12,320 research outputs found

    Work distribution of an expanding gas and transverse energy production in relativistic heavy ion collisions

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    The work distribution of an expanding extreme relativistic gas is shown to be a gamma distribution with a different shape parameter as compared with its non-relativistic counterpart. This implies that the shape of the transverse energy distribution in relativistic heavy ion collisions depends on the particle contents during the evolution of the hot and dense matter. Therefore, transverse energy fluctuations provide additional insights into the Quark-Gluon Plasma produced in these collisions.Comment: Added discussions in Section 3, improved introductions to Eqs. (4) and (15), corrected typos, updated reference

    Tree-level Split Helicity Amplitudes in Ambitwistor Space

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    We study all tree-level split helicity gluon amplitudes by using the recently proposed BCFW recursion relation and Hodges diagrams in ambitwistor space. We pick out the contributing diagrams and find that all of them can be divided into triangles in a suitable way. We give the explicit expressions for all of these amplitudes. As an example, we reproduce the six gluon split NMHV amplitudes in momentum space.Comment: 20 pages, 16 figures; minor changes; clarifications added, 22 pages, 16 figure

    Resummation of High Order Corrections in ZZ Boson Plus Jet Production at the LHC

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    We study the multiple soft gluon radiation effects in ZZ boson plus jet production at the LHC. By applying the transverse momentum dependent factorization formalism, the large logarithms introduced by the small total transverse momentum of the ZZ boson plus jet final state system, are resummed to all orders in the expansion of the strong interaction coupling at the accuracy of Next-to-Leading Logarithm(NLL). We also compare the prediction of our resummation calculation to the CMS data by employing a reweighting procedure to estimate the effect from imposing kinematic cuts on the leptons from ZZ boson decay, and find good agreement for both the imbalance transverse momentum and the azimuthal angle correlation of the final state ZZ boson and jet system, for pp→Z+jetpp\to Z+jet production at the LHC.Comment: 7 pages, published versio

    Remarks on the Theory of Cosmological Perturbation

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    It is shown that the power spectrum defined in the Synchronous Gauge can not be directly used to calculate the predictions of cosmological models on the large-scale structure of universe, which should be calculated directly by a suitable gauge-invariant power spectrum or the power spectrum defined in the Newtonian Gauge.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, minor changes, to be published in Chinese Physics Letter

    Coming Closer? Tax Morale, Deterrence and Social Learning after German Unification

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    The paper explores whether a social learning model helps explain the observed conformity and compliance with social norms after the unification of Germany. We compare tax morale, (the willingness to pay taxes), between inhabitants of East and West Germany during the post-unification period, using three World Values Survey/European Values Survey waves between 1990 and 1999. German unification is of particular interest in analysing tax morale since it is close to a quasi-natural experiment. Factors such as a common language, similar education systems and a shared cultural and political history prior to the separation after the Second World War can be controlled because they are similar. Our findings indicate that the social learning model employed in this study helps to predict the development of tax morale over time. It is clear that tax morale values converged within a mere nine years after unification, due largely to a strong change in the level of tax morale in the East. Thus, the paper contributes to the literature that attempts to explain how norms arise, how they are maintained and how they are changed.Tax Morale, Social Learning, Conformity, Convergence Process, Deterrence, Quasi-Natural Experiment

    Viscoelasticity of 2D liquids quantified in a dusty plasma experiment

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    The viscoelasticity of two-dimensional liquids is quantified in an experiment using a dusty plasma. An experimental method is demonstrated for measuring the wavenumber-dependent viscosity, η(k)\eta(k), which is a quantitative indicator of viscoelasticity. Using an expression generalized here to include friction, η(k)\eta(k) is computed from the transverse current autocorrelation function (TCAF), which is found by tracking random particle motion. The TCAF exhibits an oscillation that is a signature of elastic contributions to viscoelasticity. Simulations of a Yukawa liquid are consistent with the experiment.Comment: 5 pages text, 3 figures, 1 supplementary material, in press Physical Review Letters 201
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