3,176 research outputs found
The Interacting Gluon Model: a review
The Interacting Gluon Model (IGM) is a tool designed to study energy flow,
especially stopping and leading particle spectra, in high energy hadronic
collisions. In this model, valence quarks fly through and the gluon clouds of
the hadrons interact strongly both in the soft and in the semihard regime.
Developing this picture we arrive at a simple description of energy loss, given
in terms of few parameters, which accounts for a wide variety of experimental
data. This text is a survey of our main results and predictions.Comment: 22 pages, 21 figure
Violation of the Feynman scaling law as a manifestation of nonextensivity
We demonstrate that the apparently ad hoc parametrization of the particle
production spectra discussed in the literature and used in description of
cosmic ray data can be derived from the information theory approach to
multiparticle production processes. In particular, the violation of the Feynman
scaling law can be interpreted as a manifestation of nonextensivity of the
production processes.Comment: gz-compressed .tar file containing LaTeX file and 3 PS files with
figures (and 2 PS files with figure captions), 5 pages altogether (Nuovo
Cimento cimento.cls style file attached) Presented at Chacaltaya Meeting On
Cosmic Ray Physics, La Paz - Bolivia, 23-27 July 2000. To be published in
Nuovo Cimento (Proc. Suppl.
Two-dimensional effective action for matter fields coupled to the dilaton
We revise the calculation of the one-loop effective action for scalar and
spinor fields coupled to the dilaton in two dimensions. Applying the method of
covariant perturbation theory for the heat kernel we derive the effective
action in an explicitly covariant form that produces both the conformally
invariant and the conformally anomalous terms.For scalar fields the conformally
invariant part of the action is nonlocal. The obtained effective action is
proved to be infrared finite. We also compute the one-loop effective action for
scalar fields at finite temperature.Comment: LaTeX, 25 page
Estimating the inelasticity with the information theory approach
Using the information theory approach, in both its extensive and nonextensive
versions, we estimate the inelasticity parameter of hadronic reactions
together with its distribution and energy dependence from and
data. We find that the inelasticity remains essentially constant in energy
except for a variation around , as was originally expected.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Misprints correcte
Some forgotten features of the Bose Einstein Correlations
Notwithstanding the visible maturity of the subject of Bose-Einstein
Correlations (BEC), as witnessed nowadays, we would like to bring to ones
attention two points, which apparently did not received attention they deserve:
the problem of the choice of the form of correlation function when
effects of partial coherence of the hadronizing source are to be included and
the feasibility to model effects of Bose-Einstein statistics, in particular the
BEC, by direct numerical simulations.Comment: Talk delivered by G.Wilk at the International Workshop {\it
Relativistic Nuclear Physics: from Nuclotron to LHC energies}, Kiev, June
18-22, 2007, Ukraine; misprints correcte
Can cosmic strangelets reach the earth?
The mechanism for the propagation of strangelets with low baryon number
through the atmosphere of the Earth has been explored. It has been shown that
under suitable initial conditions, such strangelets may indeed reach depths
near mountain altitudes with mass numbers and charges close to the observed
values in cosmic ray experiments.Comment: RevTeX text, with 3 encoded eps figures. To appear in Physical Review
Letter
Nonextensive thermal sources of cosmic rays?
The energy spectrum of cosmic rays (CR) exhibits power-like behavior with a
very characteristic "knee" structure. We consider a possibility that such a
spectrum could be generated by some specific nonstatistical temperature
fluctuations in the source of CR with the "knee" structure reflecting an abrupt
change of the pattern of such fluctuations. This would result in a generalized
nonextensive statistical model for the production of CR. The possible physical
mechanisms leading to these effects are discussed together with the resulting
chemical composition of the CR, which follows the experimentally observed
abundance of nuclei.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, rewritten and updated version, to be published
in Centr. Eur. J. Phy
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