Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (1740)
- Preprint (1136)
- Doctoral Thesis (582)
- Conference Proceeding (243)
- diplomthesis (106)
- Bachelor Thesis (75)
- Master's Thesis (61)
- Contribution to a Periodical (46)
- Book (32)
- Working Paper (31)
Keywords
- Kollisionen schwerer Ionen (47)
- heavy ion collisions (44)
- LHC (25)
- Quark-Gluon-Plasma (25)
- Heavy Ion Experiments (20)
- quark-gluon plasma (19)
- equation of state (18)
- Relativistic heavy-ion collisions (16)
- QGP (15)
- heavy-ion collisions (15)
Institute
- Physik (4144) (remove)
We present a theoretical description of nuclear collisions which consists of a three-dimensional fluid-dynamical model, a chemical equilibrium breakup calculation for local light fragment (i.e., p, n, d, t, 3He, and 4He) production, and a final thermal evaporation of these particles. The light fragment cross sections and some properties of the heavy target residues are calculated for the asymmetric system Ne+U at 400 MeV/N. The results of the model calculations are compared with recent experimental data. Several observable signatures of the collective hydrodynamical processes are consistent with the present data. An event-by-event analysis of the flow patterns of the various clusters is proposed which can yield deeper insight into the collision dynamics.
Abrasion-ablation models and the empirical EPAX parametrization of projectile fragmentation are described. Their cross section predictions are compared to recent data of the fragmentation of secondary beams of neutron-rich, unstable 19,20,21O isotopes at beam energies near 600 MeV/nucleon as well as data for stable 17,18O beams.
Mit der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden zu ersten Mal die seit mehreren Jahren vorhergesagten dynamischen Aufbruchsmechanismen - der direkte, der sequentielle und der asynchrone Zerfall - in mehratomigen Molekülen kinematisch vollständig untersucht. Experimentell wurde hierfür ein Kohlenstoffdioxid-(CO2)-Molekül in langsamen Ion-Molekül Stößen dreifach ionisiert, indem die Elektronen des Targets von den langsamen, hochgeladenen Projektilionen (Ar8+-Ionen) eingefangen wurden. Die Untersuchung des Zerfalls des CO2-Ions in die einfach geladenen ionischen Fragmente C+ + O+ + O+ zeigte, dass bei diesem Zerfall das Projektilion vornehmlich einen positiven Ladungszustand von q = 6 und nicht den zunächst erwarteten Ladungszustand q = 5 aufweist. Dies ist darauf zurückzuführen, dass die eingefangenen Elektronen oftmals elektronisch hoch angeregte Zustände im Projektil populieren und demnach im weiteren Verlauf über Autoionisationsprozesse dieses auch wieder verlassen können. Ähnliche Autoionisationsprozesse können auch im Target ablaufen, treten dort jedoch mit einer geringeren Wahrscheinlichkeit auf, da der Wirkungsquerschnitt für Autoionisationsprozesse im Target um einen Faktor 1,3 kleiner ist als für Autoionisationen im Projektil. Zusätzlich zeigte die Untersuchung der Stoßdynamik, dass der dreifache Elektroneneinfang primär bei einer parallelen Orientierung der Molekülachse zur Projektilstrahlachse auftritt. Eine weitere Abhängigkeit der Stoßdynamik zum Beispiel vom Stoßparameter beziehungsweise vom Streuwinkel konnte nicht beobachtet werden. Durch die koinzidente Messung aller vier Reaktionsteilchen konnte der Kanal Ar8+ + CO2 --> Ar6+ + C+ + O+ + O+ eindeutig bestimmt werden und die Reaktionsdynamik des CO2-Ions nach dem Stoß analysiert werden. Dabei tritt deutlich der direkte Aufbruch hervor, bei welchem die drei einfach geladenen Ionen sich rein aufgrund ihrer Coulombkräfte voneinander abstoßen. Bei einer solchen Coulombexplosion bleibt dem Molekülion kaum Zeit, um eine molekulare Schwingung zu vollführen. Neben diesem schnellen Zerfall konnten aber auch jene Zerfälle beobachtet werden, bei denen das Molekülion zuerst molekular schwingt und dann zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt in die ionischen Fragmente zerfällt. Dieser letztere Zerfallsprozess gehört zu den sogenannten asynchronen Zerfallsmechanismen. Er stellt einen Zwischenprozess zwischen dem reinen 1-Stufen-Prozess wie dem direkten Aufbruch und dem reinen 2-Stufen-Prozess dar. Bei solchen sequentiellen 2-Stufen Prozessen fragmentiert das CO2-Molekül im ersten Schritt in ein O+- und ein CO2+-Ion. Im zweiten Schritt dissoziiert dann das CO2+-Fragment, nachdem es nahezu keine Wirkung der Coulombkräfte des ersten Sauerstoffions mehr spürt, in ein C+- und ein O+-Ion. Durch die Darstellung der Schwerpunktsimpulse der Fragmente in Dalitz- und Newton-Diagrammen ist es mit dieser Arbeit erstmals gelungen diesen sequentiellen Prozess experimentell eindeutig nachzuweisen. In der weiteren Analyse konnte gezeigt werden, dass über die im System deponierte Energie, welche über die kinetische Energie der Fragmente bestimmt wird, die verschiedenen Reaktionsmechanismen direkt kontrolliert werden können. Speziell bei Energien unterhalb von 20 eV wurde gezeigt, dass es keine Potentialflächen gibt, die über einen direkten bzw. simultanen Aufbruch zu dem Endzustand C+ + O+ + O+ führen. Bei mehratomigen Molekülen erweist sich das Treffen detaillierter Aussagen über mögliche Dissoziationskanäle ohne die genaue Kenntnis der Lage der Potentialflächen und den Übergängen zwischen diesen als äußerst schwierig. Selbst bei genauer Kenntnis der Lage und Form der Potentialflächen, ist es aufgrund der hohen Dichten innerhalb der Übergangsbereiche der Potentialflächen nahezu unmöglich, den Verlauf der Dissoziationskanäle zu verfolgen. Mit dieser Arbeit ist es gelungen, die verschiedenen Reaktionskanäle ohne die Existenz von Energiepotentialflächen eindeutig zu identifizieren. Außerdem konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Energie, die während des Stoßes im Molekül deponiert wird, eine Schlüsselgröße darstellt, mit welcher die Fragmentationskanäle direkt kontrolliert werden können.
We study the effects of strict conservation laws and the problem of negative contributions to final momentum distribution during the freeze out through 3-dimensional hypersurfaces with space-like normal. We study some suggested solutions for this problem, and demonstrate it on one example. PACS: 24.10.Nz, 25.75.-q
We calculate ratios of higher-order susceptibilities quantifying fluctuations in the number of net-protons and in the net-electric charge using the Hadron Resonance Gas (HRG) model. We take into account the effect of resonance decays, the kinematic acceptance cuts in rapidity, pseudo-rapidity and transverse momentum used in the experimental analysis, as well as a randomization of the isospin of nucleons in the hadronic phase. By comparing these results to the latest experimental data from the STAR Collaboration, we determine the freeze-out conditions from net-electric charge and net-proton distributions and discuss their consistency.
In continuum and fluid dynamical models, particles, which leave the system and reach the detectors, can be taken into account via freeze-out (FO) or final break-up schemes, where the frozen out particles are formed on a 3-dimensional hypersurface in space-time. Such FO descriptions are important ingredients of evaluations of two-particle correlation data, transverse-, longitudinal-, radial- and cylindrical- flow analyses, transverse momentum and transverse mass spectra and many other observables. The FO on a hypersurface is a discontinuity, where the pre FO equilibrated and interacting matter abruptly changes to non-interacting particles, showing an ideal gas type of behavior.
Freeze-out radii extracted from three-pion cumulants in pp, p–Pb and Pb–Pb collisions at the LHC
(2014)
In high-energy collisions, the spatio-temporal size of the particle production region can be measured using the Bose–Einstein correlations of identical bosons at low relative momentum. The source radii are typically extracted using two-pion correlations, and characterize the system at the last stage of interaction, called kinetic freeze-out. In low-multiplicity collisions, unlike in high-multiplicity collisions, two-pion correlations are substantially altered by background correlations, e.g. mini-jets. Such correlations can be suppressed using three-pion cumulant correlations. We present the first measurements of the size of the system at freeze-out extracted from three-pion cumulant correlations in pp, p–Pb and Pb–Pb collisions at the LHC with ALICE. At similar multiplicity, the invariant radii extracted in p–Pb collisions are found to be 5–15% larger than those in pp, while those in Pb–Pb are 35–55% larger than those in p–Pb. Our measurements disfavor models which incorporate substantially stronger collective expansion in p–Pb as compared to pp collisions at similar multiplicity.
The recent discovery of binary neutron star mergers has opened a new and exciting venue of research into hot and dense strongly interacting matter. For the first time, this elusive state of matter, described by the theory of quantum chromo dynamics, can be studied in two very different environments. On the macroscopic scale, in the collisions of neutron stars; and on the microscopic scale, in collisions of heavy ions at particle collider facilities. We will discuss the conditions that are created in these mergers and the corresponding high energy nuclear collisions. This includes the properties of quantum chromo dynamics matter, that is, the expected equation of state as well as expected chemical and thermodynamic properties of this exotic matter. To explore this matter in the laboratory, a new research prospect is available at the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research, FAIR. The new facility is being constructed adjacent to the existing accelerator complex of the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research at Darmstadt/Germany, expanding the research goals and technical possibilities substantially. The worldwide unique accelerator and experimental facilities of FAIR will open the way for a broad spectrum of unprecedented research supplying a variety of experiments in hadron, nuclear, atomic, and plasma physics as well as biomedical and material science, which will be briefly described.
The brain is a large complex system which is remarkably good at maintaining stability under a wide range of input patterns and intensities. In addition, such a stable dynamical state is able to sustain essential functions, including the encoding of information about the external environment and storing memories. In order to succeed in these challenging tasks, neural circuits rely on a variety of plasticity mechanisms that act as self-organizational rules and regulate their dynamics. Based on toy models of self-organized criticality, this stable state has been proposed to be a phase transition point, poised between distinct types of unhealthy dynamics, in what has become known as the critical brain hypothesis. It is not yet known, however, if and how self-organization could drive biological neural networks towards a critical state while maintaining or improving their learning and memory functions.
Here, we investigate the emergence of criticality signatures in the form of neuronal avalanches due to self-organizational plasticity rules in a recurrent neural network. We show that power-law distributions of events, widely observed in experiments, arise from a combination of biologically inspired synaptic and homeostatic plasticity but are highly dependent on the external drive. Additionally, we describe how learning abilities and fading memory emerge and are improved by the same self-organizational processes. We finally propose an application of these enhanced functions, focusing on sequence and simple language learning tasks.
Taken together, our results suggest that the same self-organizational processes can be responsible for improving the brain’s spatio-temporal learning abilities and memory capacity while also giving rise to criticality signatures under particular input conditions, thus proposing a novel link between such abilities and neuronal avalanches. Although criticality was not verified, the detailed study of self-organization towards critical dynamics further elucidates its potential emergence and functions in the brain.
As the successor of the EUROTRANS project, the MAX project is aiming to continue the R&D effects for a European Accelerator-Driven System and to bring the conceptual design to reality. The layout of the driver linac for MAX will follow the reference design made for the XT-ADS phase of the EUROTRANS project. For the injector part, new design strategies and approaches, e.g. half resonant frequency, half transition-energy between the RFQ and the CH-DTL, and using the 4-rod RFQ structure instead of the originally proposed 4-vane RFQ, have been conceived and studied to reach a more reliable CW operation at reduced costs. In this paper, the design and simulation results of the MAX injector are presented.
