2,924 research outputs found
Theory and Phenomenology of Heavy Flavor at RHIC
We review the problem of heavy-quark diffusion in the Quark-Gluon Plasma and
its ramifications for heavy-quark spectra in heavy-ion collisions at RHIC. In
particular, we attempt to reconcile underlying mechanisms of several seemingly
different approaches that have been put forward to explain the large
suppression and elliptic flow of non-photonic electron spectra. We also
emphasize the importance of a quantitative description of the bulk medium
evolution to extract reliable values for the heavy-quark diffusion coefficient.Comment: 8 pages latex, including 10 eps figures; plenary talk at SQM08,
Beijing (China), Oct. 06-10, 200
Apollo experience report: Food systems
Development, delivery, and use of food systems in support of the Apollo 7 to 14 missions are discussed. Changes in design criteria for this unique program as mission requirements varied are traced from the baseline system that was established before the completion of the Gemini Program. Problems and progress in subsystem management, material selection, food packaging, development of new food items, menu design, and food-consumption methods under zero-gravity conditions are described. The effectiveness of various approaches in meeting food system objectives of providing flight crews with safe, nutritious, easy to prepare, and highly acceptable foods is considered. Nutritional quality and adequacy in maintaining crew health are discussed in relation to the establishment of nutritional criteria for future missions. Technological advances that have resulted from the design of separate food systems for the command module, the lunar module, The Mobile Quarantine Facility, and the Lunar Receiving Laboratory are presented for application to future manned spacecraft and to unique populations in earthbound situations
Hadro-Chemistry and Evolution of (Anti-) Baryon Densities at RHIC
The consequences of hadro-chemical freezeout for the subsequent hadron gas
evolution in central heavy-ion collisions at RHIC and LHC energies are
discussed with special emphasis on effects due to antibaryons. Contrary to
naive expectations, their individual conservation, as implied by experimental
data, has significant impact on the chemical off-equilibrium composition of
hadronic matter at collider energies. This may reflect on a variety of
observables including source sizes and dilepton spectra.Comment: 4 pages ReVTeX incl. 3 ps-figs, submitted to PR
Cooling of Hybrid Neutron Stars and Hypothetical Self-bound Objects with Superconducting Quark Cores
We study the consequences of superconducting quark cores (with
color-flavor-locked phase as representative example) for evolution of
temperature profiles and the cooling curves in quark-hadron hybrid stars and in
hypothetical self-bounded objects having no a hadron shell (quark core neutron
stars). The quark gaps are varied from 0 to MeV. For hybrid
stars we find time scales of , and years for the
formation of a quasistationary temperature distribution in the cases , 0.1 MeV and \gsim 1 MeV, respectively. These time scales are governed by
the heat transport within quark cores for large diquark gaps (\Delta \gsim 1
MeV) and within the hadron shell for small diquark gaps (\Delta \lsim 0.1
MeV). For quark core neutron stars we find a time scale years for
the formation of a quasistationary temperature distribution in the case \Delta
\gsim 10 MeV and a very short one for \Delta \lsim 1 MeV. If hot young
compact objects will be observed they can be interpreted as manifestation of
large gap color superconductivity. Depending on the size of the pairing gaps,
the compact star takes different paths in the vs. diagram
where is the surface temperature. Compared to the corresponding hadronic
model which well fits existing data the model for the hybrid neutron star (with
a large diquark gap) shows too fast cooling. The same conclusion can be drawn
for the corresponding self-bound objects.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, uses aa-package (included), accepted for A&
The Causal Structure of Emotions in Aristotle: Hylomorphism, Causal Interaction between Mind and Body, and Intentionality
Recently, a strong hylomorphic reading of Aristotelian emotions has been put forward, one that allegedly eliminates the problem of causal interaction between soul and body. Taking the presentation of emotions in de An. I 1 as a starting point and basic thread, but relying also on the discussion of Rh. II, I will argue that this reading only takes into account two of the four causes of emotions, and that, if all four of them
