430 research outputs found
Photon production in relativistic nuclear collisions at SPS and RHIC energies
Chiral Lagrangians are used to compute the production rate of photons from
the hadronic phase of relativistic nuclear collisions. Special attention is
paid to the role of the pseudovector a_1 meson. Calculations that include
reactions with strange mesons, hadronic form factors and vector spectral
densities consistent with dilepton production, as well as the emission from a
quark-gluon plasma and primordial nucleon-nucleon collisions, reproduce the
photon spectra measured at the Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS). Predictions for
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) are made.Comment: Work presented at the 26th annual Montreal-Rochester-Syracuse-Toronto
conference (MRST 2004) on high energy physics, Montreal, QC, Canada, 12-14
May 2004. 8 pages, 3 figure
Photon Production in Hot and Dense Strongly Interacting Matter
This text is meant as an introduction to the theoretical physics of photon
emission in hot and dense strongly interacting matter, the principal
application being relativistic nuclear collisions. We shall cover some of the
results and techniques appropriate for studies at SPS, RHIC, and LHC energiesComment: 35 pages, accepted for publication, Landolt-Boernstein Volume 1-23
Bag Formation in Quantum Hall Ferromagnets
Charged skyrmions or spin-textures in the quantum Hall ferromagnet at filling
factor nu=1 are reinvestigated using the Hartree-Fock method in the lowest
Landau level approximation. It is shown that the single Slater determinant with
the minimum energy in the unit charge sector is always of the hedgehog form. It
is observed that the magnetization vector's length deviates locally from unity,
i.e. a bag is formed which accommodates the excess charge. In terms of a
gradient expansion for extended spin-textures a novel O(3) type of effective
action is presented, which takes bag formation into account.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Between overt and covert research: concealment and disclosure in an ethnographic study of commercial hospitality
This article examines the ways in which problems of concealment emerged in an ethnographic study of a suburban bar and considers how disclosure of the research aims, the recruitment of informants, and elicitation of information was negotiated throughout the fieldwork. The case study demonstrates how the social context and the relationships with specific informants determined overtness or covertness in the research. It is argued that the existing literature on covert research and covert methods provides an inappropriate frame of reference with which to understand concealment in fieldwork. The article illustrates why concealment is sometimes necessary, and often unavoidable, and concludes that the criticisms leveled against covert methods should not stop the fieldworker from engaging in research that involves covertness
Off-shell effects in dilepton production from hot interacting mesons
The production of dielectrons in reactions involving a_1 mesons and pions is
studied. We compare results obtained with different phenomenological
Lagrangians that have been used in connection with hadronic matter and finite
nuclei. We insist on the necessity for those interactions to satisfy known
empirical properties of the strong interaction. Large off-shell effects in
dielectron production are found and some consequences for the interpretation of
heavy ion data are outlined. We also compare with results obtained using
experimentally-extracted spectral functions.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX2e, 2 figure
Properties of vector mesons at finite temperature -effective lagrangian approach-
The properties of -mesons at finite temperature () are examined with
an effective chiral lagrangian in which vector and axial-vector mesons are
included as massive Yang-Mills fields of the chiral symmetry. It is shown that,
at order, the effective mass is not changed but only the mixing effect in
vector and axial-vector correlator appears.Comment: 13 pages (REVTeX), two figures
Investigation of potential interferences in the detection of atmospheric RO radicals by laser-induced fluorescence under dark conditions
Direct detection of highly reactive, atmospheric hydroxyl radicals (OH) is widely accomplished by laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) instruments. The technique is also suitable for the indirect measurement of HO2 and RO2 peroxy radicals by chemical conversion to OH. It requires sampling of ambient air into a low pressure cell, where OH fluorescence is detected after excitation by 308 nm laser radiation. Although the residence time of air inside the fluorescence cell is typically only on the order of milliseconds, there is potential that additional OH is internally produced, which would artificially increase the measured OH concentration. Here, we present experimental studies investigating potential interferences in the detection of OH and peroxy radicals for the LIF instruments of Forschungszentrum Jülich for nighttime conditions. For laboratory experiments, the inlet of the instrument was overflown by excess synthetic air containing one or more reactants. In order to distinguish between OH produced by reactions upstream of the inlet and artificial signals produced inside the instrument, a chemical titration for OH was applied. Additional experiments were performed