Bottomonium states are key probes for experimental studies of the quark-gluon plasma (QGP) created in high-energy nuclear collisions. Theoretical models of bottomonium productions in high-energy nuclear collisions rely on the in-medium interactions between the bottom and antibottom quarks, which can be characterized by real (VR(T, r)) and imaginary (VI(T, r)) potentials, as functions of temperature and spatial separation. Recently, the masses and thermal widths of up to 3S and 2P bottomonium states in QGP were calculated using lattice quantum chromodynamics (LQCD). Starting from these LQCD results and through a novel application of deep neural network (DNN), here, we obtain model-independent results for VR(T, r) and VI(T, r). The temperature dependence of VR(T, r) was found to be very mild between T ≈ 0 − 330 MeV. Meanwhile, VI(T, r) shows rapid increase with T and r, which is much larger than the perturbation theory based expectations.
We discuss recent applications of the partonic perturbative QCD based cascade model BAMPS with focus on heavy-ion phenomenology in the hard and soft momentum range. First, the elliptic flow and suppression of charm and bottom quarks are studied at LHC energies. Thereafter, we compare in a detailed study the standard Gunion-Bertsch approximation of the matrix elements for inelastic processes to the exact results in leading order perturbative QCD. Since a disagreement is found, we propose an improved Gunion-Bertsch matrix element, which agrees with the exact result in all phase space regions.
System size dependence of hadron production properties is discussed within the Wounded Nucleon Model and the Statistical Model in the grand canonical, canonical and micro-canonical formulations. Similarities and differences between predictions of the models related to the treatment of conservation laws are exposed. A need for models which would combine a hydrodynamicallike expansion with conservation laws obeyed in individual collisions is stressed.
From the colour glass condensate to filamentation: systematics of classical Yang–Mills theory
(2019)
The non-equilibrium early time evolution of an ultra-relativistic heavy ion collision is often described by classical lattice Yang–Mills theory, starting from the colour glass condensate (CGC) effective theory with an anisotropic energy momentum tensor as initial condition. In this work we investigate the systematics associated with such studies and their dependence on various model parameters (IR, UV cutoffs and the amplitude of quantum fluctuations) which are not yet fixed by experiment. We perform calculations for SU() and SU(), both in a static box and in an expanding geometry. Generally, the dependence on model parameters is found to be much larger than that on technical parameters like the number of colours, boundary conditions or the lattice spacing. In a static box, all setups lead to isotropisation through chromo-Weibel instabilities, which is illustrated by the accompanying filamentation of the energy density. However, the associated time scale depends strongly on the model parameters and in all cases is longer than the phenomenologically expected one. In the expanding system, no isotropisation is observed for any parameter choice. We show how investigations at fixed initial energy density can be used to better constrain some of the model parameters.
The non-equilibrium quantum field dynamics is usually described in the closed-time-path formalism. The initial state correlations are introduced into the generating functional by non-local source terms. We propose a functional approach to the Dyson-Schwinger equation, which treats the non-local and local source terms in the same way. In this approach, the generating functional is formulated for the connected Green functions and one-particle-irreducible vertices. The great advantages of our approach over the widely used two-particle-irreducible method are that it is much simpler and that it is easy to implement the procedure in a computer program to automatically generate the Feynman diagrams for a given process. The method is then applied to a pure gluon plasma to derive the gauge-covariant transport equation from the Dyson-Schwinger equation in the background covariant gauge. We discuss the structure of the kinetic equation and show its relationship with the classical one. We derive the gauge-covariant collision part and present an approximation in the vicinity of equilibrium. The role of the non-local source kernel in the non-equilibrium system is discussed in the context of a free scalar field. PACS numbers: 12.38.Mh, 25.75.-q, 24.85.+p, 11.15.Kc
Cryo-electron tomography (CET) is a unique technique to visualize biological objects under near-to-native conditions at near-atomic resolution. CET provides three-dimensional (3D) snapshots of the cellular proteome, in which the spatial relations between macromolecular complexes in their near native cellular context can be explored. Due to the limitation of the electron dose applicable on biological samples, the achievable resolution of a tomogram is restricted to a few nanometers, higher resolution can be achieved by averaging of structures occurring in multiples. For this purpose, computational techniques such as template matching, sub-tomogram averaging and classification are essential for a meaningful processing of CET data.
This thesis introduces the techniques of template matching and sub-tomogram averaging and their applications on real biological data sets. Subsequently, the problem of reference bias, which restricts the applicability of those techniques, is addressed. Two methods that estimate the reference bias in Fourier and real space are demonstrated. The real space method, which we have named the “M-free” score, provides a reliable estimation of the reference bias, which gives access to the reliability of the template matching or sub-tomogram averaging process. Thus, the “M-free” score makes those approaches more applicable to structural biology. Furthermore, a classification algorithm based on Neural Networks (NN) called “KerDenSOM3D” is introduced, which is implemented in 3D and compensates for the missing-wedge. This approach helps extracting different structural states of macromolecular complexes or increasing the class purity of data sets by eliminating outliers. A comprehensive comparison with other classification methods shows superior performance of KerDenSOM3D.
The present thesis is primarily concerned with the application of the functional renormalization group (FRG) to spin systems. In the first part, we study the critical regime close to the Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless (BKT) transition in several systems. Our starting point is the dual-vortex representation of the two-dimensional XY model, which is obtained by applying a dual transformation to the Villain model. In order to deal with the integer-valued field corresponding to the dual vortices, we apply the lattice FRG formalism developed by Machado and Dupuis [Phys. Rev. E 82, 041128 (2010)]. Using a Litim regulator in momentum space with the initial condition of isolated lattice sites, we then recover the Kosterlitz-Thouless renormalization group equations for the rescaled vortex fugacity and the dimensionless temperature. In addition to our previously published approach based on the vertex expansion [Phys. Rev. E 96, 042107 (2017)], we also present an alternative derivation within the derivative expansion. We then generalize our approach to the O(2) model and to the strongly anisotropic XXZ model, which enables us to show that weak amplitude fluctuations as well as weak out-of-plane fluctuations do not change the universal properties of the BKT transition.
In the second part of this thesis, we develop a new FRG approach to quantum spin systems. In contrast to previous works, our spin functional renormalization group (SFRG) does not rely on a mapping to bosonic or fermionic fields, but instead deals directly with the spin operators. Most importantly, we show that the generating functional of the irreducible vertices obeys an exact renormalization group equation, which resembles the Wetterich equation of a bosonic system. As a consequence, the non-trivial structure of the su(2) algebra is fully taken into account by the initial condition of the renormalization group flow. Our method is motivated by the spin-diagrammatic approach to quantum spin system that was developed more than half a century ago in a seminal work by Vaks, Larkin, and Pikin (VLP) [Sov. Phys. JETP 26, 188 (1968)]. By embedding their ideas in the language of the modern renormalization group, we avoid the complicated diagrammatic rules while at the same time allowing for novel approximation schemes. As a demonstration, we explicitly show how VLP's results for the leading corrections to the free energy and to the longitudinal polarization function of a ferromagnetic Heisenberg model can be recovered within the SFRG. Furthermore, we apply our method to the spin-S Ising model as well as to the spin-S quantum Heisenberg model, which allows us to calculate the critical temperature for both a ferromagnetic and an antiferromagnetic exchange interaction. Finally, we present a new hybrid formulation of the SFRG, which combines features of both the pure and the Hubbard-Stratonovich SFRG that were published recently [Phys. Rev. B 99, 060403(R) (2019)].
Ende der 70ger Jahre, fünf Jahre nach der Einführung des ersten kommerziellen, medizinischen Computertomographen wurde die Tomographie am Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory zum ersten Mal für die Diagnose von Teilchenstrahlen angewendet. Bei der Tomographie wird aus eindimensionalen Projektionen, sogenannten Profilen, welche in möglichst vielen Winkeln um ein Objekt herum aufgenommen werden, ein zweidimensionales Abbild der Dichteverteilung (Slice oder Scheibe) approximiert. Dies ist möglich durch das bereits 1917 von Johann Radon eingeführte Fourier-Scheiben-Theorem. In der Theorie kann die zwei-dimensionale Dichteverteilung exakt ermittelt werden, wenn Projektionen mit einer unendlich feinen Auflösung über unendlich viele Winkel um ein Objekt herum in die Rekonstruktion einbezogen werden. Durch die Rekonstruktion vieler Scheiben kann ein drei-dimensionales Abbild der Dichteverteilung in einem Objekt, in diesem Fall einem Ionenstrahl, berechnet werden, sofern dieses nicht optisch dicht ist.
Die Profile in der nicht-invasiven Strahldiagnose entstehen durch CCD-Kameraaufnahmen von strahlinduzierter Fluoreszenz, welche durch den Einlass von Restgas hervorgerufen wird. Es sind aber auch Profile, welche aus anderen Methoden gewonnen werden (z.B. Gittermessungen) denkbar. An Orten mit hoher Energie ist jedoch eine nicht-invasive Form der Profilaufnahme sowohl für die Qualität des Strahls, wie auch den Schutz der Messgeräte unabdingbar.
In den letzten 40 Jahren wurden im Bereich der Strahltomographie viele wichtige Fortschritte erzielt:
1. Anfangs standen nur sehr wenige Profile zur Verfügung, so dass die Methode der gefilterten Rückprojektion(FBP), welche sich direkt aus dem Fourier-Scheiben-Theorem ableitet und welches auch in der Medizin verwendet wird, nicht angewendet werden kann. Um dieses Problem zu lösen wurden iterative Methoden wie die Algebraische Rekonstruktion (ART) und die Methode der Maximalen Entropie (MEM) für die Strahltomographie erschlossen, so dass auch mit sehr geringer Profilanzahl eine Rücktransformation möglich wurde.
2. Neben der Ortsraumtomographie wurde die Phasenraumtomografie entwickelt, so dass mittlerweile eine Rekonstruktion des sechs-dimensionalen Phasenraumes möglich ist, mit welchem ein Ionenstrahl in seiner Gesamtheit beschrieben werden kann.
3. Die Projektionen wurden lange Zeit durch Aufnahmen von mehreren festen Anschlüssen aus gewonnen (Multi-Port-Technik). Auf diese Weise ist die Anzahl der möglichen Projektionen sehr begrenzt. So entwickelte man später eine Methode welche den Strahl mit Hilfe von Quadrupolen dreht (Quad-Scan-Technik), so dass auf diese Weise von einem Anschluss aus viele Projektionen gemessen werden konnten, so dass sogar die FBP angewendet werden konnte.
4. Die meisten Bestrebungen zielten darauf ab, die Tomographie für eine nicht-invasive Emittanzmessmethode zu nutzen, welches bis heute aufgrund der großen und noch immer zunehmenden Energien in modernen Beschleunigern ein wichtiges Problem ist. Um die Tomographie zur Emittanzmessung zu verwenden, führt man eine Rekonstruktion des Phasenraumes durch. Das Problem ist, dass hierfür das a priori Wissen über die Strahltransportmatrix in die Tomographie mit einfließt, die berechnete Strahltransportmatrix
jedoch nicht mit dem tatsächlichen Strahltransport übereinstimmt, da dieser bei hohen Energien durch auftretende Raumladung nicht-linear verändert wird. Hierzu wurden gute Fortschritte in der Abschätzung der tatsächlichen Transportmatrix gemacht um die Phasenraumtomographie trotzdem mit hinreichend gutem Ergebnis durchführen zu können.
