1,476 research outputs found

    Strangeness Production in Light and Intermediate size Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions

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    Within the statistical model, the net strangeness conservation and incomplete total strangeness equilibration lead to the suppression of strange particle multiplicities. Furthermore, suppression effects appear to be stronger in small systems. By treating the production of strangeness within the canonical ensemble formulation we developed a simple model which allows to predict the excitation function of K+/π+K^+/\pi^+ ratio in nucleus-nucleus collisions. In doing so we assumed that different values of K+/π+K^+/\pi^+, measured in p+p and Pb+Pb interactions at the same collision energy per nucleon, are driven by the finite size effects only. These predictions may serve as a baseline for experimental results from NA61/SHINE at the CERN SPS and the future CBM experiment at FAIR

    Strongly Intensive Measures for Multiplicity Fluctuations

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    The recently proposed two families of strongly intensive measures of fluctuations and correlations are studied within Hadron-String-Dynamics (HSD) transport approach to nucleus-nucleus collisions. We consider the measures ΔKπ\Delta^{K\pi} and ΣKπ\Sigma^{K\pi} for kaon and pion multiplicities in Au+Au collisions in a wide range of collision energies and centralities. These strongly intensive measures appear to cancel the participant number fluctuations. This allows to enlarge the centrality window in the analysis of event-by-event fluctuations up to at least of 10% most central collisions. We also present a comparison of the HSD results with the data of NA49 and STAR collaborations. The HSD describes ΣKπ\Sigma^{K\pi} reasonably well. However, the HSD results depend monotonously on collision energy and do not reproduce the bump-deep structure of ΔKπ\Delta^{K\pi} observed from the NA49 data in the region of the center of mass energy of nucleon pair sNN=8÷12\sqrt{s_{NN}}= 8\div 12 GeV. This fact deserves further studies. The origin of this `structure' is not connected with simple geometrical or limited acceptance effects, as these effects are taken into account in the HSD simulations

    Adaptive potential of durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) varieties of Azerbaijan

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    Background. Studies into the adaptability of the genetic diversity of cultivated plants and their wild relatives to various environments are induced by global climate change. Introduction of adaptive wheat cultivars resistant to environmental stressors is the basis for stable harvests. This article presents the results of a research into the adaptive value of indigenous durum wheat varieties and improved cultivars released in different years in Azerbaijan.Materials and methods. The experiments were carried out in the foothills of Mountainous Shirvan under unsecured non-irrigation at Gobustan Experiment Station of the Research Institute of Crop Husbandry. In 2012–2014, contrasting in weather conditions, levels and structure of yield were analyzed. VIR’s guidelines were used to study 42 durum wheat varie ties, including 10 landraces. The years of study differed sharply in rainfall. Selyaninov’s hydrothermal coefficient was used to assess the conditions of growing seasons.Results. Mostly modern cultivars of the semi-intensive type were distinguished for a set of agrobiological traits. Adaptability coefficients (0.81–1.23) showed that the response of the studied varieties to unfavorable conditions was highly expressed. Indigenous landraces ‘Ag bughda’ and ‘Bozak’, old breeding varieties ‘Arandani’, ‘Ag bughda 13’, ‘Kahraba’ and ‘Mirbashir 50’, and new cultivars ‘Karagilchig 2’ and ‘Barakatli 95’ had the highest adaptability coefficients. The first of them demonstrated stable yield, and the latter two were also resistant to stressors.Conclusion. Durum wheat yields under the conditions of moderately continental climate in Mountainous Shirvan depended on the number and weight of grains per ear. The varieties identified for the best adaptability are recommended to be included in crosses to develop new plastic cultivars of durum wheat

    Production of deuterium, tritium, and 3^3He in central Pb+Pb collisions at 20A, 30A, 40A, 80A, and 158A GeV at the CERN SPS

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    Production of dd, tt, and 3^3He nuclei in central Pb+Pb interactions was studied at five collision energies (sNN=\sqrt{s_{NN}}= 6.3, 7.6, 8.8, 12.3, and 17.3 GeV) with the NA49 detector at the CERN SPS. Transverse momentum spectra, rapidity distributions, and particle ratios were measured. Yields are compared to predictions of statistical models. Phase-space distributions of light nuclei are discussed and compared to those of protons in the context of a coalescence approach. The coalescence parameters B2B_2 and B3B_3, as well as coalescence radii for dd and 3^3He were determined as a function of transverse mass at all energies.Comment: 22 pages, 29 figures, 8 tables, for submission to Phys. Rev.

