1,678 research outputs found
Scaling of in heavy ion collisions
We interpret the scaling of the corrected elliptic flow parameter w.r.t. the
corrected multiplicity, observed to hold in heavy ion collisions for a wide
variety of energies and system sizes. We use dimensional analysis and
power-counting arguments to place constraints on the changes of initial
conditions in systems with different center of mass energy .
Specifically, we show that a large class of changes in the (initial) equation
of state, mean free path, and longitudinal geometry over the observed
are likely to spoil the scaling in observed experimentally. We
therefore argue that the system produced at most Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS)
and Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) energies is fundamentally the same
as far as the soft and approximately thermalized degrees of freedom are
considered. The ``sQGP'' (Strongly interacting Quark-Gluon Plasma) phase, if it
is there, is therefore not exclusive to RHIC. We suggest, as a goal for further
low-energy heavy ion experiments, to search for a ``transition''
where the observed scaling breaks.Comment: Accepted for publication by Phys. Rev. C Based on presentation in
mini-symposium on QGP collective properties, Frankfurt. Discussion expanded,
results adde
A statistical model analysis of fluctuations in heavy ion collisions
We briefly describe two statistical hadronization models, based respectively
on the presence and absence of light quark chemical equilibrium, used to
analyze particle yields in heavy ion collisions. We then try to distinguish
between these models using fluctuations data. We find that while the
non-equilibrium model provides an acceptable description of fluctuations at top
SPS and RHIC energies, both models considerably under-estimate fluctuations at
low SPS energies.Comment: References updated Poster in QM2006 conference, Shangha
New Results from NA49
We present recent results of the SPS experiment NA49 on production of strange
particles and event-by-event fluctuations of mean and of charged particle
ratios in central Pb+Pb collisions at various beam energies (40, 80, 158 AGeV)
as well as in different collisions at 158 AGeV, going from p+p over light-ion
collisions to peripheral and central Pb+Pb.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures (in eps) talk given at XXXI International
Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics, Sep. 1-7, 2001, Datong China URL
http://ismd31.ccnu.edu.cn
Hadron Resonances and Phase Threshold in Heavy Ion Collisions
We show that a measurement of the reaction energy dependence of relative
hadron resonance yields in heavy ion collisions can be used to study the phase
structure of the dense QCD matter created in these collisions, and investigate
the origin of the trends observed in the excitation functions of certain soft
hadronic observables. We show that presence of chemical nonequilibrium in light
quark abundance imparts a characteristic signature on the energy dependence of
resonance yields, that differs considerably from what is expected in the
equilibrium picture.Comment: In press, Phys. Rev.
Hanbury-Brown--Twiss Analysis in a Solvable Model
The analysis of meson correlations by Hanbury-Brown--Twiss interferometry is
tested with a simple model of meson production by resonance decay. We derive
conditions which should be satisfied in order to relate the measured momentum
correlation to the classical source size. The Bose correlation effects are
apparent in both the ratio of meson pairs to singles and in the ratio of like
to unlike pairs. With our parameter values, we find that the single particle
distribution is too distorted by the correlation to allow a straightforward
analysis using pair correlation normalized by the singles rates. An analysis
comparing symmetrized to unsymmetrized pairs is more robust, but nonclassical
off-shell effects are important at realistic temperatures.Comment: 21 pages + 9 figures (tarred etc. using uufiles, submitted
separately), REVTeX 3.0, preprint number: DOE/ER/40561-112/INT93-00-3
Boundary and Coulomb Effects on Boson Systems in High-Energy Heavy-Ion Collisions
The boundary of a boson system plays an important role in determining the
momentum distribution of the bosons. For a boson system with a cylindrical
boundary, the momentum distribution is enhanced at high transverse momenta but
suppressed at low transverse momenta, relative to a Bose-Einstein distribution.
The boundary effects on systems of massless gluons and massive pions are
studied. For gluons in a quark-gluon plasma, the presence of the boundary may
modify the signals for the quark-gluon plasma. For pions in a pion system in
heavy-ion collisions, Coulomb final-state interactions with the nuclear
participants in the vicinity of the central rapidity region further modify the
momentum distribution at low transverse momenta. By including both the boundary
effect and the Coulomb final-state interactions we are able to account for the
behavior of the transverse momentum spectrum observed in many
heavy-ion experiments, notably at low transverse momenta.Comment: 15 pages Postscript uuencoded tar-comprssed file, 9 Postscript
figures uuencoded tar-compressed fil
Search for the QCD critical point in nuclear collisions at the CERN SPS
Pion production in nuclear collisions at the SPS is investigated with the aim
to search, in a restricted domain of the phase diagram, for power-laws in the
behavior of correlations which are compatible with critical QCD. We have
analyzed interactions of nuclei of different size (p+p, C+C, Si+Si, Pb+Pb) at
158 GeV adopting, as appropriate observables, scaled factorial moments in a
search for intermittent fluctuations in transverse dimensions. The analysis is
performed for pairs with invariant mass very close to the two-pion
threshold. In this sector one may capture critical fluctuations of the sigma
component in a hadronic medium, even if the -meson has no well defined
vacuum state. It turns out that for the Pb+Pb system the proposed analysis
technique cannot be applied without entering the invariant mass region with
strong Coulomb correlations. As a result the treatment becomes inconclusive in
this case. Our results for the other systems indicate the presence of power-law
fluctuations in the freeze-out state of Si+Si approaching in size the
prediction of critical QCD.Comment: 31 pages, 11 figure
A review of post-whaling abundance, trends, changes in distribution and migration patterns, and supplementary feeding of Southern Hemisphere humpback whales
Southern Hemisphere humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) were heavily
targeted during modern commercial whaling operations, with some 216,000
individuals killed between 1903 and 1973. That impacted the abundance of all the
seven breeding stocks of the species. Most of these stocks have been recovering
from whaling pressure although the understanding of the current growth rates of
some stocks, and how the rates compare across stocks are lacking. Updated
information is fundamental for understanding the species’ current status, and to
support the review of management plans promoting its protection and recovery,
especially considering current changes in ocean environments due to climate
change. This work offers a comprehensive overview of the current knowledge on
Southern Hemisphere humpback whales breeding stocks’ status. The aim is to
provide information on their post-whaling growth trends and changes in
distribution and migration patterns. Within that, records of supplementary
feeding records (i.e. feeding beyond their formally described feeding grounds)
are described. We have also identified knowledge gaps and note that the
establishment of research collaborations, as well as standard methodologies
for data collection can be important steps for the acquisition of better
comparable data sets for the analysis of the current status of humpback
whales and to fill such gaps. The compiled information provided can be used
as part of an In-Depth Assessment of the species by the International
Whaling Commission.Griffith University from a private charitable trust as part of the Whales & Climate Research Program.https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/marine-science#am2024Mammal Research InstituteZoology and EntomologySDG-14:Life below wate
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