1,296 research outputs found
Some exact analytical results and a semi-empirical formula for single electron ionization induced by ultrarelativistic heavy ions
The delta function gauge of the electromagnetic potential allows
semiclassical formulas to be obtained for the probability of exciting a single
electron out of the ground state in an ultrarelativistic heavy ion reaction.
Exact formulas have been obtained in the limits of zero impact parameter and
large, perturbative, impact parameter. The perturbative impact parameter result
can be exploited to obtain a semi-empirical cross section formula of the form,
sigma = A ln(gamma) + B, for single electron ionization. A and B can be
evaluated for any combination of target and projectile, and the resulting
simple formula is good at all ultrarelativistic energies. The analytical form
of A and B elucidates a result previously found in numerical calculations:
scaled ionization cross sections decrease with increasing charge of the nucleus
being ionized. The cross section values obtained from the present formula are
in good agreement with recent CERN SPS data from a Pb beam on various nuclear
targets.Comment: 14 pages, latex, revtex source, no figure
Aspects of Coulomb Dissociation and Interference in Peripheral Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions
Coherent vector meson production in peripheral nucleus-nucleus collisions is
discussed. These interactions may occur for impact parameters much larger than
the sum of the nuclear radii. Since the vector meson production is always
localized to one of the nuclei, the system acts as a two-source interferometer
in the transverse plane. By tagging the outgoing nuclei for Coulomb
dissociation it is possible to obtain a measure of the impact parameter and
thus the source separation in the interferometer. This is of particular
interest since the life-time of the vector mesons are generally much shorter
than the impact parameters of the collisions.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, Presented at the Workshop on Electromagnetic
Probes of Fundamental Physics, Erice, Italy, 16-21 October, 200
Two-Photon Interactions with Nuclear Breakup in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
Highly charged relativistic heavy ions have high cross-sections for
two-photon interactions. The photon flux is high enough that two-photon
interactions may be accompanied by additional photonuclear interactions. Except
for the shared impact parameter, these interactions are independent. Additional
interactions like mutual Coulomb excitation are of experimental interest, since
the neutrons from the nuclear dissociation provide a simple, relatively
unbiased trigger.
We calculate the cross sections, rapidity, mass and transverse momentum
( distributions for exclusive production of mesons and
lepton pairs, and for reactions accompanied by mutual Coulomb
dissociation. The cross-sections for interactions accompanied by
multiple neutron emission () and single neutron emission () are
about 1/10 and 1/100 of that for the unaccompanied interactions.
We discuss the accuracy with which these cross-sections may be calculated. The
typical of final states is several times smaller than for
comparable coherent photonuclear interactions, so may be an effective
tool for separating the two classes of interactions.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figure
Coherent Vector Meson Photoproduction with Nuclear Breakup in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
Relativistic heavy ions are copious sources of virtual photons. The large
photon flux gives rise to a substantial photonuclear interaction probability at
impact parameters where no hadronic interactions can occur. Multiple
photonuclear interactions in a single collision are possible. In this letter,
we use mutual Coulomb excitation of both nuclei as a tag for moderate impact
parameter collisions. We calculate the cross section for coherent vector meson
production accompanied by mutual excitation, and show that the median impact
parameter is much smaller than for untagged production. The vector meson
rapidity and transverse momentum distribution are very different from untagged
exclusive vector meson production.Comment: 14 pages, including 4 figure
Microlensing Surveys of M31 in the Wide Field Imaging Era
The Andromeda Galaxy (M31) is the closest large galaxy to the Milky Way, thus
it is an important laboratory for studying massive dark objects in galactic
halos (MACHOs) by gravitational microlensing. Such studies strongly complement
the studies of the Milky Way halo using the the Large and Small Magellanic
Clouds. We consider the possibilities for microlensing surveys of M31 using the
next generation of wide field imaging telescopes with fields of view in the
square degree range. We consider proposals for such imagers both on the ground
and in space. For concreteness, we specialize to the SNAP proposal for a space
telescope and the LSST proposal for a ground based telescope. We find that a
modest space-based survey of 50 visits of one hour each is considerably better
than current ground based surveys covering 5 years. Crucially, systematic
effects can be considerably better controlled with a space telescope because of
both the infrared sensitivity and the angular resolution. To be competitive, 8
meter class wide-field ground based imagers must take exposures of several
hundred seconds with several day cadence.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
Exact scaling of pair production in the high-energy limit of heavy-ion collisions
The two-center Dirac equation for an electron in the external electromagnetic
field of two colliding heavy ions in the limit in which the ions are moving at
the speed of light is exactly solved and nonperturbative amplitudes for free
electron-positron pair production are obtained. We find the condition for the
applicability of this solution for large but finite collision energy, and use
it to explain recent experimental results. The observed scaling of positron
yields as the square of the projectile and target charges is a result of an
exact cancellation of a nonperturbative charge dependence and holds as well for
large coupling. Other observables would be sensitive to nonperturbative phases.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex, no figures, submitted to PR
Process 3 -> 3 and crossing symmetry violation
Using the Sudakov technique we sum the perturbation series for the process
and obtain the compact analytical expression for the amplitude of this
process, which takes into account all possible Coulomb interactions between
colliding particles. Compare it with the amplitude of the lepton pair
production in heavy ion collision i.e. in the process , we show that
crossing symmetry between this processes holds only if one neglects the
interaction of produced pair with ions (i.e. in the approximation
).Comment: LaTeX2e, 10 pages, 5 eps figure
Luminosity Function of Faint Globular Clusters in M87
We present the luminosity function to very faint magnitudes for the globular
clusters in M87, based on a 30 orbit \textit{Hubble Space Telescope (HST)}
WFPC2 imaging program. The very deep images and corresponding improved false
source rejection allow us to probe the mass function further beyond the
turnover than has been done before. We compare our luminosity function to those
that have been observed in the past, and confirm the similarity of the turnover
luminosity between M87 and the Milky Way. We also find with high statistical
significance that the M87 luminosity function is broader than that of the Milky
Way. We discuss how determining the mass function of the cluster system to low
masses can constrain theoretical models of the dynamical evolution of globular
cluster systems. Our mass function is consistent with the dependence of mass
loss on the initial cluster mass given by classical evaporation, and somewhat
inconsistent with newer proposals that have a shallower mass dependence. In
addition, the rate of mass loss is consistent with standard evaporation models,
and not with the much higher rates proposed by some recent studies of very
young cluster systems. We also find that the mass-size relation has very little
slope, indicating that there is almost no increase in the size of a cluster
with increasing mass.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
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