29,571 research outputs found
Directed flow, a signal for the phase transition in Relativistic Nuclear Collisions?
The sign change of the slope of the directed flow of baryons has been
predicted as a signal for a first order phase transition within fluid dynamical
calculations. Recently, the directed flow of identified particles has been
measured by the STAR collaboration in the beam energy scan (BES) program. In
this article, we examine the collision energy dependence of directed flow
in fluid dynamical model descriptions of heavy ion collisions for
GeV. The first step is to reproduce the existing
predictions within pure fluid dynamical calculations. As a second step we
investigate the influence of the order of the phase transition on the
anisotropic flow within a state-of-the-art hybrid approach that describes other
global observables reasonably well. We find that, in the hybrid approach, there
seems to be no sensitivity of the directed flow on the equation of state and in
particular on the existence of a first order phase transition. In addition, we
explore more subtle sensitivities like e.g. the Cooper-Frye transition
criterion and discuss how momentum conservation and the definition of the event
plane affects the results. At this point, none of our calculations matches
qualitatively the behavior of the STAR data, the values of the slopes are
always larger than in the data.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Lateral-directional control of the x-15 airplane
Lateral directional control and stability characteristics of X-15 aircraf
Further studies of methods for reducing community noise around airports
A simplified method of analysis was used in which all flights at a 'simulated' airport were assumed to operate from one runway in a single direction. For this simulated airport, contours of noise exposure forecast were obtained and evaluated. A flight schedule of the simulated airport which is representative of the 23 major U. S. airports was used. The effect of banning night-time operations by four-engine, narrow-body aircraft in combination with other noise reduction options was studied. The reductions in noise which would occur of two- and three-engine, narrow-body aircraft equipped with a refanned engine was examined. A detailed comparison of the effects of engine cutback on takeoff versus the effects of retrofitting quiet nacelles for narrow-body aircraft was also examined. A method of presenting the effects of various noise reduction options was treated
Hadronic and electromagnetic probes of hot and dense matter in a Boltzmann+Hydrodynamics model of relativistic nuclear collisions
We present recent results on bulk observables and electromagnetic probes
obtained using a hybrid approach based on the Ultrarelativistic Quantum
Molecular Dynamics transport model with an intermediate hydrodynamic stage for
the description of heavy-ion collisions at AGS, SPS and RHIC energies. After
briefly reviewing the main results for particle multiplicities, elliptic flow,
transverse momentum and rapidity spectra, we focus on photon and dilepton
emission from hot and dense hadronic matter.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of WISH 2010: International Workshop on
Interplay between Soft and Hard interactions in particle production at
ultrarelativistic energies, Catania, Italy, 8-10 September 201
On the distribution of career longevity and the evolution of home run prowess in professional baseball
Statistical analysis is a major aspect of baseball, from player averages to
historical benchmarks and records. Much of baseball fanfare is based around
players exceeding the norm, some in a single game and others over a long
career. Career statistics serve as a metric for classifying players and
establishing their historical legacy. However, the concept of records and
benchmarks assumes that the level of competition in baseball is stationary in
time. Here we show that power-law probability density functions, a hallmark of
many complex systems that are driven by competition, govern career longevity in
baseball. We also find similar power laws in the density functions of all major
performance metrics for pitchers and batters. The use of performance-enhancing
drugs has a dark history, emerging as a problem for both amateur and
professional sports. We find statistical evidence consistent with
performance-enhancing drugs in the analysis of home runs hit by players in the
last 25 years. This is corroborated by the findings of the Mitchell Report [1],
a two-year investigation into the use of illegal steroids in major league
baseball, which recently revealed that over 5 percent of major league baseball
players tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs in an anonymous 2003
survey.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 2-column revtex4 format. Revision has change of
title, a figure added, and minor changes in response to referee comment
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