    Partial Wave Analysis of the Reaction p(3.5GeV)+ppK+Λp(3.5 GeV)+p \to pK^+\Lambda to Search for the "ppKppK^-" Bound State

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    Employing the Bonn-Gatchina partial wave analysis framework (PWA), we have analyzed HADES data of the reaction p(3.5GeV)+ppK+Λp(3.5GeV)+p\to pK^{+}\Lambda. This reaction might contain information about the kaonic cluster "ppKppK^-" via its decay into pΛp\Lambda. Due to interference effects in our coherent description of the data, a hypothetical KNN\overline{K}NN (or, specifically "ppKppK^-") cluster signal must not necessarily show up as a pronounced feature (e.g. a peak) in an invariant mass spectra like pΛp\Lambda. Our PWA analysis includes a variety of resonant and non-resonant intermediate states and delivers a good description of our data (various angular distributions and two-hadron invariant mass spectra) without a contribution of a KNN\overline{K}NN cluster. At a confidence level of CLs_{s}=95\% such a cluster can not contribute more than 2-12\% to the total cross section with a pK+ΛpK^{+}\Lambda final state, which translates into a production cross-section between 0.7 μb\mu b and 4.2 μb\mu b, respectively. The range of the upper limit depends on the assumed cluster mass, width and production process.Comment: 7 Pages, 5 Figure

    Deep sub-threshold Ξ\Xi^- production in Ar+KCl reactions at 1.76A GeV

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    We report first results on a deep sub-threshold production of the doubly strange hyperon Ξ\Xi^- in a heavy-ion reaction. At a beam energy of 1.76A GeV the reaction Ar+KCl was studied with the High Acceptance Di-Electron Spectrometer (HADES) at SIS18/GSI. A high-statistics and high-purity Λ\Lambda sample was collected, allowing for the investigation of the decay channel ΞΛπ\Xi^- \to \Lambda \pi^-. The deduced Ξ/(Λ+Σ0)\Xi^-/(\Lambda+\Sigma^0) production ratio of (5.6±1.21.7+1.8)103(5.6 \pm 1.2 ^{+1.8}_{-1.7})\cdot 10^{-3} is significantly larger than available model predictions.Comment: 4 pages, including 4 figure

    Production of Sigma{\pm}pi?pK+ in p+p reactions at 3.5 GeV beam energy

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    We study the production of Sigma^+-pi^+-pK^+ particle quartets in p+p reactions at 3.5 GeV kinetic beam energy. The data were taken with the HADES experiment at GSI. This report evaluates the contribution of resonances like Lambda(1405$, Sigma(1385)^0, Lambda(1520), Delta(1232), N^* and K^*0 to the Sigma^+- pi^-+ p K+ final state. The resulting simulation model is compared to the experimental data in several angular distributions and it shows itself as suitable to evaluate the acceptance corrections properly.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure

    Inclusive pion and eta production in p+Nb collisions at 3.5 GeV beam energy

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    Data on inclusive pion and eta production measured with the dielectron spectrometer HADES in the reaction p+93Nb at a kinetic beam energy of 3.5 GeV are presented. Our results, obtained with the photon conversion method, supplement the rather sparse information on neutral meson production in proton-nucleus reactions existing for this bombarding energy regime. The reconstructed e+e-e+e- transverse-momentum and rapidity distributions are confronted with transport model calculations, which account fairly well for both pi0 and eta production.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Physical Review
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