Trotz all dieser Fortschritte und Entwicklungen ist die Tomographie bis heute keine weitverbreitete Methode in der Strahldiagnose. Der Grund ist, dass das Einrichten einer Tomografie eine komplexe Abfolge etlicher Entscheidungen und weitgestreutes Wissen aus vielen unterschiedlichen Bereichen erfordert, dieser nicht zu unterschätzende Mehraufwand jedoch auch durch einen signifikanten Nutzen gerechtfertigt sein muss. Der große Nutzen der Tomographie für die Strahldiagnose und Untersuchung der Strahldynamik ist bis heute allerdings weitgehend unerkannt und weiterhin reduziert auf die Entwicklung einer nicht-invasiven Methode für die Emittanzbestimmung. Ein zweites Hindernis stellte bisher auch die Diskrepanz zwischen Genauigkeit und Platzaufwand dar (hohe Genauigkeit durch viele Projektionen mit Quad-Scan-Technik auf mehreren Metern oder niedrige Genauigkeit durch wenig Projektionen mit Multi-Port-Technik auf weniger als einem Meter). Die Tomografie kann großen Nutzen leisten für die Online-Überwachung wichtiger Maschineneparameter im Strahlbetrieb (Monitoring) als auch für detaillierte Analysen zur Strahldynamik (Modellierung) weit über die Implementierung einer nicht-invasiven Emittanzmessmethode hinaus.
Um dies zu gewährleisten Bedarf es Zweierlei. Zum einen muss die Diskrepanz zwischen Genauigkeit und Platzaufwand aufgehoben werden. Hierzu wurde im Rahmen dieser Arbeit eine rotierbare Vakuumkammer entwickelt die nach dem Vorbild medizinischer Tomographen in mehr als 5000 Winkelschritten um den Strahl herum fahren kann, dabei ein Vakuum von mindestens 10-7mbar aufrecht erhält und einen Platzbedarf von weniger als 400 mm in der Strahlstrecke einnimmt. Zum anderen muss die Implementierung der Tomografie durch eine Angabe von schematischen Schritten und Entscheidungen vereinfacht werden. Eine Strahltomographie muss immer auf ihren jeweiligen Zweck hin implementiert werden, da Einzelelemente der Tomografie wie beispielsweise Messvorrichtung und dadurch die Profilanzahl, zu verwendender Tomographiealgorithmus, zu bestimmende Parameter sich je nach Einsatz unterscheiden können. Jedoch können die dazu nötigen Entscheidungen in ein Schema eingeordnet werden, welches die Implementierung der Tomographie vereinfacht und beschleunigt. Hierzu wurde in dieser Arbeit eine Diagnosepipeline und ein Entscheidungsschema eingeführt, sowie die Implementierung nach diesem Schema am Beispiel einer Strahltomographie für die Frankfurter Neutronenquelle (FRANZ) demonstriert und die entsprechenden Fragen und Entscheidungen diskutiert. Es wird gezeigt, wie sich aus den Messdaten über die Aufbereitung der Daten durch die Tomografie die erforderlichen Standardstrahlparameter für ein Monitoring gewinnen lassen. Zusätzlich wird ein Ebenen-Modell eingeführt, über welches nicht-Standardparameter oder neu modellierte Strahlparameter für detaillierte Analysen der Strahldynamik über die Standardparameter hinaus entwickelt werden können. Diese Arbeit soll ein grundlegendes Konzept für die routinemäßige Implementierung der Tomographie in der Strahldiagnose zur Verfügung stellen. Für die Verwendung zum Monitoring im Strahlbetrieb muss die Bestimmung von Standardparametern noch wesentlich im Zeitaufwand verbessert werden. Die Verwendung der Phasenraumtomographie benötigt noch eine Idee um den arcustangensförmigen Verlauf der berechneten Phasenraumrotationswinkel mit der Forderung der FBP nach äquidistanten Projektionswinkeln verträglicher zu machen.
In den Neurowissenschaften führt die Erforschung des vegetativen Nervensystem (VNS) immer noch ein Schattendasein. Einer der wichtigsten Teile des VNS, der Hirnstamm, ist dabei besonders schlecht erforscht, obwohl er die Steuerzentren für Herzschlag, Blutdruckregulation, Atmung, Verdauung, und viele weitere lebenswichtige Funktionen beherbergt. Ein wichtiger Grund für diesen Umstand ist, dass die funktionelle Kernspintomographie (fMRT) sich in ihrer bisherigen Form nur bedingt für Messungen im Hirnstamm eignet. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es daher, neue Ansätze zur fMRT-Messung vegetativer Zentren im menschlichen Hirnstamm zu entwickeln. Nach einer Einführung in die Neuroanatomie sowie die physikalischen und physiologischen Grundlagen der strukturellen und funktionellen MRT werden im mittleren Teil der Arbeit die Entwicklung sowie der Test neuer Ansätze zur Hirnstamm-fMRT beschrieben. Dabei untersucht der Autor zunächst, welche grundlegenden Probleme einer konventionellen fMRT-Messung im Hirnstamm entgegenstehen. Es stellt sich heraus, dass alle hirnstamm-spezifischen Störquellen direkt oder indirekt auf den Herzschlag zurückzuführen sind. Aus den vorhandenen Ansätzen zur Korrektur solcher Störungen wird die Herzschlag-Taktung ausgewählt. Bei diesem Verfahren erfolgt die Aufnahme der fMRT-Bilder zeitlich gekoppelt an dem Herzschlag des Probanden, um sämtliche kardiogenen Rauschquellen zu unterdrücken. Anstelle des häufig verwendeten, aber statistisch problematischen Guimaraes-Verfahrens zur Korrektur der durch die Herzfrequenzvariabilität bedingten Schwankungen des MR-Signals wird in der vorliegenden Arbeit der die sog. Dual-Echo-Bildgebung verwendet. Dabei wird die konventionelle EPI-Sequenz (echo-planar imaging) dahingehend erweitert, dass pro Bild anstelle eines Echos zwei aufgenommen werden. Durch Quotientenbildung der beiden Bilder kann so der fluktuierende Teil des Signals entfernt werden. Beim Vergleich verschiedener Varianten der Quotientenbildung stellt sich ein neu entwickelter, exponentieller Ansatz als überlegen heraus. Danach werden die Auswirkungen verschiedener Methoden der Bewegungskorrektur und Schichtorientierung verglichen, um das Optimum für Messungen im Hirnstamm zu ermitteln. Nach Tests des neuen Verfahrens an verschiedenen fMRT-Datensätzen werden Empfehlungen für die Kombination der verschiedenen Parameter gegeben. Es zeigt sich, dass die Standardabweichung der fMRT-Bilder mit der neuen Methode im unteren Hirnstamm um 13% - 33% reduziert werden kann. Ein Sensitivitätstest an motorischen Hirnstammkernen, welche durch ein motorisches Paradigma aktiviert werden, zeigt, dass die jeweiligen Kerne in 85% - 95% der Fälle eindeutig identifiziert werden können. Im dritten Teil der Arbeit erfolgt die Anwendung der neuen Methode auf die Messung von Aktivierungen vegetativer Zentren. Hier wird als unkonventionellen Stimulus des vegetativen Nervensystems die Akupunktur verwendet. Dies geschieht u.a. mit der Zielsetzung, zur Aufdeckung des noch immer unbekannten Wirkmechanismus dieser Therapieform beizutragen. Als Akupunkturpunkt wird Pc6 am Handgelenk gewählt, da die Studienlage eindeutig dessen Effektivität bei der Behandlung von Übelkeit und Erbrechen sowie eine Beeinflussung der Magen-Peristaltik zeigt und die neuralen Zentren hierfür größtenteils im Hirnstamm lokalisiert sind. Der Autor stellt daher die Hypothese auf, dass die Akupunkturwirkung in diesem Fall über den Vagusnerv und dessen Hirnstammkern, den Nucleus dorsalis nervi vagi, vermittelt wird. Vor der Überprüfung dieser Hypothese erfolgt zunächst eine Methodenkritik der bisherigen Akupunktur-fMRT-Forschung. Anhand einer Gruppe von Studien, welche über Aktivierungen der Sehrinde bei Akupunktur visuell relevanter Punkte berichten, weist der Autor eine Reihe methodischer Probleme nach. Anhand einer eigenen Studie kann er mittels Independent Component Analysis (ICA) zeigen, dass die von den bisherigen Studien berichteten, visuellen Aktivierungen höchstwahrscheinlich nicht auf die Wirkung der Akupunktur zurückzuführen sind. Um einige der Probleme dieser Studien zu umgehen, entwickelt der Autor ein neues psychophysikalisches Verfahren, bei dem die Probanden während der Akupunktur kontinuierlich die Stärke der Nadelempfindung („DeQi“) auf einer visuellen Analogskala bewerten. Mit Hilfe dieses Verfahrens gelingt schließlich der Nachweis einer Hirnstamm-Aktivierung unter Akupunktur-Stimulation, deren Lokalisation mit der des Nucleus dorsalis nervi vagi vereinbar ist. Dies bestätigt die ursprüngliche Hypothese und zeigt gleichzeitig die Eignung des neuen Verfahrens für die Bildgebung vegetativer Hirnstammzentren.
The novel momentum analysis technique introduced by Danielewicz and Odyniec can be used to detect and exhibit collective flow in the light system Ar(1800 MeV/nucleon) + KCl where the usual kinetic energy flow analysis fails. The microscopic Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck theory which includes the nuclear mean field, two-body collisions, and Pauli blocking is used to study this phenomenon. The resulting transverse momentum transfers turn out to be quite sensitive to the nuclear equation of state. From a comparison with experimental data, evidence is presented for a rather stiff nuclear equation of state. The cascade model is unable to describe the data.
We present results for calculating fusion cross-sections using a new microscopic approach based on a time-dependent density-constrained DFT calculations. The theory is implemented by using densities and other information obtained from TDDFT time-evolution of the nuclear system as a constraint on the density for DFT calculations.
Fuzziness at the horizon
(2010)
We study the stability of the noncommutative Schwarzschild black hole interior by analysing the propagation of a massless scalar field between the two horizons. We show that the spacetime fuzziness triggered by the field higher momenta can cure the classical exponential blue-shift divergence, suppressing the emergence of infinite energy density in a region nearby the Cauchy horizon.
To determine the neutron flux in activation experiments, a commonly used monitor is zirconium and in particular the stable isotopes 94,96Zr. 96Zr is very sensitive to epithermal neutrons. Despite its widespread application, most gamma intensities of the radioactive neutron capture product, 97Zr, yield large uncertainties. With the help of a new γ spectroscopy setup and GEANT simulations, we succeeded in determining a new set of γ-ray intensities with significantly reduced uncertainties.
The current performance of a 4π barium fluoride gamma detector consisting of 41 modules is evaluated. It will be used to measure neutron capture events in different samples that are exposed to a neutron beam that is expected to contain up to 10^7 neutrons/(cm^2 sec). The capture cross-sections acquired in this experiment will be relevant to a multitude of different areas, for example to s-process studies, or accelerator-driven systems. The detector array was re-mounted after having been moved from Karlsruhe to Frankfurt and in the course of this process, the detector modules have been checked for their current detection properties. Every module consists of a BaF2 crystal, a photomultiplier tube connected to the crystal by sillicon oil and a voltage divider to drive the PMT, so each of them is already an individual gamma detector. Using Cobalt-60 and Caesium-137 test sources the energy resolution and - more importantly - the time resolution of every module has been determined; the results are presented in this work and compared to previous data taken at the time the detector was built initially in the mid-1980s.
We discuss gapless colour superconductivity for neutral quark matter in β equilibrium at zero as well as at nonzero temperature. Basic properties of gapless superconductors are reviewed. The current progress and the remaining problems in the understanding of the phase diagram of strange quark matter are discussed.
