61 research outputs found
Thermal Dileptons from Coarse-Grained Transport as Fireball Probes at SIS Energies
Utilizing a coarse-graining method to convert hadronic transport simulations
of Au+Au collisions at SIS energies into local temperature, baryon and pion
densities, we compute the pertinent radiation of thermal dileptons based on an
in-medium spectral function that describes available spectra at
ultrarelativistic collision energies. In particular, we analyze how far the
resulting yields and slopes of the invariant-mass spectra can probe the
lifetime and temperatures of the fireball. We find that dilepton radiation sets
in after the initial overlap phase of the colliding nuclei of about 7 fm/c, and
lasts for about 13 fm/c. This duration closely coincides with the development
of the transverse collectivity of the baryons, thus establishing a direct
correlation between hadronic collective effects and thermal EM radiation, and
supporting a near local equilibration of the system. This fireball "lifetime"
is substantially smaller than the typical 20-30 fm/c that naive considerations
of the density evolution alone would suggest. We furthermore find that the
total dilepton yield radiated into the invariant-mass window of
GeV/, normalized to the number of charged pions, follows a relation to
the lifetime found earlier in the (ultra-) relativistic regime of heavy-ion
collisions, and thus corroborates the versatility of this tool. The spectral
slopes of the invariant-mass spectra above the mass provide a
thermometer of the hottest phases of the collision, and agree well with the
maximal temperatures extracted from the coarse-grained hadron spectra.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures; v2: extended discussion, matches the version
accepted for publicatio
A model-free procedure to correct for volume fluctuations in E-by-E analyses of particle multiplicities
We develop an innovative and unbiased procedure, based on event mixing, to
account for unavoidable contributions from volume (or system size) fluctuations
to experimentally measured moments of particle multiplicity distributions
produced in relativistic nuclear collisions. Within the wounded-nucleon model
they are characterized by fluctuations of the number of wounded nucleons, the
latter usually referred to as participants. For the first time we extract
participant fluctuations directly from the data used for the fluctuation
analysis, i.e., without involving model calculations. To achieve this we
constructed a dedicated event-mixing algorithm that eliminates all possible
correlations between produced particles while preserving the volume
fluctuations. The procedure provides direct access to the cumulants of
wounded-nucleon distributions, which can be used to account for non-critical
contributions to the experimentally measured cumulants of multiplicity
distributions
A demonstrator for the Micro-Vertex-Detector of the CBM experiment
CMOS sensors are the most promising candidates for the Micro-Vertex-Detector (MVD) of the CBM experiment at GSI, as they provide an unprecedented compromise between spatial resolution, low material budget, adequate radiation tolerance and readout speed. To study the integration of these sensors into a detector module, a so-called MVD-demonstrator has been developed. The demonstrator and its in-beam performance will be presented and discussed in this work
Pluto: a Monte Carlo simulation tool for hadronic physics
Pluto is a Monte-Carlo event generator designed for hadronic interactions from Pion production threshold to intermediate energies of a few GeV per nucleon, as well as for studies of heavy ion reactions. The package is entirely based on ROOT, without the need of additional packages, and uses the embedded C++ interpreter of ROOT to control the event production. The generation of events based on a single reaction chain and the storage of the resulting particle objects can be done with a few lines of a ROOT-macro. However, the complete control of the package can be taken over by the steering macro and user-defined models may be added without a recompilation of the framework. Multi-reaction cocktails can be facilitated as well using either mass-dependent or user-defined static branching ratios. The included physics uses resonance production with mass-dependent Breit-Wigner sampling. The calculation of partial and total widths for resonances producing unstable particles is performed recursively in a coupled-channel approach. Here, particular attention is paid to the electromagnetic decays, motivated by the physics program of HADES. The thermal model supports 2-component thermal distributions, longitudinal broadening, radial blast, direct and elliptic flow, and impact-parameter sampled multiplicities. The interface allows angular distribution models (e.g. for the primary meson emission) to be attached by the user as well as descriptions of multi-particle correlations using decay chain templates. The exchange of mass sampling or momentum generation models is also possible. The first feature allows for consistent coupled-channel calculations, needed for a correct description of hadronic interactions. For elementary reactions, angular distribution models for selected channels are already part of the framework, based on parameterizations of existing data. This report gives an overview of the design of the package, the included models and the user interface
Decontamination of black peppercorn (Piper nigrum L.) using microwave-generated low pressure air plasma
The preliminary results show that microwave-generated low pressure air plasmas could be a very efficient method for the decontamination of spices since the population of a microorganism (Bacillus subtilis) commonly found in black pepper (Piper nigrum L.) was significantly reduced on test substrates in a very short period of time. Based on the experimental results, a laboratory apparatus was developed for the sterilisation of spices
Status of the Micro Vertex Detector of the Compressed Baryonic Matter Experiment
The CBM experiment will investigate heavy-ion collisions at beam energies from 8 to 45 AGeV
at the future accelerator facility FAIR. The goal of the experiment is to study the QCD phase
diagram in the vincinity of the QCD critical point. To do so, CBM aims at measuring rare probes
among them open charm. In order to identify those rare and short lived particles despite the
rich combinatorial background generated in heavy ion collisions, a micro vertex detector (MVD)
providing an unprecedented combination of high rate capability and radiation hardness, very light
material budget and excellent granularity is required. In this work, we will discuss the concept of
this detector and summarize the status of the R&D
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