the collisions of super high energy particles
"Free" Constituent Quarks and Dilepton Production in Heavy Ion Collisions
An approach is suggested, invoking vitally the notion of constituent massive
quarks (valons) which can survive and propagate rather than hadrons (except of
pions) within the hot and dense matter formed below the chiral transition
temperature in course of the heavy ion collisions at high energies. This
approach is shown to be quite good for description of the experimentally
observed excess in dilepton yield at masses 250 MeV < M < 700 MeV over the
prompt resonance decay mechanism (CERES cocktail) predictions. In certain
aspects, it looks to be even more successful, than the conventional approaches:
it seems to match the data somewhat better at dilepton masses before the
two-pion threshold and before the rho-meson peak as well as at higher dilepton
masses (beyond the phi-meson one). The approach implies no specific assumptions
on the equation of state (EOS) or peculiarities of phase transitions in the
expanding nuclear matter.Comment: 13 pages, 3 PNG figures. submitted to Sov. Nucl. Phy