The main purpose of the Transition Radiation Detector (TRD) located in the central barrel of ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) is electron identification for separation from pions at momenta pt > 1 GeV/c, since in this momentum range the measurements of the specific energy loss (dE/dx) of the Time Projection Chamber (TPC) is no longer sufficient. Furthermore, it provides a fast trigger for high transverse momentum charged particles (pt > 3 GeV/c) and makes a significant contribution to the optimization of the tracking of reaction products in heavy-ion collisions. Its whole setup comprises 18 supermodules out of which 13 are presently operational and mounted cylindrically around the beam axis of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). A supermodule contains either 30 or 24 chambers, each consisting of a radiator for transition radiation creation, a drift and an amplifying region followed by the read-out electronics. In total, the TRD is an array of 522 chambers operated with about 28 m3 of a Xe-CO2 [85-15%] gas mixture. During the work of this thesis, the testing, commissioning, operation and maintenance of detector parts, the gas system and its online quality monitor, improvements on the detector control user-interface and studies about a new pre-trigger module for data read-out have been accomplished. The TRD gas system mixes, distributes and circulates the operational gas mixture through the detector. Its overall optimization has been achieved by minimizing gas leakage, surveying, controlling, maintaining and continuously improving it as well as designing and carrying out upgrades. Gas quality monitors of the type \GOOFIE" (Gas prOportional cOunter For drIfting Electrons) can be used in gaseous detectors as on-line monitors of the electron drift velocity, gain and gas properties. One of these devices has been implemented within the TRD gas system, while another one surveys the gas of the TPC. Both devices had to be adapted to the specific needs of the detectors, were under constant surveillance and control, and needed to be further developed on both hardware and software side. To improve the operation of the TRD, modifications on its DCS software (Detector Control System) used for monitoring, controlling, operating, regulating and configuring of hardware and computing devices have been carried out. The DCS is designed to enable an operator to interact with equipment through user interfaces that display the information from the system. The main focus of this work was laid on the optimization of the usability and design of the user interface. The front-end electronics of the TRD require an early start signal (\pre-trigger") from the fast forward detectors or the Time-Of-Flight detector during the running periods. The realization of a new hardware concept for the read-out of the TRD pre-trigger system has been studied and first tests were performed. This new module called PIMDDL (Pre-trigger Interface Module Detector Data Link) is meant to acquire all data necessary to simulate and predict the full pre-trigger functionality, and to verify its proper operation. Furthermore, it shall provide all functionalities of the so-called Control Box Bottom as well as keep the functionalities of the already existing PIM (Pre-trigger Interface Module) in order to combine and replace these two modules in the future.
In this contribution we report the status and plans of the open lattice initiative to generate and share new gauge ensembles using the stabilised Wilson fermion framework. The production strategy is presented in terms of a three stage plan alongside summaries of the data management as well as access policies. Current progress in completing the first stage of generating ensembles at four lattice spacings at the flavor symmetric point is given.
In den vergangen Jahren wurde erkannt, dass eine Quantenfeldtheorie (QFT) namens Quantenchromodynamik (QCD) die richtige Theorie der starken Wechselwirkungen ist. QCD beschreibt erfolgreich die starken Wechselwirkungen, die Quarks zu Nukleonen und Nukleonen zu Atomkernen zusammenbinden. Jedoch ist die theoretische Beschreibung vieler Phänomene der starken Wechselwirkung aufgrund des starken Kopplungsverhaltens bei niedrigen Energien schwierig. Stoßexperimente mit Schwerionen sind ein möglicher Weg, um die charakteristischen Phänomene und Eigenschaften der QCD-Materie zu untersuchen. In Stoßexperimenten mit Schwerionen werden schwere (d.h. große) Atomkerne aufeinander geschossen, beispielsweise Gold (am RHIC) oder Blei (am CERN, LHC), mit einer ultrarelativistischen Energie √s im Schwerpunktsystem. Auf diese Art ist es möglich, eine große Menge von Materie mit hoher Energiedichte hervorzubringen. Das Ziel von Schwerionenkollisionen ist die Erzeugung und Charakterisierung einer makroskopischen Phase von freien Quarks und Gluonen im lokalen thermischen Gleichgewicht. Ein solcher Aggregatzustand kann neue Informationen über das QCD-Phasendiagramm und den QCD-Phasenübergang liefern. Man nimmt an, dass ein solcher Übergang stattfand, als sich die Materie des frühen Universums von einem Plasma aus Quarks und Gluonen (QGP) in ein Gas von Hadronen umwandelte...
Abstract Geant4 is a toolkit for simulating the passage of particles through matter. It includes a complete range of functionality including tracking, geometry, physics models and hits. The physics processes offered cover a comprehensive range, including electromagnetic, hadronic and optical processes, a large set of long-lived particles, materials and elements, over a wide energy range starting, in some cases, from 250 eV and extending in others to the TeV energy range. It has been designed and constructed to expose the physics models utilised, to handle complex geometries, and to enable its easy adaptation for optimal use in different sets of applications. The toolkit is the result of a worldwide collaboration of physicists and software engineers. It has been created exploiting software engineering and object-oriented technology and implemented in the C++ programming language. It has been used in applications in particle physics, nuclear physics, accelerator design, space engineering and medical physics. PACS: 07.05.Tp; 13; 23
The neutron sensitivity of the C6D6 detector setup used at n_TOF facility for capture measurements has been studied by means of detailed GEANT4 simulations. A realistic software replica of the entire n_TOF experimental hall, including the neutron beam line, sample, detector supports and the walls of the experimental area has been implemented in the simulations. The simulations have been analyzed in the same manner as experimental data, in particular by applying the Pulse Height Weighting Technique. The simulations have been validated against a measurement of the neutron background performed with a natC sample, showing an excellent agreement above 1 keV. At lower energies, an additional component in the measured natC yield has been discovered, which prevents the use of natC data for neutron background estimates at neutron energies below a few hundred eV. The origin and time structure of the neutron background have been derived from the simulations. Examples of the neutron background for two different samples are demonstrating the important role of accurate simulations of the neutron background in capture cross-section measurements.
First measurements of balance functions (BFs) of all combinations of identified charged hadron (π,K,p) pairs in Pb−Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=2.76 TeV recorded by the ALICE detector are presented. The BF measurements are carried out as two-dimensional differential correlators versus the relative rapidity (Δy) and azimuthal angle (Δφ) of hadron pairs, and studied as a function of collision centrality. The Δφ dependence of BFs is expected to be sensitive to the light quark diffusivity in the quark−gluon plasma. While the BF azimuthal widths of all pairs substantially decrease from peripheral to central collisions, the longitudinal widths exhibit mixed behaviors: BFs of ππ and cross-species pairs narrow significantly in more central collisions, whereas those of KK and pp are found to be independent of collision centrality. This dichotomy is qualitatively consistent with the presence of strong radial flow effects and the existence of two stages of quark production in relativistic heavy-ion collisions. Finally, the first measurements of the collision centrality evolution of BF integrals are presented, with the observation that charge balancing fractions are nearly independent of collision centrality in Pb−Pb collisions. Overall, the results presented provide new and challenging constraints for theoretical models of hadron production and transport in relativistic heavy-ion collisions.
First measurements of balance functions (BFs) of all combinations of identified charged hadron (π,K,p) pairs in Pb−Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=2.76 TeV recorded by the ALICE detector are presented. The BF measurements are carried out as two-dimensional differential correlators versus the relative rapidity (Δy) and azimuthal angle (Δφ) of hadron pairs, and studied as a function of collision centrality. The Δφ dependence of BFs is expected to be sensitive to the light quark diffusivity in the quark−gluon plasma. While the BF azimuthal widths of all pairs substantially decrease from peripheral to central collisions, the longitudinal widths exhibit mixed behaviors: BFs of ππ and cross-species pairs narrow significantly in more central collisions, whereas those of KK and pp are found to be independent of collision centrality. This dichotomy is qualitatively consistent with the presence of strong radial flow effects and the existence of two stages of quark production in relativistic heavy-ion collisions. Finally, the first measurements of the collision centrality evolution of BF integrals are presented, with the observation that charge balancing fractions are nearly independent of collision centrality in Pb−Pb collisions. Overall, the results presented provide new and challenging constraints for theoretical models of hadron production and transport in relativistic heavy-ion collisions.
First measurements of balance functions (BFs) of all combinations of identified charged hadron (π,K, p) pairs in Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 2.76 TeV recorded by the ALICE detector are presented. The BF measurements are carried out as two-dimensional differential correlators versus the relative rapidity (Δy) and azimuthal angle (Δφ) of hadron pairs, and studied as a function of collision centrality. The Δφ dependence of BFs is expected to be sensitive to the light quark diffusivity in the quark–gluon plasma. While the BF azimuthal widths of all pairs substantially decrease from peripheral to central collisions, the longitudinal widths exhibit mixed behaviors: BFs of ππ and cross-species pairs narrow significantly in more central collisions, whereas those of KK and pp are found to be independent of collision centrality. This dichotomy is qualitatively consistent with the presence of strong radial flow effects and the existence of two stages of quark production in relativistic heavy-ion collisions. Finally, the first measurements of the collision centrality evolution of BF integrals are presented, with the observation that charge balancing fractions are nearly independent of collision centrality in Pb–Pb collisions. Overall, the results presented provide new and challenging constraints for theoretical models of hadron production and transport in relativistic heavy-ion collisions.
The MYRRHA Project (Multi Purpose Hybrid Reactor for High Tech Applications) at Mol/belgium will be a user facility with emphasis on research with neutron generated by a spallation source. One main aspect is the demonstration of nuclear waste technology using an accelerator driven system. A superconducting linac delivers a 4 mA, 600 MeV proton beam. The first accelerating section is covered by the 17 MeV injector. It consists of a proton source, an RFQ, two room temperature CH cavities and 4 superconducting CH-cavities. The initial design has used an RF frequency of 352 MHz. Recently the frequency of the injector has been set to 176 MHz. The main reason is the possible use of a 4-rod-RFQ with reduced power dissipation and energy, respectively. The status of the overall injector layout including cavity design is presented.
The Generalized Uncertainty Principle (GUP) arises from Quantum Gravity thought experiments and contains a minimal lenght. In this thesis I calculate Schwarzschild Black Holes that are modified by the GUP. These Black Holes have the property, that their temperature does not diverge for small masses, although they still posses a curvature singularity. I calculate analytically that in more than 3+1 dimensions the temperature diverges again.
A powerful technique to distinguish the enantiomers of a chiral molecule is the Coulomb Explosion Imaging (CEI). This technique allows us to determine the handedness of a single molecule. In CEI, the molecule becomes charged by losing many electrons in a very short period of time by interacting with the light. The repulsion forces between the positive charged particles of the molecule leads the molecule to break into parts-fragments. By measuring the three vector momentum of (at least) four fragments, the handedness observable can be determined. In this thesis, CEI is induced by absorption of a single high energy photon, which creates an inner-shell hole (K shell) of the molecule. The subsequent cascade of Auger decays lead to fragmentation. We decided to work with the formic acid molecule in this thesis. Two different experiments were conducted. The first experiment focused on exciting electrons to different energy states, while the second experiment focused on extracting directly a photoelectron to the continuum and measure the angular distribution of the photoelectron in the molecular frame. The primary goal was to search for chiral signal in a pure achiral planar molecule under the previous electron processes. The results of these findings were further implemented to two more molecules.
Coupling local, slowly adapting variables to an attractor network allows to destabilize all attractors, turning them into attractor ruins. The resulting attractor relict network may show ongoing autonomous latching dynamics. We propose to use two generating functionals for the construction of attractor relict networks, a Hopfield energy functional generating a neural attractor network and a functional based on information-theoretical principles, encoding the information content of the neural firing statistics, which induces latching transition from one transiently stable attractor ruin to the next. We investigate the influence of stress, in terms of conflicting optimization targets, on the resulting dynamics. Objective function stress is absent when the target level for the mean of neural activities is identical for the two generating functionals and the resulting latching dynamics is then found to be regular. Objective function stress is present when the respective target activity levels differ, inducing intermittent bursting latching dynamics.