in the simulation chamber SAPHIR where simultaneous measurements by an open-path differential optical absorption spectrometer (DOAS) served as reference for OH to quantify potential artifacts in the LIF instrument. Experiments included the investigation of potential interferences related to the nitrate radical (NO3, N2O5), related to the ozonolysis of alkenes (ethene, propene, 1-butene, 2,3-dimethyl-2-butene, α-pinene, limonene, isoprene), and the laser photolysis of acetone. Experiments studying the laser photolysis of acetone yield OH signals in the fluorescence cell, which are equivalent to 0.05 × 106 cm−3 OH for a mixing ratio of 5 ppbv acetone. Under most atmospheric conditions, this interference is negligible. No significant interferences were found for atmospheric concentrations of reactants during ozonolysis experiments. Only for α-pinene, limonene, and isoprene at reactant concentrations which are orders of magnitude higher than in the atmosphere artificial OH could be detected. The value of the interference depends on the turnover rate of the ozonolysis reaction. For example, an apparent OH concentration of approximately 1 × 106 cm−3 is observed, if 5.8 ppbv limonene reacts with 600 ppbv ozone. Experiments with the nitrate radical NO3 reveal a small interference signal in the OH, HO2 and RO2 detection. Dependencies on experimental parameters point to artificial OH formation by surface reactions at the chamber walls or in molecular clusters in the gas expansion. The signal scales with the presence of NO3 giving equivalent radical concentrations of 1.1 × 105 cm−3 OH, 1 × 107 cm−3 HO2, and 1.7 × 107 cm−3 RO2 per 10 pptv NO3
Partial Deconfinement in Color Superconductivity
We analyze the fate of the unbroken SU(2) color gauge interactions for 2
light flavors color superconductivity at non zero temperature. Using a simple
model we compute the deconfining/confining critical temperature and show that
is smaller than the critical temperature for the onset of the superconductive
state itself. The breaking of Lorentz invariance, induced already at zero
temperature by the quark chemical potential, is shown to heavily affect the
value of the critical temperature and all of the relevant features related to
the deconfining transition. Modifying the Polyakov loop model to describe the
SU(2) immersed in the diquark medium we argue that the deconfinement transition
is second order. Having constructed part of the equation of state for the 2
color superconducting phase at low temperatures our results are relevant for
the physics of compact objects featuring a two flavor color superconductive
state.Comment: 9 pp, 4 eps-figs, version to appear in PR
Intermediate-mass dilepton spectra and the role of secondary hadronic processes in heavy-ion collisions
We carry out a study of intermediate-mass (between 1 and 2.5 GeV) dilepton
spectra from hadronic interactions in heavy-ion collisions. The processes
considered are , , , , , and . The elementary cross sections for those are obtained
from chiral Lagrangians involving pseudoscalar, vector, and axial-vector
mesons. The respective electromagnetic form factors are determined by fitting
to experimental data for the reverse processes of . Based on
this input we calculate cross sections and thermal dilepton emission rates and
compare our results with those from other approaches. Finally we use these
elementary cross sections with a relativistic transport model and calculate
dilepton spectra in S+W collisions at SPS energies. The comparison of our
results with experimental data from the HELIOS-3 collaboration indicates the
importance of the secondary hadronic contributions to the intermediate-mass
dilepton spectra.Comment: 25 pages, including 20 postscript figure
Baryons as Chiral Solitons in the Nambu--Jona-Lasinio Model
The description of baryons as chiral solitons of the Nambu--Jona--Lasinio
(NJL) model is reviewed. A motivation for the soliton description of baryons is
provided from large QCD. Rigorous results on the spontaneous breaking of
chiral symmetry in QCD are discussed. It is then argued that the NJL model
provides a fair description of low--energy hadron physics. The NJL model is
therefore employed to mimic the low--energy chiral flavor dynamics of QCD. The
model is bosonized by functional integral techniques and the physical content
of the emerging effective meson theory is discussed. In particular, its
relation to the Skyrme model is established. The static soliton solutions of
the bosonized NJL model are found, their properties discussed, and the
influence of various meson fields studied. These considerations provide strong
support of Witten's conjecture that baryons can be understood as soliton
solutions of effective meson theories. The chiral soliton of the NJL model is
then quantized in a semiclassical fashion and various static properties of the
nucleon are studied. The dominating corrections to the semiclassically
quantized soliton are investigated. Time--dependent meson fluctuations off the
chiral soliton are explored and employed to estimate the quantum corrections to
the soliton mass. Finally, hyperons are described as chiral solitons of the NJL
model. This is done in both, the collective rotational approach of Yabu and
Ando as well as in the bound state approach of Callan and Klebanov.Comment: 120 pages, uuencoded and compressed postscript file is submitted,
hardcopy available upon request
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