427 research outputs found
Energy and system-size dependence of the chiral magnetic effect
The energy dependence of the local and violation in Au+Au and Cu+Cu collisions in a large energy range is estimated within a simple phenomenological model. It is expected that at LHC the chiral magnetic effect will be about 20 times weaker than at RHIC. At lower energy range, covered by the low-energy scan at RHIC and future NICA/FAIR facilities, the created magnetic field strength and energy density of deconfined matter are rather high providing necessary conditions for the chiral magnetic effect. However, the particular model for the chiral magnetic effect predicts that this effect should vanish sharply at energy somewhere above the top SPS one. To elucidate CME background effects the Hadron-String-Dynamics (HSD) transport model including electromagnetic fields is put forward. Importance of new planning experiments at LHC and for the low-energy RHIC scan program is emphasized
Evidence for creation of strong electromagnetic fields in relativistic heavy-ion collisions
It is proposed to identify a strong electric field created during
relativistic collisions of asymmetric nuclei via observation of pseudorapidity
and transverse momentum distributions of hadrons with the same mass but
opposite charges. The detailed calculation results for the directed flow within
the Parton-Hadron String Dynamics model are given for Cu-Au interactions at the
NICA collision energies of and GeV. The separation effect
is observable at 9 GeV as clearly as at 200 GeVComment: 3 pages, 8 figure
Multifragmentation of non-spherical nuclei : Analysis of central Xe + Sn collisions at 50 MeV/nucl
The influence of shape of expanding and rotating source on various
characteristics of the multifragmentation process is studied. The analysis is
based on the extension of the statistical microcanonical multifragmentation
model. The comparison with the data is done for central Xe+Sn collisions at 50
A MeV as measured by INDRA Collaboration.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures; Talk given at the XXVII International Workshop on
Gross Properties of Nuclei and Nuclear Excitation, Hirschegg (Austria),
January 17 - 23, 199
Fragile Signs of Criticality in the Nuclear Multifragmentation
Deviations from an idealized equilibrium phase transition picture in nuclear
multifragmentation is studied in terms of the entropic index. We investigate
different heat-capacity features in the canonical quantum statistical model of
nuclear multifragmentation generalized in the framework of Tsallis nonextensive
thermostatistics. We find that the negative branch of heat capacity observed in
quasi-peripheral Au+Au collisions is caused primarily by the non-generic
nonextensivity effects.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Event-by-event background in estimates of the chiral magnetic effect
In terms of the parton-hadron-string-dynamics (PHSD) approach - including the
retarded electromagnetic field - we investigate the role of fluctuations of the
correlation function in the azimuthal angle of charged hadrons that is
expected to be a sensitive signal of local strong parity violation. For the
early time we consider fluctuations in the position of charged spectators
resulting in electromagnetic field fluctuations as well as in the position of
participant baryons defining the event plane. For partonic and hadronic phases
in intermediate stages of the interaction we study the possible formation of
excited matter in electric charge dipole and quadrupole form as generated by
fluctuations. The role of the transverse momentum and local charge conservation
laws in the observed azimuthal asymmetry is investigated, too. All these
above-mentioned effects are incorporated in our analysis based on
event-by-event PHSD calculations. Furthermore, the azimuthal angular
correlations from Au+Au collisions observed in the recent STAR measurements
within the RHIC Beam-Energy-Scan (BES) program are studied. It is shown that
the STAR correlation data at the collision energies of = 7.7
and 11.5 GeV can be reasonably reproduced within the PHSD. At higher energies
the model fails to describe the correlation data resulting in an
overestimation of the partonic scalar field involved. We conclude that an
additional transverse anisotropy fluctuating source is needed which with a
comparable strength acts on both in- and out-of-plane components.Comment: 20 pages, 19 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
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