1,614 research outputs found
Hard photon production rate of a quark-gluon plasma at finite quark chemical potential
We compute the photon production rate of a quark-gluon plasma (QGP) at finite
quark chemical potential using the Braaten-Pisarski method, thus
continuing the work of Kapusta, Lichard, and Seibert who did the calculation
for .Comment: 9 pages, revtex, no figures, error in soft part corrected, figures
available at ftp://theorie.physik.uni-giessen.de/usr/users/ftp/photon
Fragmentation Functions for Lepton Pairs
We calculate the fragmentation function for a light quark to decay into a
lepton pair to leading order in the QCD coupling constant. In the formal
definition of the fragmentation function, a QED phase must be included in the
eikonal factor to guarantee QED gauge invariance. We find that the longitudinal
polarization fraction is a decreasing function of the factorization scale, in
accord with the intuitive expectation that the virtual photon should behave
more and more like a real photon as the transverse momomentum of the
fragmenting quark increases.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, normalization corrected, text abbreviate
Color-Octet Fragmentation and the psi' Surplus at the Tevatron
The production rate of prompt 's at large transverse momentum at the
Tevatron is larger than theoretical expectations by about a factor of 30. As a
solution to this puzzle, we suggest that the dominant production
mechanism is the fragmentation of a gluon into a pair in a pointlike
color-octet S-wave state, which subsequently evolves nonperturbatively into a
plus light hadrons. The contribution to the fragmentation function from
this process is enhanced by a short-distance factor of relative
to the conventional color-singlet contribution. This may compensate for the
suppression by , where is the relative momentum of the charm quark in
the . If this is indeed the dominant production mechanism at large
, then the prompt 's that are observed at the Tevatron should
almost always be associated with a jet of light hadrons.Comment: 9 pages, LaTe
Photon Propagation in Dense Media
Using thermal field theory, we derive simple analytic expressions for the
spectral density of photons in degenerate QED plasmas, without assuming the
usual non or ultra-relativistic limit. We recover the standard results in both
cases. Although very similar in ultra-relativistic plasmas, transverse and
longitudinal excitations behave very differently as the electron Fermi momentum
decreases.Comment: 12pp (3 PS figures available upon request), ENSLAPP-A-412/9
Hard Thermal Loops and the Sphaleron Rate on the Lattice
We measure the sphaleron rate (topological susceptibility) of hot SU(2) gauge
theory, using a lattice implementation of the hard thermal loop (HTL) effective
action. The HTL degrees of freedom are implemented by an expansion in spherical
harmonics and truncation. Our results for the sphaleron rate agree with the
parametric prediction of Arnold, Son and Yaffe: Gamma ~ \alpha^5 T^4.Comment: 3 page
Generalized forward scattering amplitudes in QCD at high temperature
We extend to a general class of covariant gauges an approach which relates
the thermal Green functions to forward scattering amplitudes of thermal
particles. A brief discussion of the non-transversality of the thermal gluon
polarization tensor is given in this context. This method is then applied to
the calculation of the ln(T) contributions associated with general
configurations of 2 and 3-point gluon functions. The results are Lorentz
covariant and have the same structure as the ultraviolet divergent
contributions which occur at zero temperature.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Three-boson recombination at ultralow temperatures
The effects of trimer continuum resonances are considered in the three-body
recombination rate of a Bose system at finite energies for large and negative
two-body scattering lengths (). The thermal average of the rate allows to
apply our formula to Bose gases at ultra-low temperatures. We found a good
quantitative description of the experimental three-body recombination length of
cesium atoms to deeply bound molecules up to 500 nK. Consistent with the
experimental data, the increase of the temperature moves the resonance peak of
the three-body recombination rate to lower values of exhibiting a
saturation behavior
Comment on "Cherenkov Radiation by Neutrinos in a Supernova Core"
Mohanty and Samal have shown that the magnetic-moment interaction with
nucleons contributes significantly to the photon dispersion relation in a
supernova core, and with an opposite sign relative to the usual plasma effect.
Because of a numerical error they overestimated the magnetic-moment term by two
orders of magnitude, but it is still of the same order as the plasma effect. It
appears that the Cherenkov processes gamma+nu -> nu and nu -> nu+gamma remain
forbidden, but a final verdict depends on a more detailed investigation of the
dynamical magnetic susceptibility of a hot nuclear medium.Comment: 2 pages, REVTEX. Submitted as a Comment to PR
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