Generating functionals may guide the evolution of a dynamical system and constitute a possible route for handling the complexity of neural networks as relevant for computational intelligence.We propose and explore a new objective function, which allows to obtain plasticity rules for the afferent synaptic weights. The adaption rules are Hebbian, self-limiting, and result from the minimization of the Fisher information with respect to the synaptic flux. We perform a series of simulations examining the behavior of the new learning rules in various circumstances.The vector of synaptic weights aligns with the principal direction of input activities, whenever one is present. A linear discrimination is performed when there are two or more principal directions; directions having bimodal firing-rate distributions, being characterized by a negative excess kurtosis, are preferred. We find robust performance and full homeostatic adaption of the synaptic weights results as a by-product of the synaptic flux minimization. This self-limiting behavior allows for stable online learning for arbitrary durations.The neuron acquires new information when the statistics of input activities is changed at a certain point of the simulation, showing however, a distinct resilience to unlearn previously acquired knowledge. Learning is fast when starting with randomly drawn synaptic weights and substantially slower when the synaptic weights are already fully adapted.
We derive the collision term in the Boltzmann equation using the equation of motion for the Wigner function of massive spin-1/2 particles. To next-to-lowest order in h, it contains a nonlocal contribution, which is responsible for the conversion of orbital into spin angular momentum. In a proper choice of pseudogauge, the antisymmetric part of the energy-momentum tensor arises solely from this nonlocal contribution. We show that the collision term vanishes in global equilibrium and that the spin potential is, then, equal to the thermal vorticity. In the nonrelativistic limit, the equations of motion for the energy-momentum and spin tensors reduce to the well-known form for hydrodynamics for micropolar fluids.
An automated beam-setting optimization application has been implemented on top of FAIR’s control system software stack based on CERN’s LSA framework. The optimization functionality is built using the Jenetics software library implemented in Java. Tests of the software with beam have been performed at the CRYRING@ESR ion storage ring.
A novel approach to identify the geometrical (anti)clusters formed by the Polyakov loops of the same sign and to study their properties in the lattice SU(2) gluodynamics is developed. The (anti)cluster size distributions are analyzed for the lattice coupling constant β ∈ 2 [2:3115; 3]. The found distributions are similar to the ones existing in 2- and 3-dimensional Ising systems. Using the suggested approach, we explain the phase transition in SU(2) gluodynamics at β = 2.52 as a transition between two liquids during which one of the liquid droplets (the largest cluster of a certain Polyakov loop sign) experiences a condensation, while another droplet (the next to the largest cluster of opposite Polyakov loop sign) evaporates. The clusters of smaller sizes form two accompanying gases, which behave oppositely to their liquids. The liquid drop formula is used to analyze the distributions of the gas (anti)clusters and to determine their bulk, surface and topological parts of free energy. Surprisingly, even the monomer multiplicities are reproduced with high quality within such an approach. The behavior of surface tension of gaseous (anti)clusters is studied. It is shown that this quantity can serve as an order parameter of the deconfinement phase transition in SU(2) gluodynamics. Moreover, the critical exponent β of surface tension coefficient of gaseous clusters is found in the upper vicinity of critical temperature. Its value coincides with the one found for 3-dimensional Ising model within error bars. The Fisher topological exponent τ of (anti)clusters is found to have the same value 1:806±0:008, which agrees with an exactly solvable model of the nuclear liquid-gas phase transition and disagrees with the Fisher droplet model, which may evidence for the fact that the SU(2) gluodynamics and the model are in the same universality class.
The interaction of T cells and antigen-presenting cells is central to adaptive immunity and involves the formation of immunological synapses in many cases. The surface molecules of the cells form a characteristic spatial pattern whose formation mechanisms and function are largely unknown. We perform computer simulations of recent experiments on geometrically repatterned immunological synapses and explain the emerging structure as well as the formation dynamics. Only the combination of in vitro experiments and computer simulations has the potential to pinpoint the kind of interactions involved. The presented simulations make clear predictions for the structure of the immunological synapse and elucidate the role of a self-organizing attraction between complexes of T cell receptor and peptide–MHC molecule, versus a centrally directed motion of these complexes.
Gemessen wurden der gerichtete und der elliptische Fluss von Pionen und Protonen in Blei-Blei-Stößen bei einer Laborenergie des Projektils von 40 GeV pro Nukleon. Bestimmt wurde die Abhängigkeit der beiden Flusskomponenten von der Zentralität des Stoßes sowie von der Rapidität und dem Transversalimpuls der gemessenen Teilchen. Zur Rekonstruktion des Flusses wurde die Methode der Korrelation der Teilchen mit der abgeschätzten Reaktionsebene verwendet. Zur Korrektur der azimutalen Anisotropien des Detektors wurde die Methode des Zentrierens der Teilchenverteilung in Abhängigkeit von Rapidität und Transversalimpuls angewendet. Für den v2 wurde eine Abänderung des Korrelationsterms nötig, um den Einflüssen durch die schlechte Akzeptanz entgegenzuwirken. Weiterhin wurde der Einfluss von Nicht-Fluss-Korrelationen zwischen den gemessenen Teilchen auf den Fluss untersucht. Dabei erkannte man einen starken Einfluss der Transversalimpulserhaltung im v1, der durch eine Korrektur behoben werden konnte. Einen weniger starken Einfluss konnte man bei der Untersuchung im Phasenraum kurzreichweitiger Korrelationen feststellen. Es wurde erstmals deutlich ein negativer gerichteter Fluss von Protonen nahe der Schwerpunktsrapidität beobachtet, der bereits mittels meherer theoretischer Rechnungen vorhergesagt wurde. Sowohl der gerichtete als auch der elliptische Fluss erreicht bei 40 AGeV Laborenergie annähernd die gleichen Werte, die von NA49 bei 158 AGeV Laborenergie gemessen wurden. Die für den Fluss gemessenen Werte befinden sich teilweise in Übereinstimmung mit denen des Experimentes CERES/NA45, ist allerdings nur bedingt möglich, da bisher nur einzelne vorläufige Resultate veröffentlicht wurden. Die für den elliptischen Fluss gemessenen Werte bei der Schwerpunktsrapidität und einer Zentralität von 25% liegen etwas höher als man aus der beobachteten Systematik der Energieabhängigkeit zwischen den Experimenten E877 (mit 10 AGeV Laborenergie am AGS), CERES und NA49 (bei einer Energie von und 160 AGeV am SPS) sowie STAR (am RHIC bei einer Energie von psNN = 130GeV) erwartet hat. So wird von den Werten am AGS bei voller Energie zu denen am SPS bei 40 AGeV ein Anstieg von 2% auf 3,3% beobachtet. Von 40 AGeV zu 158 AGeV Laborenergie am SPS ändert sich der Wert nur minimal von 3,3% auf 3,2%. Zwischen der höheren SPS-Energie von 158 AGeV und der RHIC-Energie von psNN = 130GeV wird ein weiterer Anstieg von 3,2% auf 5,6% gemessen. Das ist ein Anzeichen für eine Anomalie, die im Bereich der SPS-Energien vorliegen könnte. Eine genauere Bestimmung des Flusses ist noch möglich, da für die Analyse dieser Arbeit erst eine Hälfte der gemessenen Daten zur Verfügung stand. Mit Hilfe dieser Daten ließe sich die Energieabhängigkeit des Flusses genauer untersuchen und die gefundene Anomalie bestätigen.
Type-II multiferroic materials, in which ferroelectric polarization is induced by inversion non-symmetric magnetic order, promise new and highly efficient multifunctional applications based on mutual control of magnetic and electric properties. However, to date this phenomenon is limited to low temperatures. Here we report giant pressure-dependence of the multiferroic critical temperature in CuBr2: at 4.5 GPa it is enhanced from 73.5 to 162 K, to our knowledge the highest TC ever reported for non-oxide type-II multiferroics. This growth shows no sign of saturating and the dielectric loss remains small under these high pressures. We establish the structure under pressure and demonstrate a 60\% increase in the two-magnon Raman energy scale up to 3.6 GPa. First-principles structural and magnetic energy calculations provide a quantitative explanation in terms of dramatically pressure-enhanced interactions between CuBr2 chains. These large, pressure-tuned magnetic interactions motivate structural control in cuprous halides as a route to applied high-temperature multiferroicity.
Experimental results are presented on event-by-event net-proton fluctuation measurements in Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 TeV, recorded by the ALICE detector at the CERN LHC. These measurements have as their ultimate goal an experimental test of Lattice QCD (LQCD) predictions on second and higher order cumulants of net-baryon distributions to search for critical behavior near the QCD phase boundary. Before confronting them with LQCD predictions, account has to be taken of correlations stemming from baryon number conservation as well as fluctuations of participating nucleons. Both effects influence the experimental measurements and are usually not considered in theoretical calculations. For the first time, it is shown that event-by-event baryon number conservation leads to subtle long-range correlations arising from very early interactions in the collisions.
Experimental results are presented on event-by-event net-proton fluctuation measurements in Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 2.76 TeV, recorded by the ALICE detector at the CERN LHC. These measurements have as their ultimate goal an experimental test of Lattice QCD (LQCD) predictions on second and higher order cumulants of net-baryon distributions to search for critical behavior near the QCD phase boundary. Before confronting them with LQCD predictions, account has to be taken of correlations stemming from baryon number conservation as well as fluctuations of participating nucleons. Both effects influence the experimental measurements and are usually not considered in theoretical calculations. For the first time, it is shown that event-by-event baryon number conservation leads to subtle long-range correlations arising from very early interactions in the collisions.
Experimental results are presented on event-by-event net-proton fluctuation measurements in Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 TeV, recorded by the ALICE detector at the CERN LHC. These measurements have as their ultimate goal an experimental test of Lattice QCD (LQCD) predictions on second and higher order cumulants of net-baryon distributions to search for critical behavior near the QCD phase boundary. Before confronting them with LQCD predictions, account has to be taken of correlations stemming from baryon number conservation as well as fluctuations of participating nucleons. Both effects influence the experimental measurements and are usually not considered in theoretical calculations. For the first time, it is shown that event-by-event baryon number conservation leads to subtle long-range correlations arising from very early interactions in the collisions.
The ultrarelativistic quantum molecular dynamics model (UrQMD) is used to study global observables in central reactions of Au+Au at sqrt[s]=200A GeV at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). Strong stopping governed by massive particle production is predicted if secondary interactions are taken into account. The underlying string dynamics and the early hadronic decoupling implies only small transverse expansion rates. However, rescattering with mesons is found to act as a source of pressure leading to additional flow of baryons and kaons, while cooling down pions.
The global polarization of the Λ and Λ¯¯¯¯ hyperons is measured for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 and 5.02 TeV recorded with the ALICE at the LHC. The results are reported differentially as a function of collision centrality and hyperon's transverse momentum (pT) for the range of centrality 5-50%, 0.5<pT<5 GeV/c, and rapidity |y|<0.5. The hyperon global polarization averaged for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 and 5.02 TeV is found to be consistent with zero, ⟨PH⟩ (%) ≈ - 0.01 ± 0.05 (stat.) ± 0.03 (syst.) in the collision centrality range 15-50%, where the largest signal is expected. The results are compatible with expectations based on an extrapolation from measurements at lower collision energies at RHIC, hydrodynamical model calculations, and empirical estimates based on collision energy dependence of directed flow, all of which predict the global polarization values at LHC energies of the order of 0.01%.
