116 research outputs found

    QCD and Hadron Dynamics

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    Perturbative QCD predicts and describes various features of multihadron production. An amazing similarity between observable hadron systems and calculable underlying parton ensembles justifies the attempts to use the language of quarks and gluons down to small momentum scales, to approach the profound problems that are commonly viewed as being entirely non-perturbative.Comment: Talk at the Royal Society meeting "Structure of Matter", London, May 200

    Measuring the saturation scale in nuclei

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    The saturation momentum seeing in the nuclear infinite momentum frame is directly related to transverse momentum broadening of partons propagating through the medium in the nuclear rest frame. Calculation of broadening within the color dipole approach including the effects of saturation in the nucleus, gives rise to an equation which describes well data on broadening in Drell-Yan reaction and heavy quarkonium production.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, based on the talk presented by B.K. at the INT workshop "Physics at a High Energy Electron Ion Collider", Seattle, October 200

    Magnetic field driven instability of charged center in graphene

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    It is shown that a magnetic field dramatically affects the problem of supercritical charge in graphene making any charge in gapless theory supercritical. The cases of radially symmetric potential well and Coulomb center in an homogeneous magnetic field are considered. The local density of states and polarization charge density are calculated in the first order of perturbation theory. It is argued that the magnetically induced instability of the supercritical Coulomb center can be considered as a quantum mechanical counterpart of the magnetic catalysis phenomenon in graphene.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures; to be published in PR

    Collective modes, stability and superfluid transition of a quasi-two-dimensional dipolar Fermi gas

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    We examine collective modes, stability, and BCS pairing in a quasi-two-dimensional gas of dipolar fermions aligned by an external field. By using the (conserving) Hartree-Fock approximation, which treats direct and exchange interactions on an equal footing, we obtain the spectrum of single-particle excitations and long wavelength collective modes (zero sound) in the normal phase. It appears that exchange interactions result in strong damping of zero sound when the tilting angle between the dipoles and the normal to the plane of confinement is below some critical value. In particular, zero sound cannot propagate if the dipoles are perpendicular to the plane of confinement. At intermediate coupling we find unstable modes that can lead either to collapse of the system or the formation of a density wave. The BCS transition to a superfluid phase, on the other hand, occurs at arbitrarily weak strengths of the dipole-dipole interaction, provided the tilting angle exceeds a critical value. We determine the critical temperature of the transition taking into account many-body effects as well as virtual transitions to higher excited states in the confining potential, and discuss prospects of experimental observations

    Elastic scattering theory and transport in graphene

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    Electron properties of graphene are described in terms of Dirac fermions. Here we thoroughly outline the elastic scattering theory for the two-dimensional massive Dirac fermions in the presence of an axially symmetric potential. While the massless limit is relevant for pristine graphene, keeping finite mass allows for generalizations onto situations with broken symmetry between the two sublattices, and provides a link to the scattering theory of electrons in a parabolic band. We demonstrate that the Dirac theory requires short-distance regularization for potentials which are more singular than 1/r. The formalism is then applied to scattering off a smooth short-ranged potential. Next we consider the Coulomb potential scattering, where the Dirac theory is consistent for a point scatterer only for the effective impurity strength below 1/2. From the scattering phase shifts we obtain the exact Coulomb transport cross-section in terms of the impurity strength. The results are relevant for transport in graphene in the presence of impurities that do not induce scattering between the Dirac points in the Brillouin zone.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures. Published versio

    Production Mechanism for Quark Gluon Plasma in Heavy Ion Collisions

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    A general scheme is proposed here to describe the production of semi soft and soft quarks and gluons that form the bulk of the plasma in ultra relativistic heavy ion collisions. We show how to obtain rates as a function of time in a self consistent manner, without any ad-hoc assumption. All the required features - the dynamical nature of QCD vacuum, the non-Markovian nature of the production, and quasi particle nature of the partons, and the importance of quantum interference effects are naturally incorporated. We illustrate the results with a realistic albeit toy model and show how almost all the currently employed source terms are unreliable in their predictions. We show the rates in the momentum space and indicate at the end how to extract the full phase-space dependence.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, two colum

