4,727 research outputs found
Stability and instability of a hot and dilute nuclear droplet
The diabatic approach to collective nuclear motion is reformulated in the
local-density approximation in order to treat the normal modes of a spherical
nuclear droplet analytically. In a first application the adiabatic isoscalar
modes are studied and results for the eigenvalues of compressional (bulk) and
pure surface modes are presented as function of density and temperature inside
the droplet, as well as for different mass numbers and for soft and stiff
equations of state. We find that the region of bulk instabilities (spinodal
regime) is substantially smaller for nuclear droplets than for infinite nuclear
matter. For small densities below 30% of normal nuclear matter density and for
temperatures below 5 MeV all relevant bulk modes become unstable with the same
growth rates. The surface modes have a larger spinodal region, reaching out to
densities and temperatures way beyond the spinodal line for bulk instabilities.
Essential experimental features of multifragmentation, like fragmentation
temperatures and fragment-mass distributions (in particular the power-law
behavior) are consistent with the instability properties of an expanding
nuclear droplet, and hence with a dynamical fragmentation process within the
spinodal regime of bulk and surface modes (spinodal decomposition).Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, LaTeX2e, EPJA style (included
Instabilities of a hot expanded nuclear droplet
The stability of hot expanded nuclear droplets against small bulk and surface
oscillations is examined and possible consequences for multifragmentation are
discussed.Comment: LaTeX (uses epsfig.sty), 6 pages with 6 eps figures inside text. Talk
given at XXVII International Workshop on Gross Properties of Nuclei and
Nuclear Excitations, "MULTIFRAGMENTATION", Hirschegg, January 17--23, 199
Instabilities in Nuclei
The evolution of dynamical perturbations is examined in nuclear
multifragmentation in the frame of Vlasov equation. Both plane wave and bubble
type of perturbations are investigated in the presence of surface (Yukawa)
forces. An energy condition is given for the allowed type of instabilities and
the time scale of the exponential growth of the instabilities is calculated.
The results are compared to the mechanical spinodal region predictions. PACS:
25.70 MnComment: 22 pages, latex, with 5 PS figures, available at
http://www.gsi.de/~papp
Jets and produced particles in pp collisions from SPS to RHIC energies for nuclear applications
Higher-order pQCD corrections play an important role in the reproduction of
data at high transverse momenta in the energy range 20 GeV GeV. Recent calculations of photon and pion production in collisions
yield detailed information on the next-to-leading order contributions. However,
the application of these results in proton-nucleus and nucleus-nucleus
collisions is not straightforward. The study of nuclear effects requires a
simplified understanding of the output of these computations. Here we summarize
our analysis of recent calculations, aimed at handling the NLO results by
introducing process and energy-dependent factors.Comment: 4 pages with 5 eps figures include
K+/pi+ probes of jet quenching in AA collisions
Non-abelian energy loss in quark gluon plasma is shown to lead to novel
hadron ratio suppression patterns in ultrarelativistic nuclear collisions. We
apply recent (GLV) estimates for the gluon radiative energy loss, which
increases linearly with the jet energy up to E<20 GeV and depends quadratically
on the nuclear radius, R. The K+/\pi+ ratio is found to be most sensitive to
the initial density of the plasma.Comment: Presented at 6th International Conference on Strange Quarks in
Matter: 2001: A Flavourspace Odyssey (SQM2001), Frankfurt, Germany, 25-29 Sep
200
Kaon and Pion Ratio Probes of Jet Quenching in Nuclear Collisions
Non-abelian energy loss in quark gluon plasmas is shown to lead to novel
hadron ratio suppression patterns in ultrarelativistic nuclear collisions. We
apply GLV estimates for the gluon radiative energy loss. The K^-/K^+ and
K^+/\pi^+ ratios are found to be most sensitive to the initial density of the
plasma.Comment: 10 pages in Latex, 6 EPS figure
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