The global polarization of the Λ and Λ¯¯¯¯ hyperons is measured for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 and 5.02 TeV recorded with the ALICE at the LHC. The results are reported differentially as a function of collision centrality and hyperon's transverse momentum (pT) for the range of centrality 5-50%, 0.5<pT<5 GeV/c, and rapidity |y|<0.5. The hyperon global polarization averaged for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 and 5.02 TeV is found to be consistent with zero, ⟨PH⟩ (%) ≈ 0.01 ± 0.06 (stat.) ± 0.03 (syst.) in the collision centrality range 15-50%, where the largest signal is expected. The results are compatible with expectations based on an extrapolation from measurements at lower collision energies at RHIC, hydrodynamical model calculations, and empirical estimates based on collision energy dependence of directed flow, all of which predict the global polarization values at LHC energies of the order of 0.01%.
The global polarization of the Λ and Λ¯¯¯¯ hyperons is measured for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 and 5.02 TeV recorded with the ALICE at the LHC. The results are reported differentially as a function of collision centrality and hyperon's transverse momentum (pT) for the range of centrality 5-50%, 0.5<pT<5 GeV/c, and rapidity |y|<0.5. The hyperon global polarization averaged for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 and 5.02 TeV is found to be consistent with zero, ⟨PH⟩ (%) ≈ - 0.01 ± 0.05 (stat.) ± 0.03 (syst.) in the collision centrality range 15-50%, where the largest signal is expected. The results are compatible with expectations based on an extrapolation from measurements at lower collision energies at RHIC, hydrodynamical model calculations, and empirical estimates based on collision energy dependence of directed flow, all of which predict the global polarization values at LHC energies of the order of 0.01%.
The global polarization of the Λ and Λ¯¯¯¯ hyperons is measured for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 and 5.02 TeV recorded with the ALICE at the LHC. The results are reported differentially as a function of collision centrality and hyperon's transverse momentum (pT) for the range of centrality 5-50%, 0.5<pT<5 GeV/c, and rapidity |y|<0.5. The hyperon global polarization averaged for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 and 5.02 TeV is found to be consistent with zero, ⟨PH⟩ (%) ≈ 0.01 ± 0.06 (stat.) ± 0.03 (syst.) in the collision centrality range 15-50%, where the largest signal is expected. The results are compatible with expectations based on an extrapolation from measurements at lower collision energies at RHIC, hydrodynamical model calculations, and empirical estimates based on collision energy dependence of directed flow, all of which predict the global polarization values at LHC energies of the order of 0.01%.
The scalar glueball G is the lightest particle of the Yang–Mills sector of QCD, with a lattice predicted mass of about mG≃1.7GeV. It is natural to investigate glueball-glueball scattering and the possible emergence of a bound state, that we call glueballonium. We perform this study in the context of a widely used dilaton potential, that depends on a single dimensionful parameter ΛG. We consider a unitarization prescription that allows us to predict the lowest partial waves in the elastic window. These quantities can be in principle calculated on the lattice, thus offering possibility for testing the validity of the dilaton potential and an independent determination of its parameter. Moreover, we also show that a stable glueballonium exists if ΛG is small enough. In particular, for ΛG compatible with the expectations from the gluon condensate, the glueballonium has a mass of about 3.4GeV.
This letter reports on how the Wilson flow technique can efficaciously kill the short-distance quantum fluctuations of 2- and 3-gluon Green functions, remove the ΛQCD scale and destroy the transition from the confining non-perturbative to the asymptotically-free perturbative sector. After the Wilson flow, the behavior of the Green functions with momenta can be described in terms of the quasi-classical instanton background. The same behavior also occurs, before the Wilson flow, at low-momenta. This last result permits applications as, for instance, the detection of instanton phenomenological properties or a determination of the lattice spacing only from the gauge sector of the theory.
We calculate the shadowing of sea quarks and gluons and show that the shadowing of gluons is not simply given by the sea quark shadowing, especially at small x. The calculations are done in the lab frame approach by using the generalized vector meson dominance model. Here the virtual photon turns into a hadronic fluctuation long before the nucleus. The subsequent coherent interaction with more than one nucleon in the nucleus leads to the depletion sigma(gamma*A )< A*sigma(gamma * N) known as shadowing. A comparison of the shadowing of quarks to E665 data for 40Ca and 207Pb shows good agreement.
We calculate the shadowing of sea quarks and gluons and show that the shadowing of gluons is not simply given by the sea quark shadowing, especially at small x. The calculations are done in the lab frame approach by using the generalized vector meson dominance model. Here the virtual photon turns into a hadronic fluctuation long before the nucleus. The subsequent coherent interaction with more than one nucleon in the nucleus leads to the depletion sigma(gamma* A) < A sigma( gamma*N) known as shadowing. A comparison of the shadowing of quarks to E665 data for 40Ca and 207Pb shows good agreement.
In this work, largely based on [J. L. Albacete, A. Soto-Ontoso, Hot spots and the hollowness of proton-proton interactions at high energies, arXiv:1605.09176; J. L. Albacete, H. Petersen, A. Soto-Ontoso, Correlated wounded hot spots in proton-proton interactions, arXiv:1612.06274], we present a novel initial state geometry for proton-proton interactions. We rely on gluonic hot spots as effective degrees of freedom whose transverse positions inside the proton are correlated. We explore the impact of these non-trivial spatial correlations on the eccentricity and triangularity of the system following a Monte Carlo Glauber approach.
We study the gluonic phase in a two-flavor color superconductor as a function of the ratio of the gap over the chemical potential mismatch, Δ/δμ. We find that the gluonic phase resolves the chromomagnetic instability encountered in a two-flavor color superconductor for Δ/δμ<2. We also calculate approximately the free energies of the gluonic phase and the single plane-wave LOFF phase and show that the former is favored over the latter for a wide range of coupling strengths.
The outer segment of vertebrate photoreceptors is a specialized compartment that hosts all the signaling components required for visual transduction. Specific to rod photoreceptors is an unusual set of three glutamic acid-rich proteins (GARPs) as follows: two soluble forms, GARP1 and GARP2, and the N-terminal cytoplasmic domain (GARP′ part) of the B1 subunit of the cyclic GMP-gated channel. GARPs have been shown to interact with proteins at the rim of the disc membrane. Here we characterized native GARP1 and GARP2 purified from bovine rod photoreceptors. Amino acid sequence analysis of GARPs revealed structural features typical of “natively unfolded” proteins. By using biophysical techniques, including size-exclusion chromatography, dynamic light scattering, NMR spectroscopy, and circular dichroism, we showed that GARPs indeed exhibit a large degree of intrinsic disorder. Analytical ultracentrifugation and chemical cross-linking showed that GARPs exist in a monomer/multimer equilibrium. The results suggested that the function of GARP proteins is linked to their structural disorder. They may provide flexible spacers or linkers tethering the cyclic GMP-gated channel in the plasma membrane to peripherin at the disc rim to produce a stack of rings of these protein complexes along the long axis of the outer segment. GARP proteins could then provide the environment needed for protein interactions in the rim region of discs.
More than 75% of surface and secreted proteins are modified by covalent addition of complex sugars through N- and O-glycosylation. Unlike proteins, glycans do not typically adopt specific secondary structures and remain very mobile, influencing protein dynamics and interactions with other molecules. Glycan conformational freedom impairs complete structural elucidation of glycoproteins. Computer simulations may be used to model glycan structure and dynamics. However, such simulations typically require thousands of computing hours on specialized supercomputers, thus limiting routine use. Here, we describe a reductionist method that can be implemented on personal computers to graft ensembles of realistic glycan conformers onto static protein structures in a matter of minutes. Using this open-source pipeline, we reconstructed the full glycan cover of SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein (S-protein) and a human GABAA receptor. Focusing on S-protein, we show that GlycoSHIELD recapitulates key features of extended simulations of the glycosylated protein, including epitope masking, and provides new mechanistic insights on N-glycan impact on protein structural dynamics.
In LHC Run 3, ALICE will increase the data taking rate significantly to 50 kHz continuous read-out of minimum bias Pb—Pb collisions. The reconstruction strategy of the online-offline computing upgrade foresees a first synchronous online reconstruction stage during data taking enabling detector calibration and data compression, and a posterior calibrated asynchronous reconstruction stage. Many new challenges arise, among them continuous TPC read-out, more overlapping collisions, no a priori knowledge of the primary vertex and of location-dependent calibration in the synchronous phase, identification of low-momentum looping tracks, and sophisticated raw data compression. The tracking algorithm for the Time Projection Chamber (TPC) will be based on a Cellular Automaton and the Kalman filter. The reconstruction shall run online, processing 50 times more collisions per second than today, while yielding results comparable to current offline reconstruction. Our TPC track finding leverages the potential of hardware accelerators via the OpenCL and CUDA APIs in a shared source code for CPUs and GPUs for both reconstruction stages. We give an overview of the status of Run 3 tracking including performance on processors and GPUs and achieved compression ratios.
Scanning Hall probe microscopy is attractive for minimally invasive characterization of magnetic thin films and nanostructures by measurement of the emanating magnetic stray field. Established sensor probes operating at room temperature employ highly miniaturized spin-valve elements or semimetals, such as Bi. As the sensor layer structures are fabricated by patterning of planar thin films, their adaption to custom-made sensor probe geometries is highly challenging or impossible. Here we show how nanogranular ferromagnetic Hall devices fabricated by the direct-write method of focused electron beam induced deposition (FEBID) can be tailor-made for any given probe geometry. Furthermore, we demonstrate how the magnetic stray field sensitivity can be optimized in situ directly after direct-write nanofabrication of the sensor element. First proof-of-principle results on the use of this novel scanning Hall sensor are shown.
In this paper we derive a formula for the energy loss due to elastic N to N particle scattering in models with extra dimensions that are compactified on a radius R. In contrast to a previous derivation we also calculate additional terms that are suppressed by factors of frequency over compactification radius. In the limit of a large compactification radius R those terms vanish and the standard result for the non compactified case is recovered.
Gravitational radiation from ultra high energy cosmic rays in models with large extra dimensions
(2006)
The effects of classical gravitational radiation in models with large extra dimensions are investigated for ultra high energy cosmic rays (CRs). The cross sections are implemented into a simulation package (SENECA) for high energy hadron induced CR air showers. We predict that gravitational radiation from quasi-elastic scattering could be observed at incident CR energies above 10^9 GeV for a setting with more than two extra dimensions. It is further shown that this gravitational energy loss can alter the energy reconstruction for CR energies E_CR > 5 10^9 GeV.
n this article we will focus on the appearance of the hadron-quark phase transition and the formation of strange matter in the interior region of the hypermassive neutron star and its conjunction with the spectral properties of the emitted gravitational waves (GWs). A strong hadron-quark phase transition might give rise to a mass-radius relation with a twin star shape and we will show in this article that a twin star collapse followed by a twin star oscillation is feasible. If such a twin star collapse would happen during the postmerger phase it will be imprinted in the GW-signal.
Gravitational-wave cosmology with dark sirens: state of the art and perspectives for 3G detectors
(2022)
A joint fit of the mass and redshift distributions of the population of Binary Black Holes detected with Gravitational-Wave observations can be used to obtain constraints on the Hubble parameter and on deviations from General Relativity in the propagation of Gravitational Waves. We first present applications of this technique to the latest catalog of Gravitational-Wave events, focusing on the comparison of different parametrizations for the source-frame mass distribution of Black Hole Binaries. We find that models with more than one feature are favourite by the data, as suggested by population studies, even when varying the cosmology. Then, we discuss perspectives for the use of this technique with third generation Gravitational-Wave detectors, exploiting the recently developed Fisher information matrix Python code GWFAST.
