3,309 research outputs found
High Energy Nuclear Collisions: Theory Overview
We review some basic concepts of Relativistic Heavy Ion Physics and discuss
our understanding of some key results from the experimental program at the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). We focus in particular on the early
time dynamics of nuclear collisions, some result from lattice QCD, hard probes
and photons.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures; delivered at ISNP 2009, published in Praman
Hadron production in heavy ion collisions: Fragmentation and recombination from a dense parton phase
We discuss hadron production in heavy ion collisions at RHIC. We argue that
hadrons at transverse momenta P_T < 5 GeV are formed by recombination of
partons from the dense parton phase created in central collisions at RHIC. We
provide a theoretical description of the recombination process for P_T > 2 GeV.
Below P_T = 2 GeV our results smoothly match a purely statistical description.
At high transverse momentum hadron production is well described in the language
of perturbative QCD by the fragmentation of partons. We give numerical results
for a variety of hadron spectra, ratios and nuclear suppression factors. We
also discuss the anisotropic flow v_2 and give results based on a flow in the
parton phase. Our results are consistent with the existence of a parton phase
at RHIC hadronizing at a temperature of 175 MeV and a radial flow velocity of
0.55c.Comment: 25 pages LaTeX, 18 figures; v2: some references updated; v3: some
typos fixe
Information sharing and credit : firm-level evidence from transition countries
We investigate whether information sharing among banks has affected credit market performance in the transition countries of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, using a large sample of firm-level data. Our estimates show that information sharing is associated with improved availability and lower cost of credit to firms. This correlation is stronger for opaque firms than transparent ones and stronger in countries with weak legal environments than in those with strong legal environments. In cross-sectional estimates, we control for variation in country-level aggregate variables that may affect credit, by examining the differential impact of information sharing across firm types. In panel estimates, we also control for the presence of unobserved heterogeneity at the firm level, as well as for changes in macroeconomic variables and the legal environment
Microstructural enrichment functions based on stochastic Wang tilings
This paper presents an approach to constructing microstructural enrichment
functions to local fields in non-periodic heterogeneous materials with
applications in Partition of Unity and Hybrid Finite Element schemes. It is
based on a concept of aperiodic tilings by the Wang tiles, designed to produce
microstructures morphologically similar to original media and enrichment
functions that satisfy the underlying governing equations. An appealing feature
of this approach is that the enrichment functions are defined only on a small
set of square tiles and extended to larger domains by an inexpensive stochastic
tiling algorithm in a non-periodic manner. Feasibility of the proposed
methodology is demonstrated on constructions of stress enrichment functions for
two-dimensional mono-disperse particulate media.Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures; v2: completely re-written after the first
revie
Recombination Models
We review the current status of recombination and coalescence models that
have been successfully applied to describe hadronization in heavy ion
collisions at RHIC energies. Basic concepts as well as actual implementations
of the idea are discussed. We try to evaluate where we stand in our
understanding at the moment and what remains to be done in the future.Comment: Plenary Talk at Quark Matter 2004, submitted to J. Phys. G, 8 pages,
3 figure
Favorable cardiovascular health at young and middle ages and dementia in older age—The CHA study
The QCD confinement transition: hadron formation
We review the foundations and the applications of the statistical and the
quark recombination model as hadronization models.Comment: 45 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Landolt-Boernstein
Volume 1-23
Some Features of the Glasma
We discuss high energy hadronic collisions within the theory of the Color
Glass Condensate. We point out that the initial electric and magnetic fields
produced in such collisions are longitudinal. This leads to a novel string like
description of the collisions, and a large Chern-Simons charge density made
immediately after the collision. The presence of the longitudinal magnetic
field suggests that essential to the description of these collisions is the
decay of Chern-Simons charge.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures. V2: references added and correcte
Usefulness of standard plasma coagulation tests in the management of perioperative coagulopathic bleeding: is there any evidence?
Standard laboratory coagulation tests (SLTs) such as prothrombin time/international normalized ratio or partial thromboplastin time are frequently used to assess coagulopathy and to guide haemostatic interventions. However, this has been challenged by numerous reports, including the current European guidelines for perioperative bleeding management, which question the utility and reliability of SLTs in this setting. Furthermore, the arbitrary definition of coagulopathy (i.e. SLTs are prolonged by more than 1.5-fold) has been questioned. The present study aims to review the evidence for the usefulness of SLTs to assess coagulopathy and to guide bleeding management in the perioperative and massive bleeding setting. Medline was searched for investigations using results of SLTs as a means to determine coagulopathy or to guide bleeding management, and the outcomes (i.e. blood loss, transfusion requirements, mortality) were reported. A total of 11 guidelines for management of massive bleeding or perioperative bleeding and 64 studies investigating the usefulness of SLTs in this setting were identified and were included for final data synthesis. Referenced evidence for the usefulness of SLTs was found in only three prospective trials, investigating a total of 108 patients (whereby microvascular bleeding was a rare finding). Furthermore, no data from randomized controlled trials support the use of SLTs. In contrast, numerous investigations have challenged the reliability of SLTs to assess coagulopathy or guide bleeding management. There is actually no sound evidence from well-designed studies that confirm the usefulness of SLTs for diagnosis of coagulopathy or to guide haemostatic therap
Bulk matter physics and its future at the Large Hadron Collider
Measurements at low transverse momentum will be performed at the LHC for
studying particle production mechanisms in and heavy-ion collisions. Some
of the experimental capabilities for bulk matter physics are presented,
focusing on tracking elements and particle identification. In order to
anticipate the study of baryon production for both colliding systems at
multi-TeV energies, measurements for identified species and recent model
extrapolations are discussed. Several mechanisms are expected to compete for
hadro-production in the low momentum region. For this reason, experimental
observables that could be used for investigating multi-parton interactions and
help understanding the "underlying event" content in the first collisions
at the LHC are also mentioned.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures. To appear in the proceedings of Hot Quarks 2008,
Estes Park, Colorado, 18-23 August 200
- …