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We discuss the possibility of producing a new kind of nuclear system by putting a few antibaryons inside ordinary nuclei. The structure of such systems is calculated within the relativistic mean field model assuming that the nucleon and antinucleon potentials are related by the G parity transformation. The presence of antinucleons leads to decreasing vector potential and increasing scalar potential for the nucleons. As a result, a strongly bound system of high density is formed. Due to the significant reduction of the available phase space the annihilation probability might be strongly suppressed in such systems.
The width of the ω meson in cold nuclear matter is computed in a hadronic many-body approach, focusing on a detailed treatment of the medium modifications of intermediate πρ states. The π and ρ propagators are dressed by their self-energies in nuclear matter taken from previously constrained many-body calculations. The pion self-energy includes Nh and Δh excitations with short-range correlations, while the ρ self-energy incorporates the same dressing of its 2π cloud with a full 3-momentum dependence and vertex corrections, as well as direct resonance-hole excitations; both contributions were quantitatively fit to total photo-absorption spectra and πN→ρN scattering. Our calculations account for in-medium decays of type ωN→πN(⁎),ππN(Δ), and 2-body absorptions ωNN→NN(⁎),πNN. This causes deviations of the in-medium ω width from a linear behavior in density, with important contributions from spacelike ρ propagators. The ω width from the ρπ cloud may reach up to 200 MeV at normal nuclear matter density, with a moderate 3-momentum dependence. This largely resolves the discrepancy of linear T–ϱ approximations with the values deduced from nuclear photoproduction measurements.
The dynamics of strange pseudoscalar and vector mesons in hot and dense nuclear matter is studied within a chiral unitary framework in coupled channels. Our results set up the starting point for implementations in microscopic transport approaches of heavy-ion collisions, particularly at the conditions of the forthcoming experiments at GSI/FAIR and NICA-Dubna. In the K̄ N sector we focus on the calculation of (off-shell) transition rates for the most relevant binary reactions involved in strangeness production close to threshold energies, with special attention to the excitation of sub-threshold hyperon resonances and isospin effects (e.g. K̄ p vs K̄ n). We also give an overview of recent theoretical developments regarding the dynamics of strange vector mesons (K*, K̄* and ϕ) in the nuclear medium, in connection with experimental activity from heavy-ion collisions and nuclear production reactions. We emphasize the role of hadronic decay modes and the excitation of hyperon resonances as the driving mechanisms modifying the properties of vector mesons.
n this contribution we lay down a lattice setup that allows for the nonperturbative study of a field theoretical model where a SU(2) fermion doublet, subjected to non-Abelian gauge interactions, is also coupled to a complex scalar field doublet via a Yukawa and an “irrelevant” Wilson-like term. Using naive fermions in quenched approximation and based on the renormalizedWard identities induced by purely fermionic chiral transformations, lattice observables are discussed that enable: a) in theWigner phase, the determinations of the critical Yukawa coupling value where the purely fermionic chiral transformation become a symmetry up to lattice artifacts; b) in the Nambu-Goldstone phase of the resulting critical theory, a stringent test of the actual generation of a fermion mass term of non-perturbative origin. A soft twisted fermion mass term is introduced to circumvent the problem of exceptional configurations, and observables are then calculated in the limit of vanishing twisted mass.
Testing a non-perturbative mechanism for elementary fermion mass generation: numerical results
(2018)
Based on a recent proposal according to which elementary particle masses could be generated by a non-perturbative dynamical phenomenon, alternative to the Higgs mechanism, we carry out lattice simulations of a model where a non-abelian strongly interacting fermion doublet is also coupled to a doublet of complex scalar fields via a Yukawa and an “irrelevant" Wilson-like term. In this pioneering study we use naive fermions and work in the quenched approximation. We present preliminary numerical results both in the Wigner and in the Nambu-Goldstone phase, focusing on the observables relevant to check the occurrence of the conjectured dynamical fermion mass generation effect in the continuum limit of the critical theory in its spontaneously broken phase.
A generalized teleparallel cosmological model, f(TG,T), containing the torsion scalar T and the teleparallel counterpart of the Gauss–Bonnet topological invariant TG, is studied in the framework of the Noether symmetry approach. As f(G,R) gravity, where G is the Gauss–Bonnet topological invariant and R is the Ricci curvature scalar, exhausts all the curvature information that one can construct from the Riemann tensor, in the same way, f(TG,T) contains all the possible information directly related to the torsion tensor. In this paper, we discuss how the Noether symmetry approach allows one to fix the form of the function f(TG,T) and to derive exact cosmological solutions.
