8,406 research outputs found

    Quark mass density- and temperature- dependent model for bulk strange quark matter

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    It is shown that the quark mass density-dependent model can not be used to explain the process of the quark deconfinement phase transition because the quark confinement is permanent in this model. A quark mass density- and temperature-dependent model in which the quark confinement is impermanent has been suggested. We argue that the vacuum energy density B is a function of temperature. The dynamical and thermodynamical properties of bulk strange quark matter for quark mass density- and temperature-dependent model are discussed.Comment: 6 Pages, 5 Figures. To be published on Phys. Rev.

    Noncontextuality with Marginal Selectivity in Reconstructing Mental Architectures

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    We present a general theory of series-parallel mental architectures with selectively influenced stochastically non-independent components. A mental architecture is a hypothetical network of processes aimed at performing a task, of which we only observe the overall time it takes under variable parameters of the task. It is usually assumed that the network contains several processes selectively influenced by different experimental factors, and then the question is asked as to how these processes are arranged within the network, e.g., whether they are concurrent or sequential. One way of doing this is to consider the distribution functions for the overall processing time and compute certain linear combinations thereof (interaction contrasts). The theory of selective influences in psychology can be viewed as a special application of the interdisciplinary theory of (non)contextuality having its origins and main applications in quantum theory. In particular, lack of contextuality is equivalent to the existence of a "hidden" random entity of which all the random variables in play are functions. Consequently, for any given value of this common random entity, the processing times and their compositions (minima, maxima, or sums) become deterministic quantities. These quantities, in turn, can be treated as random variables with (shifted) Heaviside distribution functions, for which one can easily compute various linear combinations across different treatments, including interaction contrasts. This mathematical fact leads to a simple method, more general than the previously used ones, to investigate and characterize the interaction contrast for different types of series-parallel architectures.Comment: published in Frontiers in Psychology: Cognition 1:12 doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00735 (special issue "Quantum Structures in Cognitive and Social Science"

    Pion transverse-momentum spectrum and elliptic anisotropy of partially coherent source

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    In this letter, we study the pion momentum distribution of a coherent source and investigate the influences of coherent emission on the pion transverse-momentum (pTp_T) spectrum and elliptic anisotropy. With a partially coherent source, constructed by a conventional viscous hydrodynamics model (chaotic part) and a parameterized expanding coherent source model, we reproduce the pion pTp_T spectrum and elliptic anisotropy coefficient v2(pT)v_2(p_T) in the peripheral Pb-Pb collisions at sNN=2.76\sqrt{s_{NN}}=2.76 TeV. It is found that the influences of coherent emission on the pion pTp_T spectrum and v2(pT)v_2(p_T) are related to the initial size and shape of the coherent source, largely due to the interference effect. However, the effect of source dynamical evolution on coherent emission is relatively small. The results of the partially coherent source with 33% coherent emission and 67% chaotic emission are consistent with the experimental measurements of the pion pTp_T spectrum, v2(pT)v_2(p_T), and especially four-pion Bose-Einstein correlations.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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