42 research outputs found
Finite Volume Cumulant Expansion in QCD-Colorless Plasma
Due to the finite size effects, the localisation of the phase transition in
finite systems and the determination of its order, become an extremely
difficult task, even in the simplest known cases. In order to identify and
locate the finite volume transition point of the QCD deconfinement
phase transition to a Colorless QGP, we have developed a new approach using the
finite size cumulant expansion of the order parameter and the -method.
The first six cumulants with the corresponding
under-normalized ratios(skewness , kurtosis ,pentosis
and hexosis ) and three unnormalized
combinations of them (, , ) are calculated and studied as functions of . A new approach,
unifying in a clear and consistent way the definitions of cumulant ratios, is
proposed. A numerical FSS analysis of the obtained results has allowed us to
locate accurately the finite volume transition point. The extracted transition
temperature value agrees with that expected from the
order parameter and the thermal susceptibility ,
according to the standard procedure of localization to within about . In
addition to this, a very good correlation factor is obtained proving the
validity of our cumulants method. The agreement of our results with those
obtained by means of other models is remarkable.Comment: 19 pages,14 figues, figures 4,5,6 figures are oversized, therefore,
can be obtained directly from [email protected],Accepted for publication in
EPJ
Effect of colorlessness condition on phase transition from Hadronic Gas to partonic plasma
One of the most important phase transition in physics is the Deconfinement Phase Transition in thermal Quantum ChromoDynamics. Due to the confinement property, we study the effect of colorlessness condition during the Deconfinement Phase Transition from a Hadronic Gas to a Quark-Gluon Plasma. We investigate the behavior of some thermodynamical quantities of the system such as the energy density and the pressure, the colorlessness condition and without colorlessness
Finite-Size Effects and Scaling for the Thermal QCD Deconfinement Phase Transition within the Exact Color-Singlet Partition Function
We study the finite-size effects for the thermal QCD Deconfinement Phase
Transition (DPT), and use a numerical finite size scaling analysis to extract
the scaling exponents characterizing its scaling behavior when approaching the
thermodynamic limit. For this, we use a simple model of coexistence of hadronic
gas and color-singlet Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP) phases in a finite volume. The
Color-Singlet Partition Function (CSPF) of the QGP cannot be exactly calculated
and is usually derived within the saddle point approximation. When we try to do
calculations with such an approximate CSPF, a problem arises in the limit of
small temperatures and/or volumes (VT3<<1), requiring then additional
approximations if we want to carry out calculations. We propose in this work a
new method for an accurate calculation of any quantity of the finite system,
without explicitly calculating the CSPF itself and without any approximation.
By probing the behavior of some useful thermodynamic response functions on the
hole range of temperature, it turns out that in a finite size system, all
singularities in the thermodynamic limit are smeared out and the transition
point is shifted away. A numerical finite size scaling analysis of the obtained
data allows us to determine the scaling exponents of the QCD DPT. Our results
expressing the equality between their values and the space dimensionality is a
consequence of the singularity characterizing a first order phase transition
and agree very well with the predictions of other FSS theoretical approaches
and with the results of both lattice QCD and Monte Carlo models calculations.Comment: 09 pages, 11 Postscript figure
Measurement of negative particle multiplicity in S - Pb collisions at 200 GeV/c per nucleon with the NA36 TPC
A high statistics study of the negative multiplicity distribution from S-Pb collisions at 200 GeV/c per nucleon is presented. The NA36 TPC was used to detect charged particles; corrections are based upon the maximum entropy method.A high statistics study of the negative multiplicity distribution from S-Pb collisions at 200 GeV/c per nucleon is presented. The NA36 TPC was used to detect charged particles; corrections are based upon the maximum entropy method.A high statistics study of the negative particle multiplicity distribution from S–Pb collisions at 200 GeV/ c per nucleon is presented. The NA36 TPC was used to detect charged particles; corrections are based upon the maximum entropy method