40 research outputs found
Probing chiral dynamics by charged-pion correlations
The environment generated in the mid-rapidity region of a high-energy nuclear
collision endows the pionic degrees of freedom with a time-dependent effective
mass. Its specific evolution provides a mechanism for the production of
back-to-back charge-conjugate pairs of soft pions which may present an
observable signal of the non-equilibrium dynamics of the chiral order
parameter.Comment: revtex body and 3 eps figures (4 pages total
Signals of spinodal phase decomposition in high-energy nuclear collisions
High-energy nuclear collisions produce quark-gluon plasmas that expand and
hadronize. If the associated phase transition is of first order then the
hadronization should proceed through a spinodal phase separation. We explore
here the possibility of identifying the associated clumping by analysis of
suitable N-particle momentum correlations.Comment: 7 pages, incl 4 ps figure
Quantum Field Treatment of DCC Dynamics
A practical quantum-field treatment is developed for systems endowed with an
effective mass function depending on both space and time and a schematic
application illustrates the quantitative importance of quantum fluctuations in
the dynamics of disoriented chiral condensates.Comment: revtex body and 4 eps figures (4 pages total
Brownian shape motion on five-dimensional potential-energy surfaces: Nuclear fission-fragment mass distributions
Although nuclear fission can be understood qualitatively as an evolution of
the nuclear shape, a quantitative description has proven to be very elusive. In
particular, until now, there exists no model with demonstrated predictive power
for the fission fragment mass yields. Exploiting the expected strongly damped
character of nuclear dynamics, we treat the nuclear shape evolution in analogy
with Brownian motion and perform random walks on five-dimensional fission
potential-energy surfaces which were calculated previously and are the most
comprehensive available. Test applications give good reproduction of highly
variable experimental mass yields. This novel general approach requires only a
single new global parameter, namely the critical neck size at which the mass
split is frozen in, and the results are remarkably insensitive to its specific
value.Comment: 4 pages, 2 ps figure