Die Primärwirkung von Röntgenstrahlung einer Dosis von 2 — 30 Millionen r auf kristallisiertes Lysozym wurde mit Hilfe physikalisch-chemischer (Elektrophorese, Ultrazentrifuge), chemischer, biochemischer und biologischer Arbeitsmethoden untersucht. Es wurde gefunden, daß durch Bestrahlung eine Reihe nah verwandter, jedoch weniger basischer Proteine verschiedenen Mol.-Gew. entsteht, deren Aminosäure-Bausteine als Folge der Bestrahlung teilweise in andere Verbindungen umgewandelt wurden. Bei der Untersuchung der amino- und carboxyl-endständigen Aminosäuren des bestrahlten Proteins wurden Unterschiede gegenüber Lysozym nur bei den carboxyl-terminalen Gruppen festgestellt. Die biologische Aktivität des Proteins blieb auch nach Bestrahlung mit einer Dosis von 5 Millionen r praktisch unverändert.
We explore some implications of our previous proposal, motivated in part by the Generalised Uncertainty Principle (GUP) and the possibility that black holes have quantum mechanical hair that the ADM mass of a system has the form M+βM2Pl/(2M), where M is the bare mass, MPl is the Planck mass and β is a positive constant. This also suggests some connection between black holes and elementary particles and supports the suggestion that gravity is self-complete. We extend our model to charged and rotating black holes, since this is clearly relevant to elementary particles. The standard Reissner–Nordström and Kerr solutions include zero-temperature states, representing the smallest possible black holes, and already exhibit features of the GUP-modified Schwarzschild solution. However, interesting new features arise if the charged and rotating solutions are themselves GUP-modified. In particular, there is an interesting transition below some value of β from the GUP solutions (spanning both super-Planckian and sub-Planckian regimes) to separated super-Planckian and sub-Planckian solutions. Equivalently, for a given value of β, there is a critical value of the charge and spin above which the solutions bifurcate into sub-Planckian and super-Planckian phases, separated by a mass gap in which no black holes can form.
The neutron capture cross section of some unstable nuclei is especially relevant for s-process nucleosynthesis studies. This magnitude is crucial to determine the local abundance pattern, which can yield valuable information of the s-process stellar environment. In this work we describe the neutron capture (n,γ) measurement on two of these nuclei of interest, 204Tl and 171Tm, from target production to the final measurement, performed successfully at the n_TOF facility at CERN in 2014 and 2015. Preliminary results on the ongoing experimental data analysis will also be shown. These results include the first ever experimental observation of capture resonances for these two nuclei.
Die Dissertation ist in den Bereichen der semiklassischen Quantengravitation und der pseudokomplexen Allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie (pk-ART) anzusiedeln. Dabei wird unter semiklassischer Quantengravitation die Untersuchung quantenmechanischer Phänomene in einem durch eine klassische Gravitationstheorie gegebenen gravitativen Hintergrundfeld verstanden und bei der pk-ART handelt es sich um eine Alternative zu der aktuell anerkannten klassischen Gravitationstheorie, der Allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie (ART), die die reellen Raumzeitkoordinaten der ART pseudokomplex erweitert. Dies führt zusammen mit einer Veränderung des Variationsprinzips in führender Ordnung auf eine Korrektur der Einstein- Gleichung der ART mit einem zusätzlichen Quellterm (Energie-Impuls-Tensor), dessen exakte Form jedoch bisher nicht bekannt ist.
Die Beschreibung der Gravitation als Hintergrundfeld ergibt sich zwangsläufig daraus, dass auf Basis der ART bisher keine quantisierte Beschreibung für sie gefunden werden konnte. Jedoch wird erhofft, dass die Untersuchung semiklassischer Phänomene Hinweise auf die korrekte Theorie der Quantengravitation gibt. Zudem motiviert der Mangel einer quantisierten Gravitationstheorie die Verwendung alternativer Theorien, da sich dadurch die Frage stellt, ob die ART die korrekte Beschreibung klassischer Felder ist.
