678 research outputs found

    Causality Constraints on Hadron Production In High Energy Collisions

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    For hadron production in high energy collisions, causality requirements lead to the counterpart of the cosmological horizon problem: the production occurs in a number of causally disconnected regions of finite space-time size. As a result, globally conserved quantum numbers (charge, strangeness, baryon number) must be conserved locally in spatially restricted correlation clusters. This provides a theoretical basis for the observed suppression of strangeness production in elementary interactions (pp, e^+e^-). In contrast, the space-time superposition of many collisions in heavy ion interactions largely removes these causality constraints, resulting in an ideal hadronic resonance gas in full equilibrium.Comment: 16 pages,8 figure

    Hawking-Unruh Hadronization and Strangeness Production in High Energy Collisions

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    The thermal multihadron production observed in different high energy collisions poses many basic problems: why do even elementary, e+ee^+e^- and hadron-hadron, collisions show thermal behaviour? Why is there in such interactions a suppression of strange particle production? Why does the strangeness suppression almost disappear in relativistic heavy ion collisions? Why in these collisions is the thermalization time less than 0.5\simeq 0.5 fm/c? We show that the recently proposed mechanism of thermal hadron production through Hawking-Unruh radiation can naturally answer the previous questions. Indeed, the interpretation of quark- antiquark pairs production, by the sequential string breaking, as tunneling through the event horizon of colour confinement leads to thermal behavior with a universal temperature, T170T \simeq 170 Mev,related to the quark acceleration, a, by T=a/2πT=a/2\pi. The resulting temperature depends on the quark mass and then on the content of the produced hadrons, causing a deviation from full equilibrium and hence a suppression of strange particle production in elementary collisions. In nucleus-nucleus collisions, where the quark density is much bigger, one has to introduce an average temperature (acceleration) which dilutes the quark mass effect and the strangeness suppression almost disappears.Comment: Contribution to special issue of Adv. High Energy Phys. entitled "Experimental Tests of Quantum Gravity and Exotic Quantum Field Theory Effects

    Nuclear Structure Functions at Low-xx in a Holographic Approach

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    Nuclear effects in deep inelastic scattering at lowx-x are phenomenologically described changing the typical dynamical and/or kinematical scales characterizing the free nucleon case. In a holographic approach, this rescaling is an analytical property of the computed structure function F2(x,Q2)F_2(x,Q^2). This function is given by the sum of a conformal term and of a contribution due to quark confinement, depending on IR hard-wall parameter z0z_0 and on the mean square distances, related to a parameter QQ^\prime, among quarks and gluons in the target. The holographic structure function per nucleon in a nucleus AA is evaluated showing that a rescaling of the typical nucleon size, z0z_0 and QQ^\prime, due to nuclear binding, can be reabsorbed in a Q2Q^2-rescaling scheme. The difference between neutron and proton structure functions and the effects of the longitudinal structure functions can also be taken into account. The obtained theoretical results favourably compare with the experimental data.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure

    A Classification Scheme for Phenomenological Universalities in Growth Problems

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    A classification in universality classes of broad categories of phenomenologies, belonging to different disciplines, may be very useful for a crossfertilization among them and for the purpose of pattern recognition. We present here a simple scheme for the classification of nonlinear growth problems. The success of the scheme in predicting and characterizing the well known Gompertz, West and logistic models suggests to us the study of a hitherto unexplored class of nonlinear growth problems.Comment: 4 pages,1 figur

    Effective degrees of freedom and gluon condensation in the high temperature deconfined phase

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    The Equation of State and the properties of matter in the high temperature deconfined phase are analyzed by a quasiparticle approach for T>1.2 TcT> 1.2~T_c. In order to fix the parameters of our model we employ the lattice QCD data of energy density and pressure. First we consider the pure SU(3) gluon plasma and it turns out that such a system can be described in terms of a gluon condensate and of gluonic quasiparticles whose effective number of degrees of freedom and mass decrease with increasing temperature. Then we analyze QCD with finite quark masses. In this case the numerical lattice data for energy density and pressure can be fitted assuming that the system consists of a mixture of gluon quasiparticles, fermion quasiparticles, boson correlated pairs (corresponding to in-medium mesonic states) and gluon condensate. We find that the effective number of boson degrees of freedom and the in-medium fermion masses decrease with increasing temperature. At T1.5 TcT \simeq 1.5 ~T_c only the correlated pairs corresponding to the mesonic nonet survive and they completely disappear at T2 TcT \simeq 2 ~T_c. The temperature dependence of the velocity of sound of the various quasiparticles, the effects of the breaking of conformal invariance and the thermodynamic consistency are discussed in detail.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure

    Thermodynamic Geometry of Nambu -- Jona Lasinio model

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    The formalism of Riemannian geometry is applied to study the phase transitions in Nambu -Jona Lasinio (NJL) model. Thermodynamic geometry reliably describes the phase diagram, both in the chiral limit and for finite quark masses. The comparison between the geometrical study of NJL model and of (2+1) Quantum Chromodynamics at high temperature and small baryon density shows a clear connection between chiral symmetry restoration/breaking and deconfinement/confinement regimes
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