    Near-thermal equilibrium with Tsallis distributions in heavy ion collisions

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    Hadron yields in high energy heavy ion collisions have been fitted and reproduced by thermal models using standard statistical distributions. These models give insight into the freeze-out conditions at varying beam energies. In this paper we investigate changes to this analysis when the statistical distributions are replaced by Tsallis distributions for hadrons. We investigate the appearance of near-thermal equilibrium state at SPS and RHIC energies. We obtain better fits with smaller chi^2 for the same hadron data, as applied earlier in the thermal fits for SPS energies but not for RHIC energies. This result indicates that at RHIC energies the final state is very well described by a single freeze-out temperature with very little room for fluctuations.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    The explanation of unexpected temperature dependence of the muon catalysis in solid deuterium

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    It is shown that due to the smallness of the inelastic cross-section of the dμd\mu-atoms scattering in the crystal lattice at sufficiently low temperatures the ddμdd\mu-mesomolecules formation from the upper state of the hyperfine structure dμ(F=3/2)d\mu (F=3/2) starts earlier than the mesoatoms thermolization. It explains an approximate constancy of the ddμdd\mu-mesomolecule formation rate in solid deuterium.Comment: 6 pages, 2 jpeg-figure

    Dirac Hamiltonian with superstrong Coulomb field

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    We consider the quantum-mechanical problem of a relativistic Dirac particle moving in the Coulomb field of a point charge ZeZe. In the literature, it is often declared that a quantum-mechanical description of such a system does not exist for charge values exceeding the so-called critical charge with Z=α1=137% Z=\alpha ^{-1}=137 based on the fact that the standard expression for the lower bound state energy yields complex values at overcritical charges. We show that from the mathematical standpoint, there is no problem in defining a self-adjoint Hamiltonian for any value of charge. What is more, the transition through the critical charge does not lead to any qualitative changes in the mathematical description of the system. A specific feature of overcritical charges is a non uniqueness of the self-adjoint Hamiltonian, but this non uniqueness is also characteristic for charge values less than the critical one (and larger than the subcritical charge with Z=(31=118Z=(\sqrt{3}% /2)\alpha ^{-1}=118). We present the spectra and (generalized) eigenfunctions for all self-adjoint Hamiltonians. The methods used are the methods of the theory of self-adjoint extensions of symmetric operators and the Krein method of guiding functionals. The relation of the constructed one-particle quantum mechanics to the real physics of electrons in superstrong Coulomb fields where multiparticle effects may be of crucial importance is an open question.Comment: 44 pages, LaTex file, to be published in Teor.Mat.Fiz. (Theor.Math.Phys.

    Transparent Nuclei and Deuteron-Gold Collisions at RHIC

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    The current normalization of the cross section of inclusive high-pT particle production in deuteron-gold collisions measured RHIC relies on Glauber calculations for the inelastic d-Au cross section. These calculations should be corrected for diffraction. Moreover, they miss the Gribov's inelastic shadowing which makes nuclei more transparent (color transparency). The magnitude of this effect rises with energy and it may dramatically affect the normalization of the RHIC data. We evaluate these corrections employing the light-cone dipole formalism and found a rather modest corrections for the current normalization of the d-Au data. The results of experiments insensitive to diffraction (PHENIX, PHOBOS) should be renormalized by about 20% down, while those which include diffraction (STAR), by only 10%. Such a correction completely eliminates the Cronin enhancement in the PHENIX data for pions. The largest theoretical uncertainty comes from the part of the inelastic shadowing which is related to diffractive gluon radiation, or gluon shadowing. Our estimate is adjusted to data for the triple-Pomeron coupling, however, other models do not have such a restrictions and predict much stronger gluon shadowing. Therefore, the current data for high-pT hadron production in d-Au collisions at RHIC cannot exclude in a model independent way the possibility if initial state suppression proposed by Kharzeev-Levin-McLerran. Probably the only way to settle this uncertainty is a direct measurement of the inelastic d-Au cross sections at RHIC. Also d-Au collisions with a tagged spectator nucleon may serve as a sensitive probe for nuclear transparency and inelastic shadowing. We found an illuminating quantum-mechanical effect: the nucleus acts like a lens focusing spectators into a very narrow cone.Comment: Latex 50 pages. Based on lectures given by the author at Workshop on High-pT Correlations at RHIC, Columbia University, May-June, 2003. The version to appear in PR
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