309 research outputs found
Hot nuclear matter in the modified quark-meson coupling model with quark-quark correlations
Short-range quark-quark correlations in hot nuclear matter are examined
within the modified quark-meson coupling model (MQMC) by adding repulsive
scalar and vector quark-quark interactions. Without these correlations, the bag
radius increases with the baryon density. However when the correlations are
introduced the bag size shrinks as the bags overlap. Also as the strength of
the scalar quark-quark correlation is increased, the decrease of the effective
nucleon mass with the baryonic density is slowed down and tends to
saturate at high densities. Within this model we study the phase transition
from the baryon-meson phase to the quark-gluon plasma (QGP) phase with the
latter modeled as an ideal gas of quarks and gluons inside a bag. Two models
for the QGP bag parameter are considered. In one case, the bag is taken to be
medium-independent and the phase transition from the hadron phase to QGP is
found to occur at 5-8 times ordinary nuclear matter density for temperatures
less than 60 MeV. For lower densities, the transition takes place at higher
temperature reaching up to 130 MeV at zero density. In the second case, the QGP
bag parameter is considered medium-dependent as in the MQMC model for the
hadronic phase. In this case, it is found that the phase transition occurs at
much lower densities.Comment: 8 pages, latex, 4 eps figure
Liquid-gas phase transition in nuclei in the relativistic Thomas-Fermi theory
The equation of state (EOS) of finite nuclei is constructed in the
relativistic Thomas-Fermi theory using the non-linear
model. The caloric curves are calculated by confining the nuclei in the
freeze-out volume taken to be a sphere of size about 4 to 8 times the normal
nuclear volume. The results obtained from the relativistic theory are not
significantly different from those obtained earlier in a non-relativistic
framework. The nature of the EOS and the peaked structure of the specific heat
obtained from the caloric curves show clear signals of a liquid-gas phase
transition in finite nuclei. The temperature evolution of the Gibbs potential
and the entropy at constant pressure indicate that the characteristics of the
transition are not too different from the first-order one.Comment: RevTex file(19 pages) and 12 psfiles for fugures. Physical Review C
(in Press
Heated nuclear matter, condensation phenomena and the hadronic equation of state
The thermodynamic properties of heated nuclear matter are explored using an
exactly solvable canonical ensemble model. This model reduces to the results of
an ideal Fermi gas at low temperatures. At higher temperatures, the
fragmentation of the nuclear matter into clusters of nucleons leads to features
that resemble a Bose gas. Some parallels of this model with the phenomena of
Bose condensation and with percolation phenomena are discussed. A simple
expression for the hadronic equation of state is obtained from the model.Comment: 12 pages, revtex, 1 ps file appended (figure 1
Deconfinement in the Quark Meson Coupling Model
The Quark Meson Coupling Model which describes nuclear matter as a collection
of non-overlapping MIT bags interacting by the self-consistent exchange of
scalar and vector mesons is used to study nuclear matter at finite temperature.