are included into the picture, then a causal interaction of mind and body remains within Aristotelian emotions, independent of how strongly their hylomorphism is understood. Beyond the discussion with this recent reading, the analysis proposed of the fourfold causal structure of emotions is also intended as a hermeneutical starting point for a comprehensive analysis of particular emotions in Aristotle. Through the different causes Aristotle seems to account for many aspects of the complex phenomenon of emotion, including its physiological causes, its mental causes, and its intentional object
Superconductivity from perturbative one-gluon exchange in high density quark matter
We study color superconductivity in QCD at asymptotically large chemical
potential. In this limit, pairing is dominated by perturbative one-gluon
exchange. We derive the Eliashberg equation for the pairing gap and solve this
equation numerically. Taking into account both magnetic and electric gluon
exchanges, we find with ,
verifying a recent result by Son. For chemical potentials that are of physical
interest, GeV, the calculation ceases to be reliable quantitatively,
but our results suggest that the gap can be as large as 100 MeV.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures. I accidentally replaced the paper with an
outdated version. This version has typos corrected and will appear in PR
A Diagrammatic Approach to Crystalline Color Superconductivity
We present a derivation of the gap equation for the crystalline color
superconducting phase of QCD which begins from a one-loop Schwinger-Dyson
equation written using a Nambu-Gorkov propagator modified to describe the
spatially varying condensate. Some aspects of previous variational calculations
become more straightforward when rephrased beginning from a diagrammatic
starting point. This derivation also provides a natural base from which to
generalize the analysis to include quark masses, nontrivial crystal structures,
gluon propagation at asymptotic densities, and nonzero temperature. In this
paper, we analyze the effects of nonzero temperature on the crystalline color
superconducting phase.Comment: 15 pages. 2 eps figure
Phases of QCD at High Baryon Density
We review recent work on the phase structure of QCD at very high baryon
density. We introduce the phenomenon of color superconductivity and discuss how
the quark masses and chemical potentials determine the structure of the
superfluid quark phase. We comment on the possibility of kaon condensation at
very high baryon density and study the competition between superfluid, density
wave, and chiral crystal phases at intermediate density.Comment: 15 pages. To appear in the proceedings of the ECT Workshop on Neutron
Star Interiors, Trento, Italy, June 200
Transverse flow and hadro-chemistry in Au+Au collisions at \sqrt{s_{NN}}=200 GeV
We present a hydrodynamic assessment of preliminary particle spectra observed
in Au+Au collisions at \sqrt{s_{NN}}=200 GeV. The hadronic part of the
underlying equation of state is based on explicit conservation of (measured)
particle ratios throughout the resonance gas stage after chemical freezeout by
employing chemical potentials for stable mesons, nucleons and anti-nucleons. We
find that under these conditions the data (in particular the proton spectra)
favor a low freeze-out temperature of around 100 MeV. Furthermore we show that
through inclusion of a moderate pre-hydrodynamic transverse flow field the
shape of the spectra improves with respect to the data. The effect of the
initial transverse boost on elliptic flow and the freeze-out geometry of the
system is also elucidated.Comment: as published: more data included in Fig. 1, discussions throughout
the text improved, 6 pages, 4 figure
Enhancement of Threshold Cross Sections by In-Medium Final State Interactions
We address the problem of pion production in low energy -nucleus
collisions. For the production mechanism we assume a simple model consisting of
a coherent sum of single pion exchange and the excitation---followed by the
decay into two pions and a nucleon---of the resonance. The
production amplitude is modified by the final state interaction between the
pions calculated using the chirally improved J\"ulich meson exchange model
including the polarization of the nuclear medium by the pions. The model
reproduces well the experimentally observed cross
sections, especially the enhancement with increasing of the
mass distribution in the threshold region.Comment: 5 pages RevTeX, 3-eps figure
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