In this paper an instability calculation is given for an axially symmetric gas distribution which has a differential rotation and in which a magnetic field is present. It is a generalization of similar calculations given by CHANDRASEKHAR and BEL and SCHATZMAN. The generalization becomes necessary for the study of problems of the formation of planetary systems, and star formation.
The instability conditions and the critical wave lengths are calculated for plane-wave-like disturbances. For disturbances running perpendicularly to the axis of rotation instability can occur only if the gas density exceeds a critical value which depends on the differential rotation at the considered distance only as long as pressure gradients and gradients of the magnetic field strength are negligible. If the gas density exceeds this critical value the shortest unstable wave length is proportional to the square root of vT2+vB2, where vT means the velocity of sound and vB the ALFVÉN-velocity.
For disturbances running parallel to the axis of rotation in addition to the JEANS instability a new type of instability occurs due to the simultaneous action of the magnetic field and the differential rotation; for rigid rotation this instability vanishes.
Presolar grains and their isotopic compositions provide valuable constraints to AGB star nucleosynthesis. However, there is a sample of O- and Al-rich dust, known as group 2 oxide grains, whose origin is difficult to address. On the one hand, the 17O/16O isotopic ratios shown by those grains are similar to the ones observed in low-mass red giant stars. On the other hand, their large 18O depletion and 26Al enrichment are challenging to account for. Two different classes of AGB stars have been proposed as progenitors of this kind of stellar dust: intermediate mass AGBs with hot bottom burning, or low mass AGBs where deep mixing is at play. Our models of low-mass AGB stars with a bottom-up deep mixing are shown to be likely progenitors of group 2 grains, reproducing together the 17O/16O, 18O/16O and 26Al/27Al values found in those grains and being less sensitive to nuclear physics inputs than our intermediate-mass models with hot bottom burning.
Continued advances in quantum technologies rely on producing nanometer-scale wires. Although several state-of-the-art nanolithographic technologies and bottom-up synthesis processes have been used to engineer these wires, critical challenges remain in growing uniform atomic-scale crystalline wires and constructing their network structures. Here, we discover a simple method to fabricate atomic-scale wires with various arrangements, including stripes, X-junctions, Y-junctions, and nanorings. Single-crystalline atomic-scale wires of a Mott insulator, whose bandgap is comparable to those of wide-gap semiconductors, are spontaneously grown on graphite substrates by pulsed-laser deposition. These wires are one unit cell thick and have an exact width of two and four unit cells (1.4 and 2.8 nm) and lengths up to a few micrometers. We show that the nonequilibrium reaction-diffusion processes may play an essential role in atomic pattern formation. Our findings offer a previously unknown perspective on the nonequilibrium self-organization phenomena on an atomic scale, paving a unique way for the quantum architecture of nano-network.
In der hier vorliegenden Arbeit wurden Fragen der atomaren Korrelation sowie Verschränkung untersucht und ein Beobachtungsfenster geöffnet, durch welches es möglich ist, Einblick in die Grundzustandswellenfunktion von Helium zu erhalten. Der Elektronentransfer (Pq++He->P(q-1)++He+) in schnellen Ion-Atom-Stößen findet im Bereich des Überlapps der Wellenfunktionen des gebundenen Anfangs- und Endzustandes statt [JOpp28a, MMcD70]. Daher kann diese Reaktion besonders selektiv an der Grundzustandswellenfunktion angreifen. Die bei der Transferionisation (Pq++He->P(q-1)++He2++e-) zusätzlich stattfindende Ionisation involviert auch das zweite Elektron. Dadurch ist es möglich die komplexe Vielteilchendynamik zu untersuchen und wie später in dieser Arbeit gezeigt wird, unter bestimmten Bedingungen auch sensitiv auf die Anfangszustandskorrelation zu sein! Die Messungen wurden mit H+-, He+- und He2+-Projektilen bei Einschussenergien von 40 - 630 keV/u (1,25 < vP < 5,02 a. u.) durchgeführt. Durch den Elektronentransferprozess wird auch die Vermessung des Endzustandes, den Impulsen, aller drei Teilchen (Projektil, Elektron und He2+-Rückstoßion) erleichtert. Durch das umgeladene, dann neutrale, Projektil werden zusätzlich die Post-Collision-Effekte minimiert. Zur experimentellen Untersuchung kommt die seit Jahren etablierte Technologie des Reaktionsmikroskops (COLTRIMS, COLd Target Recoil Ion Momentum Spectroscopy) zum Einsatz [HSch89, RDoe00a, JUll03], die sich durch eine 4¼-Impulsakzeptanz für alle emittierten Teilchen auszeichnet. Nach Kreuzung der Projektilionen mit einem kalten und wohl lokalisierten Gasstrahl werden die umgeladenen Projektile detektiert. Die im Überlappbereich entstehenden Elektronen und Ionen werden mittels elektrischer und magnetischer Felder ebenfalls auf orts- und zeitauflösenden Detektoren projiziert. Anhand des Auftreffortes und der Flugzeit können die dreidimensionalen Impulsvektoren eindeutig rekonstruiert werden. Je nach Energie Projektile dominieren unterschiedliche atomare Reaktionsmechanismen. Entsprechend sind es zwei Fragenkomplexe, denen sich diese Arbeit hauptsächlich widmet: - Was ist die Reaktionsdynamik? Welche Mechanismen tragen zur Reaktion bei und wie hängen diese von Projektilladung und -energie ab? - Lässt sich die Grundzustandswellenfkt. mit dieser Technik abbilden? Die erzielten Ergebnisse sehen wie folgt aus: - Im Bereich langsamer Stöße (vP <= vB;e) wird der Stoßprozess in einem quasimolekularen Bild beschrieben (Sattelpunktionisation). Hier konnten im Wesentlichen die experimentellen Ergebnisse von Schmidt zum symmetrischen Stoßsystems He2+/He [LSch00] bestätigt und zu höheren Projektilgeschwindigkeiten fortgeschrieben werden (60 keV/u). Für die Stoßsysteme He+/He und H+/He wurden sehr ähnliche Emissionsstrukturen im Impulsraum gefunden. - Bei allen untersuchten Projektilenergien und Stoßsystemen wurde eine vom Elektroneneinfang unabhängige Stoßionisation durch Wechselwirkung mit dem Projektil (Binary Encounter, BE) gefunden. Die Erwartung, dass der Targetkern nur Beobachter der Ionisation ist, wurden eindeutig widerlegt und die Abweichungen als Folge von Korrelationseffekten gedeutet. - Speziell für das Stoßsystem He+/He bei 60 keV/u wurden sehr viele im Geschwindigkeitsraum um vP verteilte Elektronen beobachtet und einem Dreistufenprozess zugeschrieben: Zuerst erfolgt die Ionisation des Projektils und anschließend ein resonanter Zweielektroneneinfang. - Wird ein Elektron sehr schnell entfernt, wie durch den Elektroneneinfang bei hohen Projektilgeschwindigkeiten (vP ¸ 3 a. u.) findet die Ionisation sehr häufig durch Shake-off [TAbe67] statt. Die Elektronen wurden entgegen der Strahlrichtung emittiert, zu negativen Longitudinalimpulsen. Darüberhinaus wurde kein Unterschied zwischen den verschiedenen Projektilen beobachtet. Da für den Shake-off-Prozess unter den hier realisierten Bedingungen das Projektil nicht mit dem emittierten Elektron wechselwirkte, spiegelt die Elektronenimpulsverteilung direkt den, durch den Elektroneneinfang präparierten Anteil, der Grundzustandswellenfunktion wider [AGod04, MSch05]. Theoretische Rechnungen bestätigen, dass die rückwärtige Elektronenemission nur durch die stark korrelierten nicht-s2-Anteile im Heliumgrundzustand zu erklären ist. Diese Beimischungen höherer Drehimpulse von weniger als 2 % konnten entgegen der verbreiteten Lehrmeinung zum ersten Mal experimentell nachgewiesen und vermessen werden.
The third dataset dedicated to the Open Guided Waves platform aims at carbon fiber composite plates with an additional omega stringer at constant temperature conditions. The two structures used in this work are representative for real aircraft components. Comprehensive measurements were recorded in order to study (I) the impact of the omega stringer on guided wave propagation, and (II) elliptical reference damages of different sizes located at three separate positions on the structure. Measurements were recorded for narrowband excitation (5-cycle toneburst with varying carrier frequencies) and broadband excitation (using chirp waveforms). The paper presents the results of a technical validation including numerical modelling, and enables further research, for example related to probability of detection (POD) analysis.
We consider the theory of high temperature superconductivity from the viewpoint of a strongly correlated electron system. In particular, we discuss Gutzwiller projected wave functions, which incorporate strong correlations by prohibiting double occupancy in orbitals with strong on-site repulsion. After a general overview on high temperature superconductivity, we discuss Anderson’s resonating valence bond (RVB) picture and its implementation by renormalized mean field theory (RMFT) and variational Monte Carlo (VMC) techniques. In the following, we present a detailed review on RMFT and VMC results with emphasis on our recent contributions. Especially, we are interested in spectral features of Gutzwiller-Bogoliubov quasiparticles obtained by extending VMC and RMFT techniques to excited states. We explicitly illustrate this method to determine the quasiparticle weight and provide a comparison with angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). We conclude by summarizing recent successes and by discussing open questions, which must be solved for a thorough understanding of high temperature superconductivity by Gutzwiller projected wave functions.
HADES : ein Dielektronenspekrometer hoher Akzeptanz für relativistische Schwerionenkollisionen
(1995)
Das Dielektronenspektrometer HADES (High Acceptance Dielectron Spectrometer) wird gegenwärtig am Schwerionensynchrotron der Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (Darmstadt) aufgebaut. Die Spektroskopie von Elektron-Positron-Paaren (Dielektronen) aus Kern-Kern-Kollisonen mit Projektilenergien von 1 bis 2 GeV/Nukleon verspricht einen Einblick in die Eigenschaften von Hadronen bei Dichten, die das Dreifache von normaler Kerndichte erreichen. Es wird erwartet, daß sich die Massenverteilung der unterhalb der Schwelle erzeugten leichten Vektormesonen rho. omega und phi anhand ihres Zerfalls in Dielektronen experimentell untersuchen läßt. Die Beobachtung von Massenänderungen kann Hinweise auf die Restauration der im Vakuum gebrochenen chiralen Symmetrie geben. Die Eigenschaften des Spektrometers wurden in der vorliegenden Arbeit mit Simulationsrechnungen (GEANT) untersucht und optimiert. Zur Leptonenidentifizierung dient ein ortsempfindlicher Cerenkov-Zähler (RICH1) mit Gasradiator, azimutal symmetrischem Spiegel und V-Photonendetektor. Durch die geometrische Anordnung des RICH und mit sechs supraleitenden Spulen in toroidaler Anordung erreicht HADES eine Polarwinkelakzeptanz von 18 bis 85 Grad. Die Feldverteilung ist der kinematischen Impulsverteilung angepaßt und garantiert Feldfreiheit im RICH. Je ein Paar Minidriftkammern vor und hinter dem Magnetfeldbereich messen die Trajektorie zur anschließenden Rekonstruktion von Impuls, Winkel und Vertex. Zuletzt passieren die Teilchen META, eine Detektorkombination von Szintillatoren und Schauerdetektor. Aus der Multiplizität geladener Teilchen in den Szintillatoren werden zentrale Kollisionen für den Trigger der ersten Stufe selektiert. Den Trigger der zweiten Stufe definieren zwei erkannte Ringe im RICH, die jeweils einem Elektronensignal in META zuzuordnen sind. HADES ist ein Experiment der zweiten Generation. Die Messungen mit dem Dileptonenspektrometer DLS am BEVALAC (Berkeley, USA) ergaben nur für leichte Stoßsysteme e+e- -Spektren guter Statistik. HADES besitzt mit 35% die hundertfache geometrische e+e- - Akzeptanz des DLS. Darüber hinaus können mit einer Massenauflösung von weniger als 1% (DLS 12%) die e+e- -Beiträge von omega- und rho-Meson getrennt werden. Es ist für die Anforderungen von Au+Au-Kollisionen bei hohen Kollisionsraten von 106 pro Sekunde konzipiert. Bei einer Anzahl von bis zu 170 Protonen und 20 geladenen Pionen sowie mehr als 0.1 e+e- -Paaren durch den pi 0-Zerfall werden pro zentralerKollision etwa 10 exp 6 Dielektronen aus dem rho- oder omega-Zerfall erwartet. Leptonen, die aus dem Zerfall verschiedener pi 0-Mesonen stammen, bilden kombinatorische e+e- -Paare, die auch im e+e- -Massenbereich der Vektormesonen beitragen können. Durch Rekonstruktion und durch Methoden der Untergrunderkennung wird der e+e- -Untergrund um nahezu zwei Größenordnungen unterdrückt, während die Effizienz für echte Dielektronen etwa 55% beträgt. Die Leptonen des verbleibenden Untergrunds stammen zu mehr als 50% aus dem pi-0-Dalitz-Zerfall und zu etwa 40% aus externer Paarkonversion von ..-Quanten des Zerfalls pi 0.. , wobei Konversionsprozesse im Radiatorgas und im Target zu gleichen Teilen beitragen. pi 0-Dalitz-Zerfall überwiegt im kombinatorischen Massenspektrum bis 500 MeV/c2 ; oberhalb von 500 MeV/c2 dominiert externe Paarkonversion.
