590 research outputs found

    Prompt Photon and Inclusive π0\pi^0 Production at RHIC and LHC

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    We present results for prompt photon and inclusive π0\pi^0 production in p-p and A-A collisions at RHIC and LHC energies. We include the full next-to-leading order radiative corrections and nuclear effects, such as nuclear shadowing and parton energy loss. We find the next-to-leading order corrections to be large and pTp_T dependent. We show how measurements of π0\pi^0 production at RHIC and LHC, at large pTp_T, can provide valuable information about the nature of parton energy loss. We calculate the ratio of prompt photons to neutral pions and show that at RHIC energies this ratio increases with pTp_T approaching one at pT∌10p_T \sim 10 GeV, due to the large suppression of π0\pi^0 production. We show that at the LHC, this ratio has steep pTp_T dependence and approaches 10% effect at pT∌20p_T \sim 20 GeV.Comment: Talk presented by I. Sarcevic, to appear in the Proceedings of Quark Matter 2002; 4 pages including 4 color figure

    From RHIC to EIC: Nuclear Structure Functions

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    We study the nuclear structure function F2AF_2^A and its logarithmic derivative in the high energy limit (small xx region) using the Color Glass Condensate formalism. In this limit the structure function F2F_2 depends on the quark anti-quark dipole-target scattering cross section NF(xbj,rt,bt)N_F (x_{bj}, r_t, b_t). The same dipole cross section appears in single hadron and hadron-photon production cross sections in the forward rapidity region in deuteron (proton)-nucleus collisions at high energy, i.e. at RHIC and LHC. We use a parameterization of the dipole cross section, which has successfully been used to describe the deuteron-gold data at RHIC, to compute the nuclear structure function F2AF_2^A and its log Q2Q^2 derivative (which is related to gluon distribution function in the double log limit). We provide a quantitative estimate of the nuclear shadowing of F2AF_2^A and the gluon distribution function in the kinematic region relevant to a future Electron-Ion Collider.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure

    Non-Gaussian Correlations in the McLerran-Venugopalan Model

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    We argue that the statistical weight function W[rho] appearing in the McLerran-Venugopalan model of a large nucleus is intrinsically non-Gaussian, even if we neglect quantum corrections. Based on the picture where the nucleus of radius R consists of a collection of color-neutral nucleons, each of radius a<<R, we show that to leading order in alpha_s and a/R only the Gaussian part of W[rho] enters into the final expression for the gluon number density. Thus, the existing results in the literature which assume a Gaussian weight remain valid.Comment: 21 pages with 4 figures (revtex

    The initial energy density of gluons produced in very high energy nuclear collisions

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    In very high energy nuclear collisions, the initial energy of produced gluons per unit area per unit rapidity, dE/L2/dηdE/L^2/d\eta, is equal to f(g2ÎŒL)(g2ÎŒ)3/g2f(g^2\mu L) (g^2\mu)^3/g^2, where ÎŒ2\mu^2 is proportional to the gluon density per unit area of the colliding nuclei. For an SU(2) gauge theory, we perform a non--perturbative numerical computation of the function f(g2ÎŒL)f(g^2\mu L). It decreases rapidly for small g2ÎŒLg^2\mu L but varies only by ∌25\sim 25%, from 0.208±0.0040.208\pm 0.004 to 0.257±0.0050.257\pm 0.005, for a wide range 35.36--296.98 in g2ÎŒLg^2\mu L, including the range relevant for collisions at RHIC and LHC. Extrapolating to SU(3), we estimate the initial energy per unit rapidity for Au-Au collisions in the central region at RHIC and LHC.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, 3 figures; revised version-includes additional numerical data; reference adde