In its modified version, the density dependence of the bag constant is
introduced by a direct coupling between the bag constant and the scalar mean
field. In the present work, the coupling of the scalar mean field with the
constituent quarks is considered exactly through the solution of the Dirac
equation. Our results show that a phase transition takes place at a critical
temperature around 200 MeV in which the scalar mean field takes a nonzero value
at zero baryon density. Furthermore it is found that the bag constant decreases
significantly when the temperature increases above this critical temperature
indicating the onset of quark deconfinement.Comment: LaTeX/TeX 15 pages (zk2.tex)+ 6 figures in TeX forma
The Liquid-Gas Phase Transitions in a Multicomponent Nuclear System with Coulomb and Surface Effects
The liquid-gas phase transition is studied in a multi-component nuclear
system using a local Skyrme interaction with Coulomb and surface effects. Some
features are qualitatively the same as the results of Muller and Serot which
uses relativistic mean field without Coulomb and surface effects. Surface
tension brings the coexistance binodal surface to lower pressure. The Coulomb
interaction makes the binodal surface smaller and cause another pair of binodal
points at low pressure and large proton fraction with less protons in liquid
phase and more protons in gas phase.Comment: 20 pages including 7 postscript figure
Isotope thermometery in nuclear multifragmentation
A systematic study of the effect of fragmentfragment interaction, quantum
statistics, -feeding and collective flow is made in the extraction of
the nuclear temperature from the double ratio of the isotopic yields in the
statistical model of one-step (Prompt) multifragmentation. Temperature is also
extracted from the isotope yield ratios generated in the sequential
binary-decay model. Comparison of the thermodynamic temperature with the
extracted temperatures for different isotope ratios show some anomaly in both
models which is discussed in the context of experimentally measured caloric
curves.Comment: uuencoded gzipped file containing 20 pages of text in REVTEX format
and 12 figures (Postscript files). Physical Review C (in press
Hot Hypernuclear Matter in the Modified Quark Meson Coupling Model
Hot hypernuclear matter is investigated in an explicit SU(3) quark model
based on a mean field description of nonoverlapping baryon bags bound by the
self-consistent exchange of scalar and vector
mesons. The mean fields are assumed to couple to the
u,d-quarks while the mean fields are coupled to the s-quark. The
coupling constants of the mean fields with the quarks are assumed to satisfy
SU(6) symmetry. The calculations take into account the medium dependence of the
bag parameter on the scalar fields . We consider only the octet
baryons in hypernuclear matter. An ideal gas of the
strange mesons and is introduced to keep zero net strangeness
density. Our results for symmetric hypernuclear matter show that a phase
transition takes place at a critical temperature around 180 MeV in which the
scalar mean fields take nonzero values at zero baryon density.
Furthermore, the bag contants of the baryons decrease significantly at and
above this critical temperature indicating the onset of quark deconfinement.
The present results imply that the onset of quark deconfinement in SU(3)
hypernuclear matter is much stronger than in SU(2) nuclear matter.Comment: LaTeX/TeX 11 pages (dfg3r.tex), 9 figures in eps forma
Hot Nuclear Matter in the Quark Meson Coupling Model with Dilatons
We study hot nuclear matter in an explicit quark model based on a mean field
description of nonoverlapping nucleon bags bound by the self-consistent
exchange of scalar and vector mesons as well as the glueball field. The
glueball exchange as well as a realization of the broken scale invariance of
quantum chromodynamics is achieved through the introduction of a dilaton field.
The calculations also take into account the medium-dependence of the bag
constant. The effective potential with dilatons is applied to nuclear matter.
The nucleon properties at finite temperature as calculated here are found to be
appreciably different from cold nuclear matter. The introduction of the dilaton
potential improves the shape of the saturation curve at T=0 and is found to
affect hot nuclear matter significantly.Comment: LaTeX/TeX 12 pages (zak2), 13 figures in TeX forma
A unified description for nuclear equation of state and fragmentation in heavy ion collisions
We propose a model that provides a unified description of nuclear equation of
state and fragmentations. The equation of state is evaluated in Bragg-Williams
as well as in Bethe-Peierls approximations and compared with that in the mean
field theory with Skyrme interactions. The model shows a liquid-gas type phase
transition. The nuclear fragment distributions are studied for different
densities at finite temperatures. Power law behavior for fragments is observed
at critical point. The study of fragment distribution and the second moment
shows that the thermal critical point coincides with the percolation
point at the critical density. High temperature behavior of the model shows
characteristics of chemical equilibrium.Comment: 20 pages in RevTex, 11 figures (uuencoded ps files), to appear in
Phys. Rev.
Effect of Flow on Caloric Curve for Finite Nuclei
In a finite temperature Thomas-Fermi theory, we construct caloric curves for
finite nuclei enclosed in a freeze-out volume few times the normal nuclear
volume, with and without inclusion of flow. Without flow, the caloric curve
indicates a smooth liquid-gas phase transition whereas with flow, the
transition may be very sharp. We discuss these results in the context of two
recent experiments, one for heavy symmetric system (Au + Au at 600A MeV) and
the other for highly asymmetric system (Au + C at 1A GeV) where different
behaviours in the caloric curves are seen.Comment: 11 pages revtex; 4 figs; version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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