HADES experiment at GSI is the only high precision experiment probing nuclear matter in the beam energy range of a few AGeV. Pion, proton and ion beams are used to study rare dielectron and strangeness probes to diagnose properties of strongly interacting matter in this energy regime. Selected results from p + A and A + A collisions are presented and discussed.
In March 2019 the HADES experiment recorded 14 billion Ag+Ag collisions at √SNN = 2.55 GeV as a part of the FAIR phase-0 physics program. With the capabilities to measure and analyze particles forming the bulk matter, namely pions, protons and light nuclei, as well as rare probes like dilepton decays of vectormesons and strange hadrons, the HADES experiment allows to study the properties of matter at high densities in great detail. In this contribution a special focus is put on the reconstruction of weakly decaying strange hadrons.
Hadron and hadron cluster production in a hydrodynamical model including particle evaporation
(1997)
We discuss the evolution of the mixed phase at RHIC and SPS within boostinvariant hydrodynamics. In addition to the hydrodynamical expansion, we also consider evaporation of particles o the surface of the fluid. The back-reaction of this evaporation process on the dynamics of the fluid shortens the lifetime of the mixed phase. In our model this lifetime of the mixed phase is d 12 fm/c in Au + Au at RHIC and d 6.5 fm/c in Pb + Pb at SPS, even in the limit of vanishing transverse expansion velocity. Strong separation of strangeness occurs, especially in events (or at rapidities) with relatively high initial net baryon and strangeness number, enhancing the multiplicity of MEMOs (multiply strange nuclear clusters). If antiquarks and antibaryons reach saturation in the course of the pure QGP or mixed phase, we find that at RHIC the ratio of antideuterons to deuterons may exceed 0.3 and even 4He/4He > 0.1. In S + Au at SPS we find only N/N H 0.1. Due to fluctuations, at RHIC even negative baryon number at midrapidity is possible in individual events, so that the antibaryon and antibaryon-cluster yields exceed those of the corresponding baryons and clusters.
Measured hadron yields from relativistic nuclear collisions can be equally well understood in two physically distinct models, namely a static thermal hadronic source versus a time-dependent, non-equilibrium hadronization off a quark gluon plasma droplet. Due to the time-dependent particle evaporation off the hadronic surface in the latter approach the hadron ratios change (by factors of / 5) in time. The overall particle yields then reflect time averages over the actual thermodynamic properties of the system at a certain stage of evolution.
Relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions create a "fireball" of strongly interacting matter at high energy density. At very high energy this is suggested to be partonic matter, but at lower energy it should consist of yet unknown hadronic, perhaps coherent degrees of freedom. The freeze-out of this high density state to a hadron gas can tell us about properties of fireball matter. Date (v1): Thu, 19 Dec 2002 12:52:34 GMT (146kb) Date (revised v2): Thu, 16 Jan 2003 15:11:47 GMT (146kb) Date (revised v3): Wed, 14 May 2003 12:49:35 GMT (146kb)
Measured hadron yields from relativistic nuclear collisions can be equally well understood in two physically distinct models, namely a static thermal hadronic source vs. a time-dependent, nonequilibrium hadronization o a quark-gluon plasma droplet. Due to the time-dependent particle evapora- tion o the hadronic surface in the latter approach the hadron ratios change (by factors of <H 5) in time. Final particle yields reflect time averages over the actual thermodynamic properties of the system at a certain stage of the evolution. Calculated hadron, strangelet and (anti-)cluster yields as well as freeze-out times are presented for di erent systems. Due to strangeness distillation the system moves rapidly out of the T, µq plane into the µs-sector. Classif.: 25.75.Dw, 12.38.Mh, 24.85.+p
The first measurement of the fluctuation of the kaon-to-proton ratio in relativistic heavy-ion collisions is presented. This thesis details the analysis procedure for identifying kaons and protons using the NA49 experiment at CERN-SPS and discusses the results in the context of the current state of the field.
We discuss the effects of the final hadronic state, in ultra-relativistic nuclear collisions, on hadronic resonance properties and measurable production rates. In particular we will compare our results with recent ALICE data on resonance production. We show that the hadronic phase of the system evolution has a considerable impact on the measured resonance ratios and pT spectra. We also discuss some of the remaining uncertainties in the model and how they may be addressed in future studies.
The transverse mass spectra of Omega hyperons and phi mesons measured recently by STAR Collaboration in Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 130 GeV are described within a hydrodynamic model of the quark gluon plasma expansion and hadronization. The flow parameters at the plasma hadronization extracted by fitting these data are used to predict the transverse mass spectra of J/psi and psi' mesons.
We use 4stout improved staggered lattice data at imaginary chemical potentials to calculate fugacity expansion coefficients in finite temperature QCD. We discuss the phenomenological interpretation of our results within the hadron resonance gas (HRG) model, and the hints they give us about the hadron spectrum. We also discuss features of the higher order coefficients that are not captured by the HRG. This conference contribution is based on our recent papers [1, 2].
We calculate the yields of pions, kaons, and Æ-mesons for RHIC and LHC energies assuming thermodynamical equilibration of the produced minijets, and using as input results from pQCD for the energy densities at midrapidity. In the calculation of the production of partons and of transverse energy one has to account for nuclear shadowing. By using two parametrizations for the gluon shadowing one derives energy densities differing strongly in magnitude. In this publication we link those perturbatively calculated energy densities of partons via entropy conservation in an ideal fluid to the hadron multiplicities at chemical freeze-out.
We calculate the yields of a variety of hadrons for RHIC and LHC energies assuming thermodynamical equilibration of the produced minijets, and using as input results from pQCD for the energy densities at midrapidity. In the calculation of the production of partons and of transverse energy one has to account for nuclear shadowing. By using two parametrizations for the gluon shadowing one derives energy densities di ering strongly in magnitude. In this publication we link those perturbatively calculated energy densities of partons via entropy conservation in an ideal fluid to the hadron multiplicities at chemical freeze-out.
Two-particle correlation functions of negative hadrons over wide phase space, and transverse mass spectra of negative hadrons and deuterons near mid-rapidity have been measured in central Pb+Pb collisions at 158 GeV per nucleon by the NA49 experiment at the CERN SPS. A novel Coulomb correction procedure for the negative two-particle correlations is employed making use of the measured oppositely charged particle correlation. Within an expanding source scenario these results are used to extract the dynamic characteristics of the hadronic source, resolving the ambiguities between the temperature and transverse expansion velocity of the source, that are unavoidable when single and two particle spectra are analysed separately. The source shape, the total duration of the source expansion, the duration of particle emission, the freeze-out temperature and the longitudinal and transverse expansion velocities are deduced.
We analyze the hadronic freeze-out in ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions at RHIC in a transport approach which combines hydrodynamics for the early, dense, deconfined stage of the reaction with a microscopic non-equilibrium model for the later hadronic stage at which the hydrodynamic equilibrium assumptions are not valid. With this ansatz we are able to self-consistently calculate the freeze-out of the system and determine space-time hypersurfaces for individual hadron species. The space-time domains of the freeze-out for several hadron species are found to be actually four-dimensional, and di er drastically for the individual hadrons species. Freeze-out radii distributions are similar in width for most hadron species, even though the is found to be emitted rather close to the phase boundary and shows the smallest freeze- out radii and times among all baryon species. The total lifetime of the system does not change by more than 10% when going from SPS to RHIC energies.
We analyze hadrochemical freeze-out in central Pb+Pb collisions at CERN SPS and LHC energies. Employing the UrQMD hybrid transport model we study the effects of the final hadron/resonance expansion phase on the hadron multiplicities established at hadronization. The bulk meson yields freeze out directly at hadronization whereas the baryon-antibaryon sector is subject to significant alterations, due to annihilation and regeneration processes. We quantify the latter changes by survival factors for each species which are applied to modify the statistical model predictions for the data. The modified SM analysis recovers the hadronization points, which coincide with the recent lattice QCD predictions of the parton-hadron transition line at finite baryochemical potential.
Using CORSIKA for simulating extensive air showers, we study the relation between the shower characteristics and features of hadronic multiparticle production at low energies. We report about investigations of typical energies and phase space regions of secondary particles which are important for muon production in extensive air showers. Possibilities to measure relevant quantities of hadron production in existing and planned accelerator experiments are discussed.
We calculate p, ±,K± and (+ 0) rapidity distributions and compare to experimental data from SIS to SPS energies within the UrQMD and HSD transport approaches that are both based on string, quark, diquark (q, ¯q, qq, ¯q ¯q) and hadronic degrees of freedom. The two transport models do not include any explicit phase transition to a quark-gluon plasma (QGP). It is found that both approaches agree rather well with each other and with the experimental rapidity distributions for protons, s, ± and K±. In- spite of this apparent agreement both transport models fail to reproduce the maximum in the excitation function for the ratio K+/ + found experimen- tally between 11 and 40 A·GeV. A comparison to the various experimental data shows that this failure is dominantly due to an insu cient description of pion rapidity distributions rather than missing strangeness . The modest di erences in the transport model results on the other hand can be attributed to di erent implementations of string formation and frag- mentation, that are not su ciently controlled by experimental data for the elementary reactions in vacuum.
The simultaneous description of the hadronic yields, pion, kaon and proton spectra, elliptic flows and femtoscopy scales in hydrokinetic model of A+A collisions is presented at different centralities for the top RHIC and LHC energies. The hydrokinetic model is used in its hybrid version that allows one to switch correctly to the UrQMD cascade at the isochronic hypersurface which separates the cascade stage and decaying hydrodynamic one. The results are compared with pure hybrid model where hydrodynamics and hadronic cascade are matching just at the non-space-like hypersurface of chemical freeze-out. The initial conditions are based on both Glauber- and KLN- Monte-Carlo simulations and results are compared. It seems that the observables, especially femtoscopy data, prefer the Glauber initial conditions. The modification of the particle number ratios caused, in particular, by the particle annihilations at the afterburn stage is analyzed.