Das Ziel der vorliegenden Dissertation war die grundlegenden Unterschiede zwischen der ART und der pk-ART für gebundene sphärisch symmetrische Zustände der Klein-Gordon- und der Dirac-Gleichung zu identifizieren und ein qualitatives Modell der Vakuumfluktuationen in sphärisch symmetrischen Materieverteilungen zu bestimmen, wobei der Zusammenhang der pk-ART mit den Vakuumfluktuationen in der Annahme besteht, dass ein Zusammenhang zwischen ihnen und dem zusätzlichen Quellterm der pk-ART existiert. Dafür wurden die gebundenen Zustände der Klein-Gordon- und der Dirac-Gleichung für drei verschiedene Metrikmodelle (zwei ART-Modelle und ein pk-ART-Modell) mit konstanter Dichte systematisch numerisch berechnet, einige repräsentative Grafiken erstellt, anhand derer die grundlegenden Unterschiede der Ergebnisse der ART-Modelle und des pk-ART-Modells erörtert wurden, und die ART Ergebnisse der Dirac-Gleichung soweit wie möglich mit Ergebnissen der Literatur verglichen. Insbesondere wurde dabei festgestellt, dass die Energieeigenwerte in der pk-ART im Gegensatz zu denen in der ART in Abhängigkeit der Ausdehnung des Zentralobjekts ein Minimum aufweisen. Zudem wurden die Energieeigenwerte der Klein-Gordon-Gleichung teilweise sowohl über das Eigenwertproblem einer Matrix als auch über ein Anfangswertproblem berechnet und es wurde festgestellt, dass die Beschreibung als Eigenwertproblem deutlich uneffektiver ist, wenn dafür die Basis des dreidimensionalen harmonischen Oszillators genutzt wird. Für die Entwicklung des qualitativen Vakuumfluktuationsmodells wurden zwei Näherungen für den Erwartungswert des Energie-Impuls-Tensors in führender Ordnung für die Schwarzschildmetrik (ART) verglichen und die Verwendung eines qualitativen Modells durch die dabei auftretende Diskrepanz gerechtfertigt. Danach wurden die Vakuumfluktuationen für Metriken konstanter Materiedichte mit Hilfe einer der Näherungen in führender Ordnung berechnet und ein Modell gesucht, das den gleichen qualitativen Verlauf aufweist. Im Anschluss wurde dieses Modell noch für einfache Metriken mit variabler Materiedichte verifiziert.
Die Dissertation leistet mit der Analyse der gebundenen Zustände einen Beitrag in der Identifikation der Unterschiede zwischen der pk-ART und der ART und führt somit auf weitere mögliche Messgrößen, die der Unterscheidung der beiden Theorien dienen könnten. Weiterhin ermöglicht das abgeleitete Modell eine Verfeinerung der schon publizierten Ergebnisse über Neutronensterne und die für die Erstellung nötigen Vorarbeiten leisten einen Beitrag zur Identifikation des
pk-ART Quellterms.
Dynamics of strange, charm and high momentum hadrons in relativistic nucleus nucleus collisions
(2003)
We investigate hadron production and attenuation of hadrons with strange and charm quarks (or antiquarks) as well as high transverse momentum hadrons in relativistic nucleus-nucleus col- lisions from 2 A·GeV to 21.3 A·TeV within two independent transport approaches (UrQMD and HSD). Both transport models are based on quark, diquark, string and hadronic degrees of freedom, but do not include any explicit phase transition to a quark-gluon plasma. From our dynamical calculations we find that both models do not describe the maximum in the K+/ + ratio at 20 - 30 A·GeV in central Au+Au collisions found experimentally, though the excitation functions of strange mesons are reproduced well in HSD and UrQMD. Furthermore, the transport calculations show that the charmonium recreation by D + J/ + meson reactions is comparable to the dissociation by comoving mesons at RHIC energies contrary to SPS energies. This leads to the final result that the total J/ suppression as a function of centrality at RHIC should be less than the suppression seen at SPS energies where the comover dissociation is substantial and the backward channels play no role. Furthermore, our transport calculations in comparison to exper- imental data on transverse momentum spectra from pp, d+Au and Au+Au reactions show that pre-hadronic e ects are responsible for both the hardening of the hadron spectra for low transverse momenta (Cronin e ect) as well as the suppression of high pT hadrons. The mutual interactions of formed hadrons are found to be negligible in central Au+Au collisions at s = 200 GeV for pT e 6 GeV/c and the sizeable suppression seen experimentally is attributed to a large extent to the interactions of leading pre-hadrons with the dense environment.
