32,953 research outputs found
Gluon saturation and Feynman scaling in leading neutron production
In this paper we extend the color dipole formalism to the study of leading
neutron production in collisions at high energies
and estimate the related observables, which were measured at HERA and may be
analysed in future electron-proton () colliders. In particular, we
calculate the Feynman distribution of leading neutrons, which is
expressed in terms of the pion flux and the photon-pion total cross section. In
the color dipole formalism, the photon-pion cross section is described in terms
of the dipole-pion scattering amplitude, which contains information about the
QCD dynamics at high energies and gluon saturation effects. We consider
different models for the scattering amplitude, which have been used to describe
the inclusive and diffractive HERA data. Moreover, the model dependence of
our predictions with the description of the pion flux is analysed in detail. We
show that the recently released H1 leading neutron spectra can be reproduced
using the color dipole formalism and that these spectra could help us to
observe more clearly gluon saturation effects in future colliders.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Tetraquark Production in Double Parton Scattering
We develop a model to study tetraquark production in hadronic collisions. We
focus on double parton scattering and formulate a version of the color
evaporation model for the production of the and of the
tetraquark, a state composed by the quarks. We find that
the production cross section grows rapidly with the collision energy
and make predictions for the forthcoming higher energy data of the LHC.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. Corrections in the text and reference
Double vector meson production in the International Linear Collider
In this paper we study double vector meson production in
interactions at high energies and, using the color dipole picture, estimate the
main observables which can be probed at the International Linear Collider
(ILC). The total
cross-sections for , , and are computed
and the energy and virtuality dependencies are studied in detail. Our results
demonstrate that the experimental analysis of this process is feasible at the
ILC and it can be useful to constrain the QCD dynamics at high energies.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Non-linear Poisson-Boltzmann Theory for Swollen Clays
The non-linear Poisson-Boltzmann equation for a circular, uniformly charged
platelet, confined together with co- and counter-ions to a cylindrical cell, is
solved semi-analytically by transforming it into an integral equation and
solving the latter iteratively. This method proves efficient, robust, and can
be readily generalized to other problems based on cell models, treated within
non-linear Poisson-like theory. The solution to the PB equation is computed
over a wide range of physical conditions, and the resulting osmotic equation of
state is shown to be in fair agreement with recent experimental data for
Laponite clay suspensions, in the concentrated gel phase.Comment: 13 pages, 4 postscript figure
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