538 research outputs found
Is the Polarized Antiquark Sea in the Nucleon Flavor Symmetric?
We show that the model which naturally explains the
asymmetry in the nucleon and is in quantitative agreement with the Gottfried
sum rule data, also predicts that in the proton and . At the input scale, these results can be derived even analytically. Thus
the violation of the flavor symmetry is more serious in the polarized case than
in the unpolarized case. In contrast, many recent analyses of the polarized
data have made a simplifying assumption that all the three 's
have the same sign and magnitude. We point out the need to redo these analyses,
allowing for the alternate scenario as described above. We present predictions
of the model for the asymmetry in polarized scattering, which can be
tested at RHIC; these are quite different from those available in the
literature.Comment: Talk given at the International Conference on Quark-Nuclear Physics
(QNP2000), 21-25 Feb. 2000, CSSM, University of Adelaide, Australia. v2: refs
added, discussion enlarged, conclusions unchanged. A short version has
appeared in NP(A) proceedings. This (long) version is to appear in PR(C).
Tables of polarized and unpolarized PDFs can be obtained by writing to the
Autho
Aspects of causal viscous hydrodynamics
We investigate the phenomenology of freely expanding fluids, with different
material properties, evolving through the Israel-Stewart (IS) causal viscous
hydrodynamics, and compare our results with those obtained in the relativistic
Eckart-Landau-Navier-Stokes (ELNS) acausal viscous hydrodynamics. Through the
analysis of scaling invariants we give a definition of thermalization time
which can be self-consistently determined in viscous hydrodynamics. Next we
construct the solutions for one-dimensional boost-invariant flows. Expansion of
viscous fluids is slower than that of one-dimensional ideal fluids, resulting
in entropy production. At late times, these flows are reasonably well
approximated by solutions obtained in ELNS hydrodynamics. Estimates of initial
energy densities from observed final values are strongly dependent on the
dynamics one chooses. For the same material, and the same final state, IS
hydrodynamics gives the smallest initial energy density. We also study
fluctuations about these one-dimensional boost-invariant backgrounds; they are
damped in ELNS hydrodynamics but can become sound waves in IS hydrodynamics.
The difference is obvious in power spectra due to clear signals of
wave-interference in IS hydrodynamics, which is completely absent in ELNS
dynamics.Comment: 27 pages, 17 figures, references added, minor changes, version to
appear in Phys. Rev. (C
Parton gas model for the nucleon structure functions
A phenomenological model for the nucleon structure functions is presented. Visualising the nucleon as a cavity filled with parton gas in thermal equilibrium and parametrizing the effects due to the finiteness of the nucleon volume, we obtain a good fit to the data on the unpolarized nucleon structure functions
Haldane Exclusion Statistics and the Boltzmann Equation
We generalize the collision term in the one-dimensional Boltzmann-Nordheim
transport equation for quasiparticles that obey the Haldane exclusion
statistics. For the equilibrium situation, this leads to the ``golden rule''
factor for quantum transitions. As an application of this, we calculate the
density response function of a one-dimensional electron gas in a periodic
potential, assuming that the particle-hole excitations are quasiparticles
obeying the new statistics. We also calculate the relaxation time of a nuclear
spin in a metal using the modified golden rule.Comment: version accepted for publication in J. of Stat. Phy
Apparent and Actual Shifts in Mass and Width of Phi Mesons Produced in Heavy-Ion Collisions
We present a method of analyzing invariant-mass spectra of kaon pairs
resulting from decay of mesons produced in high-energy heavy-ion
collisions. It can be used to extract the shifts in the mass and the width
( and ) of the mesons when they are inside the
dense matter formed in these collisions. We illustrate our method with the help
of available preliminary data. Extracted values of and are significantly larger than those obtained with an earlier method.
Our results are consistent with the experimentally observed dependence of
the mass shift. Finally, we present a phenomenological relation between and . It provides a useful constraint on theories which
predict the values of these two quantities.Comment: 11 pages, latex, revtex; 3 Postscript figures; to appear in Modern
Phys. Lett. (A
- …