119,199 research outputs found
Conditions driving chemical freeze-out
We propose the entropy density as the thermodynamic condition driving best
the chemical freeze-out in heavy-ion collisions. Taking its value from lattice
calculations at zero chemical potential, we find that it is excellent in
reproducing the experimentally estimated freeze-out parameters. The two
characteristic endpoints in the freeze-out diagram are reproduced as well.Comment: 8 pages, 5 eps figure
The influence of strange quarks on QCD phase diagram and chemical freeze-out: Results from the hadron resonance gas model
We confront the lattice results on QCD phase diagram for two and three
flavors with the hadron resonance gas model. Taking into account the
truncations in the Taylor-expansion of energy density done on the
lattice at finite chemical potential , we find that the hadron resonance
gas model under the condition of constant describes very well the
lattice phase diagram. We also calculate the chemical freeze-out curve
according to the entropy density . The -values are taken from lattice QCD
simulations with two and three flavors. We find that this condition is
excellent in reproducing the experimentally estimated parameters of the
chemical freeze-out.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures and 1 table Talk given at VIIIth international
conference on ''Strangeness in Quark Matter'' (SQM 2004), Cape Town, South
Africa, Sep. 15-20 200
Entropy for Color Superconductivity in Quark Matter
We study a model for color superconductivity with both three colors and
massless flavors including quark pairing. By using the Hamiltonian in the
color-flavor basis we can calculate the quantum entropy. From this we are able
to further investigate the phases of the color superconductor, for which we
find a rather sharp transition to color superconductivity above a chemical
potential around MeV.Comment: 10 pages, 2 eps-figure
Band Symmetries and Singularities in Twisted Multilayer Graphene
The electronic spectra of rotationally faulted graphene bilayers are
calculated using a continuum formulation for small fault angles that identifies
two distinct electronic states of the coupled system. The low energy spectra of
one state features a Fermi velocity reduction which ultimately leads to
pairwise annihilation and regeneration of its low energy Dirac nodes. The
physics in the complementary state is controlled by pseudospin selection rules
that prevent a Fermi velocity renormalization and produce second generation
symmetry-protected Dirac singularities in the spectrum. These results are
compared with previous theoretical analyses and with experimental data.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Entropy for Quark States
We discuss the quantum state structure using the standard model for three
colored quarks in the fundamental representations of making up the
singlet ground state of the hadrons. This allows us to calculate a finite von
Neumann entropy from the quantum reduced density matrix, which we explicitly
evaluate for the quarks in a model for the meson and baryon states. Finally we
look into the general effects and implications of entanglement in the
color space.Comment: 9 pages, 0 figure
SRC seal testing
Small venthole drilled in semisealed silicon-controlled rectifier (SCR) cavity eliminates entrapped helium. Although these devices show slightly greater leak than those before lead installation, it is now possible to distinguish device with good hermetic seal from defective one
Linear growth of the trace anomaly in Yang-Mills thermodynamics
In the lattice work by Miller [1,2] and in the work by Zwanziger [3] a linear
growth of the trace anomaly for high temperatures was found in pure SU(2) and
SU(3) Yang-Mills theories. These results show the remarkable property that the
corresponding systems are strong interacting even at high temperatures. We show
that within an analytical approach to Yang-Mills thermodynamics this linear
rise is obtained and is directly connected to the presence of a
temperature-dependent ground state, which describes (part of) the
nonperturbative nature of the Yang-Mills system. Our predictions are in
approximate agreement with [1,2,3]Comment: 9 pages and 2 figure
Nonperturbative screening of the Landau pole
Based on the trace anomaly for the energy-momentum tensor, an effective
theory for the thermodynamics of the deconfining phase, and by assuming the
asymptotic behavior to be determined by one-loop perturbation theory we compute
the nonperturbative beta function for the fundamental coupling in SU(2) and
SU(3) Yang-Mills theory. With increasing temperature we observe a very rapid
approach to the perturbative running. The Landau pole is nonperturbatively
screened.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Cross-calibration of Suzaku XIS and XMM-Newton EPIC using clusters of galaxies
We extend a previous cross-calibration study by the International
Astronomical Consortium for High Energy Calibration (IACHEC) on
XMM-Newton/EPIC, Chandra/ACIS and BeppoSAX/MECS X-ray instruments with clusters
of galaxies to Suzaku/XIS instruments. Our aim is to study the accuracy of the
energy-dependent effective area calibration of the XIS instruments by
comparison of spectroscopic temperatures, fluxes and fit residuals obtained
with Suzaku/XIS and XMM-Newton/EPIC-pn for the same cluster. The temperatures
measured in the hard 2.0-7.0 keV energy band with all instruments are
consistent within 5 %. However, temperatures obtained with the XIS instruments
in the soft 0.5-2.0 keV band disagree by 9-29 %. We investigated residuals in
the XIS soft band, which showed that if XIS0 effective area shape is accurately
calibrated, the effective areas of XIS1 and XIS3 are overestimated below 1.0
keV (or vice versa). Adjustments to the modelling of the column density of the
XIS contaminant in the 3-6 arcmin extraction region while forcing consistent
emission models in each instrument for a given cluster significantly improved
the fits. The oxygen column density in XIS1 and XIS3 contaminant must be
increased by 1-2E17 cm^-2 in comparison to the values implemented in the
current calibration, while the column density of the XIS0 contaminant given by
the analysis is consistent with the public calibration. XIS soft band
temperatures obtained with the modification to the column density of the
contaminant agree better with temperatures obtained with the EPIC-pn instrument
of XMM-Newton, than with those derived using the Chandra-ACIS instrument.
However, comparison of hard band fluxes obtained using Suzaku-XIS to fluxes
obtained using the Chandra-ACIS and EPIC-pn instruments proved inconclusive.Comment: 24 pages, 27 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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