    Health effects of WiFi radiation: a review based on systematicquality evaluation

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    Although WiFi contributes little to totalradiofrequency electromagnetic field (RF-EMF) exposure in our everyday environ-ment, concern has raised whether this spe-cific type of modulated RF-EMF causeshealth problems. The aim of this review isto evaluate all types of studies that investi-gated biological and health effects of WiFiexposure and fulfilled basic quality criteria.Eligible for inclusion were epidemiological,human experimental,in vivoandin vitrostudies using realistic WiFi exposure set-tings. We conducted a systematic literaturesearch for all papers published betweenJanuary 1997 and August 2020 followed by a quality review addressing blinding and dosimetry inexperimental studies and various types of biases in epidemiological studies. All studies fulfilling thequality criteria were descriptively summarized in terms of observation or absence of associations.From 1385 articles identified by the literature search, 23 fulfilled basic quality criteria: 6 epidemio-logical papers, 6 human experimental articles, 9in vivoarticles, and 2in vitroarticles. Whereasinvivoandin vitrostudies applied exposure levels up to 4 W/kg, human studies dealt with exposurelevels several orders of magnitude below the ICNIRP guidelines, which are typical for WiFi exposuresituations in the everyday environment. Numerous outcomes ranging from biological markers tosymptoms were mostly found not to be associated with WiFi exposure. Sporadic findings were notconsistent in terms of outcomes or exposure-response associations. This review based on a system-atic literature search and quality evaluation does not suggest detrimental health effects from WiFiexposure below regulatory limits

    Chiral dynamics and the growth of the nucleon's gluonic transverse size at small x

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    We study the distribution of gluons in transverse space in the nucleon at moderately small x (~10^{-2}). At large transverse distances (impact parameters) the gluon density is generated by the 'pion cloud' of the nucleon, and can be calculated in terms of the gluon density in the pion. We investigate the large-distance behavior in two different approaches to chiral dynamics: i) phenomenological soft-pion exchange, ii) the large-N_c picture of the nucleon as a classical soliton of the pion field, which corresponds to degenerate N and Delta states. The large-distance contributions from the 'pion cloud' cause a \~20% increase in the overall transverse size of the nucleon if x drops significantly below M_pi/M_N. This is in qualitative agreement with the observed increase of the slope of the t-dependence of the J/psi photoproduction cross section at HERA compared to fixed-target energies. We argue that the glue in the pion cloud could be probed directly in hard electroproduction processes accompanied by 'pion knockout', gamma^* + N -> gamma (or rho, J/psi) + pi + N', where the transverse momentum of the emitted pion is large while that of the outgoing nucleon is restricted to values of order M_pi.Comment: 20 pages, revtex4, 10 eps figure

    Quantum collisions of finite-size ultrarelativistic nuclei

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    We show that the boost variable, the conjugate to the coordinate rapidity, which is associated with the center-of-mass motion, encodes the information about the finite size of colliding nuclei in a Lorentz-invariant way. The quasi-elastic forward color-changing scattering between the quantum boost states rapidly grows with the total energy of the collision and leads to an active breakdown of the color coherence at the earliest moments of the collision. The possible physical implications of this result are discussed.Comment: 23 pages, RevTeX. New references and two figures added. Final version accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Large Scale Rapidity Correlations in Heavy Ion Collisions

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    We discuss particle production mechanisms for heavy ion collisions. We present an argument demonstrating how the fluctuations of the number of produced particles in a series of classical emissions can account for KNO scaling. We predict rapidity correlations in the particle production in the event by event analysis of heavy ion collisions on the rapidity scales of the order of one over the strong coupling constant.Comment: REVTeX, 13 pages, 3 figure

    Saturation and Wilson Line Distributions

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    We introduce a Wilson line distribution function bar{W}_tau(v) to study gluon saturation at small Feynman x_F, or large tau=ln(1/x_F). This new distribution can be obtained from the distribution W_tau(alpha) of the Color Glass Condensate model and the JIMWLK renormalization group equation. bar{W}_tau(v) is physically more relevant, and mathematically simpler to deal with because of unitarity of the Wilson line v. A JIMWLK equation is derived for bar{W}_tau(v); its properties are studied. These properties are used to complete Mueller's derivation of the JIMWLK equation, though for bar{W}_tau(v) and not W_tau(alpha). They are used to derive a generalized Balitsky-Kovchegov equation for higher multipole amplitudes. They are also used to compute the unintegrated gluon distribution at x_F=0, yielding a completely flat spectrum in transverse momentum squared k^2, with a known height. This is similar but not identical to the mean field result at small k^2.Comment: One reference and two short comments added. To appear in Physical Revies
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