14,818 research outputs found
Novel Non-equilibrium Phase Transition Caused by Non-linear Hadronic-quark Phase Structure
We consider how the occurrence of first-order phase transitions in
non-constant pressure differs from those at constant pressure. The former has
shown the non-linear phase structure of mixed matter, which implies a particle
number dependence of the binding energies of the two species. If the mixed
matter is mixed hadron-quark phase, nucleon outgoing from hadronic phase and
ingoing to quark phase probably reduces the system to a non-equilibrium state,
in other words, there exists the imbalance of the two phases when deconfinement
takes place. This novel non-equilibrium process is very analogous to the
nuclear reactions that nuclei emit neutrons and absorb them under appropriate
conditions. We present self-consistent thermodynamics in description for the
processes and identify the microphysics responsible for the processes. The
microphysics is an inevitable consequence of non-linear phase structure instead
of the effect of an additional dissipation force. When applying our findings to
the neutron star containing mixed hadron-quark matter, it is found that the
newly discovered energy release might strongly change the thermal evolution
behavior of the star.Comment: 18pages,3figures;to be accepted for publication in Physics Letters
A simple and natural interpretations of the DAMPE cosmic-ray electron/positron spectrum within two sigma deviations
The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) experiment has recently announced
the first results for the measurement of total electron plus positron fluxes
between 25 GeV and 4.6 TeV. A spectral break at about 0.9 TeV and a tentative
peak excess around 1.4 TeV have been found. However, it is very difficult to
reproduce both the peak signal and the smooth background including spectral
break simultaneously. We point out that the numbers of events in the two energy
ranges (bins) close to the 1.4 TeV excess have deficits. With the
basic physics principles such as simplicity and naturalness, we consider the
, , and deviations due to statistical
fluctuations for the 1229.3~GeV bin, 1411.4~GeV bin, and 1620.5~GeV bin.
Interestingly, we show that all the DAMPE data can be explained consistently
via both the continuous distributed pulsar and dark matter interpretations,
which have and (for all the 38
points in DAMPE electron/positron spectrum with 3 of them revised),
respectively. These results are different from the previous analyses by
neglecting the 1.4 TeV excess. At the same time, we do a similar global fitting
on the newly released CALET lepton data, which could also be interpreted by
such configurations. Moreover, we present a dark matter model with
Breit-Wigner mechanism, which can provide the proper dark matter annihilation
cross section and escape the CMB constraint. Furthermore, we suggest a few ways
to test our proposal.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables. Figures and Bibs update
- …