18,049 research outputs found
Third order differential subordination and superordination results for analytic functions involving the Srivastava-Attiya operator
In this article, by making use of the linear operator introduced and studied
by Srivastava and Attiya \cite{srivastava1}, suitable classes of admissible
functions are investigated and the dual properties of the third-order
differential subordinations are presented. As a consequence, various
sandwich-type theorems are established for a class of univalent analytic
functions involving the celebrated Srivastava-Attiya transform. Relevant
connections of the new results are pointed out.Comment: 16. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1809.0651
A Hybrid Model for QCD Deconfining Phase Boundary
Intensive search for a proper and realistic equations of state (EOS) is still
continued for studying the phase diagram existing between quark gluon plasma
(QGP) and hadron gas (HG) phases. Lattice calculations provide such EOS for the
strongly interacting matter at finite temperature () and vanishing baryon
chemical potential (). These calculations are of limited use at finite
due to the appearance of notorious sign problem. In the recent past,
we had constructed a hybrid model description for the QGP as well as HG phases
where we make use of a new excluded-volume model for HG and a
thermodynamically-consistent quasiparticle model for the QGP phase and used
them further to get QCD phase boundary and a critical point. Since then many
lattice calculations have appeared showing various thermal and transport
properties of QCD matter at finite and . We test our hybrid
model by reproducing the entire data for strongly interacting matter and
predict our results at finite so that they can be tested in future.
Finally we demonstrate the utility of the model in fixing the precise location,
the order of the phase transition and the nature of CP existing on the QCD
phase diagram. We thus emphasize the suitability of the hybrid model as
formulated here in providing a realistic EOS for the strongly interacting
matter.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures. corrected version published in Physical Review
D. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1201.044
Analyzing flow anisotropies with excursion sets in relativistic heavy-ion collisions
We show that flow anisotropies in relativistic heavy-ion collisions can be
analyzed using a certain technique of shape analysis of excursion sets recently
proposed by us for CMBR fluctuations to investigate anisotropic expansion
history of the universe. The technique analyzes shapes (sizes) of patches above
(below) certain threshold value for transverse energy/particle number (the
excursion sets) as a function of the azimuthal angle and rapidity. Modeling
flow by imparting extra anisotropic momentum to the momentum distribution of
particles from HIJING, we compare the resulting distributions for excursion
sets at two different azimuthal angles. Angles with maximum difference in the
two distributions identify the event plane, and the magnitude of difference in
the two distributions relates to the magnitude of momentum anisotropy, i.e.
elliptic flow.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Curvature Inspired Cosmological Scenario
Using modified gravity with non-linear terms of curvature, and (with being the positive real number and being the scalar
curvature), cosmological scenario,beginning at the Planck scale, is obtained.
Here, a unified picture of cosmology is obtained from gravity. In this
scenario, universe begins with power-law inflation, followed by deceleration
and acceleration in the late universe as well as possible collapse of the
universe in future. It is different from dark energy models with
non-linear curvature terms assumed as dark energy. Here, dark energy terms are
induced by linear as well as non-linear terms of curvature in Friedmann
equation being derived from modified gravity.It is also interesting to see
that, in this model, dark radiation and dark matter terms emerge spontaneously
from the gravitational sector. It is found that dark energy, obtained here,
behaves as quintessence in the early universe and phantom in the late universe.
Moreover, analogous to brane-tension in brane-gravity inspired Friedmann
equation, a tension term arises here being called as cosmic tension.
It is found that, in the late universe, Friedmann equation (obtained here)
contains a term ( being the phantom energy density)
analogous to a similar term in Friedmann equation with loop quantum effects, if
and brane-gravity correction when Comment: 19 Pages. To appear in Int. J. Thro. Phy
Numerical Study of the Lowest Energy Configurations for Global String-Antistring Pairs
We investigate the lowest energy configurations for string - antistring pairs
at fixed separations by numerically minimizing the energy. We show that for
separations smaller than a critical value, a region of false vacuum develops in
the middle due to large gradient energy density. Consequently, well defined
string - antistring pairs do not exist for such separations. We present an
example of vortex - antivortex production by vacuum bubbles where this effect
seems to play a dynamical role in the annihilation of the pair. We also study
the dependence of the energy of an string-antistring pair on their separation
and find deviations from a simple logarithmic dependence for small separations.Comment: 14 pages, in LATEX, 7 figures (not included
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