818 research outputs found
Viscosity near phase transitions
Probably the most enticing observation in theoretical physics during the last
decade was the discovery of the great amount of consequences obtained from the
AdS/CFT conjecture put forward by Maldacena. In this work we review how this
correspondence can be used to address hydrodynamic properties such as the
viscosity of some strongly interacting systems. We also employ the Boltzmann
equation for those systems closer to low-energy QCD, and argue that this kind
of transport coefficients can be related to phase transitions, in particular
the QGP/hadronic phase transition studied in heavy ion collisions.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure. Contribution to the Gribov-80 Memorial Workshop.
ICTP Trieste, Italy, May 26-28, 201
Using highly excited baryons to catch the quark mass
Chiral symmetry in QCD can be simultaneously in Wigner and Goldstone modes,
depending on the part of the spectrum examined. The transition regime between
both, exploiting for example the onset of parity doubling in the high baryon
spectrum, can be used to probe the running quark mass in the mid-IR power-law
regime. In passing we also argue that three-quark states naturally group into
same-flavor quartets, split into two parity doublets, all splittings decreasing
high in the spectrum. We propose that a measurement of masses of high-partial
wave Delta* resonances should be sufficient to unambiguously establish the
approximate degeneracy and see the quark mass running. We test these concepts
with the first computation of the spectrum of high-J excited baryons in a
chiral-invariant quark model.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, To appear in the proceedings of the 19th
International IUPAP Conference on Few-Body Problems in Physics; added
acknowledgment, hyphenized author nam
Probing the infrared quark mass from highly excited baryons
We argue that three-quark excited states naturally group into quartets, split
into two parity doublets, and that the mass splittings between these parity
partners decrease higher up in the baryon spectrum. This decreasing mass
difference can be used to probe the running quark mass in the mid-infrared
power-law regime. A measurement of masses of high-partial wave Delta*
resonances should be sufficient to unambiguously establish the approximate
degeneracy. We test this concept with the first computation of excited high-j
baryon masses in a chirally invariant quark model.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. submitted to Phys Rev Letter
D-meson diffusion in hadronic matter
We present effective-field-theory results with unitarized interactions on the
D-meson transport coefficients in a gas populated by light mesons and baryons
at finite temperature and baryochemical potential. The Fokker-Planck equation
is used to compute the drag force, the relaxation time and the diffusion
coefficients of D mesons for collisions at FAIR. At finite baryochemical
potential, the combined effect of net baryonic density and sizable meson-baryon
interaction makes the D mesons to relax more efficiently than in the case at
zero baryochemical potential. We also describe the connection with the
quark-gluon plasma phase in adiabatic trajectories on the phase diagram at both
zero and finite baryochemical potential.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Contribution to the FAIRNESS 2013 - Workshop for
young scientists with research interests focused on FAIR physics. 15-21
September 2013, Berlin (Germany
Heavy Quark Fluorescence
Heavy hadrons containing heavy quarks (for example, Upsilon-mesons) feature a
scale separation between the heavy quark mass (about 4.5 GeV for the b-quark)
and the QCD scale (about 0.3 GeV}) that controls effective masses of lighter
constituents. Therefore, as in ordinary molecules, the de-excitation of the
lighter, faster degrees of freedom leaves the velocity distribution of the
heavy quarks unchanged, populating the available decay channels in
qualitatively predictable ways. Automatically an application of the
Franck-Condon principle of molecular physics explains several puzzling results
of Upsilon(5S) decays as measured by the Belle collaboration, such as the high
rate of Bs*-anti Bs* versus Bs*-anti Bs production, the strength of three-body
B-anti B + pion decays, or the dip in B momentum shown in these decays. We
argue that the data is showing the first Sturm-Liouville zero of the
Upsilon(5S) quantum mechanical squared wavefunction, and providing evidence for
a largely b-anti b composition of this meson.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Figure 2 updated and some typos corrected. To be
published in Physical Review Letter
Minimum of and the phase transition of the Linear Sigma Model in the large-N limit
We reexamine the possibility of employing the viscosity over entropy density
ratio as a diagnostic tool to identify a phase transition in hadron physics to
the strongly coupled quark-gluon plasma and other circumstances where direct
measurement of the order parameter or the free energy may be difficult.
It has been conjectured that the minimum of eta/s does indeed occur at the
phase transition. We now make a careful assessment in a controled theoretical
framework, the Linear Sigma Model at large-N, and indeed find that the minimum
of eta/s occurs near the second order phase transition of the model due to the
rapid variation of the order parameter (here the sigma vacuum expectation
value) at a temperature slightly smaller than the critical one.Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, v2, some references and several figures added,
typos corrected and certain arguments clarified, revised for PR
The BES f_0(1810): a new glueball candidate
We analyze the f_0(1810) state recently observed by the BES collaboration via
radiative J/\psi decay to a resonant \phi\omega spectrum and confront it with
DM2 data and glueball theory. The DM2 group only measured \omega\omega decays
and reported a pseudoscalar but no scalar resonance in this mass region. A
rescattering mechanism from the open flavored KKbar decay channel is considered
to explain why the resonance is only seen in the flavor asymmetric \omega\phi
branch along with a discussion of positive C parity charmonia decays to
strengthen the case for preferred open flavor glueball decays. We also
calculate the total glueball decay width to be roughly 100 MeV, in agreement
with the narrow, newly found f_0, and smaller than the expected estimate of
200-400 MeV. We conclude that this discovered scalar hadron is a solid glueball
candidate and deserves further experimental investigation, especially in the
K-Kbar channel. Finally we comment on other, but less likely, possible
assignments for this state.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. Major substantive additions, including an
ab-initio, QCD-based computation of the glueball inclusive decay width,
evaluation of final state effects, and enhanced discussion of several
alternative possibilities. Our conclusions are unchanged: the BES f_0(1810)
is a promising glueball candidat
Shannon entropy and particle decays
We deploy Shannon's information entropy to the distribution of branching
fractions in a particle decay. This serves to quantify how important a given
new reported decay channel is, from the point of view of the information that
it adds to the already known ones. Because the entropy is additive, one can
subdivide the set of channels and discuss, for example, how much information
the discovery of a new decay branching would add; or subdivide the decay
distribution down to the level of individual quantum states (which can be
quickly counted by the phase space). We illustrate the concept with some
examples of experimentally known particle decay distributions.Comment: 12 pages, 18 plots; to appear in Nuclear Physics
- …