5,384 research outputs found
Dilepton Production in Nucleon-Nucleon Reactions With and Without Hadronic Inelasticities
We calculate elementary proton-proton and neutron-proton bremsstrahlung and
their contribution to the invariant mass distribution. At 4.9 GeV, the
proton-proton contribution is larger than neutron-proton, but it is small
compared to recent data. We then make a first calculation of bremsstrahlung in
nucleon-nucleon reactions with multi-hadron final states. Again at 4.9 GeV, the
many-body bremsstrahlung is larger than simple nucleon-nucleon bremsstrahlung
by more than an order of magnitude in the low-mass region. When the
bremsstrahlung contributions are summed with Dalitz decay of the ,
radiative decay of the and from two-pion annihilation, the result
matches recent high statistics proton-proton data from the Dilepton
Spectrometer collaboration.Comment: 1+17 pages plus 11 PostScript figures uuencoded and appended,
McGill/93-9, TPI-MINN-93/18-
Rate of photon production from hot hadronic matter
Thermal photon emission rates from hot hadronic matter are studied to order
, where indicates a strong-interaction coupling constant.
Radiative decay of mesons, Compton and annihilation processes for hadrons, and
bremsstrahlung reactions are all considered. Compared to the standard rates
from the literature, one finds two orders of magnitude increase for low photon
energies stemming mainly from bremsstrahlung and then a modest increase (factor
of 2) for intermediate and high energy photons owing to radiative decays for a
variety of mesons and from other reactions involving strangeness. These results
could have important consequences for electromagnetic radiation studies at
RHIC.Comment: 5 pages LaTeX, 4 Postscript figure
Laser surface colouring of titanium for contemporary jewellery
This paper describes work which emerged through a need to understand more about the potential of laser surface engineering for use in the creative industries. The method of creation of contemporary jewellery pieces and the resultant 'Ocular' jewellery series are described from the creative point of view. The work demonstrates how laser controlled oxide growth on Ti–6Al–4V alloy under ambient conditions can be used as an artistic tool by producing precisely defined colours. Use of the method to produce regular areas of even colour and to reproduce freehand drawings on a titanium alloy surface is described. Analysis highlights interference as the main colouring mechanism and suggests a graded surface layer, progressing from an outer layer of TiO2 to lower layers rich in TiO and Ti2O. The model of research by practice presented in this paper offers a contribution to the current debate on partnerships between art and science and engineering
Lepton pairs from thermal mesons
We study the net dielectron production rates from an ensemble of thermal
mesons, using an effective Lagrangian to model their interaction. The coupling
between the electromagnetic and the hadronic sectors is done through the vector
meson dominance approach. For the first time, a complete set of light mesons is
considered. We include contributions from decays of the type
V~(PS)~~PS~(V)~+~, where V is a vector meson and PS is a
pseudoscalar, as well as those from binary reactions PS~+~PS, V~+~V, and
V~+~PS~. Direct decays of the type V~
are included and shown to be important. We find that the dielectron invariant
mass spectrum naturally divides in distinct regions: in the low mass domain the
decays from vector and pseudoscalar mesons form the dominant contribution. The
pion--pion annihilation and direct decays then pick up and form the leading
signal in an invariant mass region that includes the complex
and extends up to the . Above invariant mass ~1~GeV other
two-body reactions take over as the prominent mechanisms for lepton pair
generation. These facts will have quantitative bearing on the eventual
identification of the quark--gluon plasma.Comment: In ReVTeX 3.0, 9 figs. available from above email address. McGill
93/8, TPI-MINN-93/19-
Photons from axial-vector radiative decay in a hadron gas
Strange and non-strange axial-vector meson radiative decays contribute to
photon production in hadron gas. One- and two-hadron radiative decay modes of
, and are studied. At 200 MeV
temperature and for a narrow range in photon energies they contribute more to
the net thermal photon production rate than ,
or . They provide
significant contribution to the rate for photon energies as high as 1.5--2.0
GeV. For higher energies they are less important.Comment: 10 pages + 7 figures uuencoded in separate file, MSUCL-92
Large mass dileptons from the passage of jets through quark gluon plasma
We calculate the emission of large mass dileptons originating from the
annihilation of quark jets passing through quark gluon plasma. Considering
central collisions of heavy nuclei at SPS, RHIC and LHC energies, we find that
the yield due to the jet-plasma interaction gets progressively larger as the
collision energy increases. We find it to be negligible at SPS energies, of the
order of the Drell-Yan contribution and much larger than the normal thermal
yield at RHIC energies and up to a factor of ten larger than the Drell-Yan
contribution at LHC energies. An observation of this new dilepton source would
confirm the occurrence of jet-plasma interactions and of conditions suitable
for jet-quenching to take place.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures; references added, improved calculation,
conclusions unchange
Determination of the absorption length of CO2, Nd:YAG and high power diode laser radiation for a selected grouting material
The laser beam absorption lengths of CO2, Nd:YAG and a high power diode laser (HPDL) radiation for a newly developed SiO2/Al2O3-based tile grout have been determined through the application of Beer-Lambert’s law. The findings revealed marked differences in the absorption lengths despite the material having similar beam absorption coefficients for the lasers. The absorption lengths for the SiO2/Al2O3-based tile grout for CO2, Nd:YAG and HPDL radiation were calculated as being 23211 m, 1934 m and 1838 m respectively. Moreover, this method of laser beam absorption length determination, which has hitherto been used predominantly with lasers operated in the pulsed mode, is shown to be valid for use with lasers operated in the continuous wave (CW) mode, depending upon the material being treated
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