Recent STAR data for the directed flow of protons, antiprotons and charged pions obtained within the beam energy scan program are analyzed within the Parton-Hadron-String-Dynamics (PHSD/HSD) transport models. Both versions of the kinetic approach are used to clarify the role of partonic degrees of freedom. The PHSD results, simulating a partonic phase and its coexistence with a hadronic one, are roughly consistent with the STAR data. Generally, the semi-qualitative agreement between the measured data and model results supports the idea of a crossover type of quark-hadron transition which softens the nuclear EoS but shows no indication of a first-order phase transition. Furthermore, the directed flow of kaons and antikaons is evaluated in the PHSD/HSD approachesfrom √sNN ≈ 3 - 200 GeV which shows a high sensitivity to hadronic potentials in the FAIR/NICA energy regime √sNN ≤ 8 GeV.
The thermodynamics of QCD with sufficiently heavy dynamical quarks can be described by a three-dimensional Polyakov loop effective theory, obtained after a truncated character and hopping expansion. We investigate the resulting phase diagram for low temperatures by mean field methods. Taking into account chemical potentials for both baryon number and isospin, we obtain clear signals for a liquid-gas type transition to baryon matter at μI=0 and a Bose-Einstein condensation transition at μB=0, as well as for their connection when both chemical potentials are non-zero.
Binary neutron star mergers represent unique observational phenomena because all four fundamental interactions play an important role at various stages of their evolution by leaving imprints in astronomical observables. This makes their accurate numerical modeling a challenging multiphysics problem that promises to increase our understanding of the high-energy astrophysics at play, thereby providing constraints for the underlying fundamental theories such as the gravitational interaction or the strong interaction of dense matter. For example, the first and so far only multi-messenger observation of the binary neutron star merger GW170817 resulted in numerous bounds on the parameters of isolated non-rotating neutron stars, e.g., their maximum mass or their distribution in radii, which can be directly used to constrain the equation of state of cold nuclear matter. While many of these results stem from the observation of the inspiral gravitational-wave signal, the postmerger phase of binary neutron star mergers encodes even more details about the extreme physics of hot and dense neutron star matter. In this Thesis we focus on the exploration of dissipative and shearing effects in binary neutron star mergers in order to identify novel approaches to constrain hot and dense neutron star matter.
The first effect is the well-motivated dissipation of energy due to the bulk viscosity which arises from violations of weak chemical equilibrium. We start by exploring the impact of bulk viscosity on black-hole accretion. This simplified problem gives us the opportunity to develop a test case for future codes taking into account the effects of dissipation in a fully general-relativistic setup and build intuition in the physics of relativistic dissipation. Next, we move on to isolated neutron stars and binary neutron star mergers by developing a robust implementation of bulk-viscous dissipation for numerical relativity simulations. We test our implementation by calculating the damping of eigenmodes of isolated neutron stars and the violent migration scenario. Finally, we present the first results on the impact of bulk viscosity on binary neutron star mergers. We identify a number of ways how bulk viscosity impacts the postmerger phase, out of which the suppression of gravitational-wave emission and dynamical mass ejection are the most notable ones.
In the last part of this Thesis we investigate how the shearing dynamics at the beginning of the merger affects the amplification of different initial magnetic-field topologies. We explore the hypothesis that magnetic fields which are located only in a small region near the stellar surface prior to merger lead to a weaker magnetic-field amplification. We show first evidence which confirms this hypothesis and discuss possible implications for constraining the physics of superconduction in cold neutron stars.
The SLC26 family of transporters maintains anion equilibria in all kingdoms of life. The family shares a 7 + 7 transmembrane segments inverted repeat architecture with the SLC4 and SLC23 families, but holds a regulatory STAS domain in addition. While the only experimental SLC26 structure is monomeric, SLC26 proteins form structural and functional dimers in the lipid membrane. Here we resolve the structure of an SLC26 dimer embedded in a lipid membrane and characterize its functional relevance by combining PELDOR distance measurements and biochemical studies with MD simulations and spin-label ensemble refinement. Our structural model reveals a unique interface different from the SLC4 and SLC23 families. The functionally relevant STAS domain exerts a stabilizing effect on regions central in this dimer. Characterization of heterodimers indicates that protomers in the dimer functionally interact. The combined structural and functional data define the framework for a mechanistic understanding of functional cooperativity in SLC26 dimers.
The SLC26 family of transporters maintains anion equilibria in all kingdoms of life. The family shares a 7 + 7 transmembrane segments inverted repeat architecture with the SLC4 and SLC23 families, but holds a regulatory STAS domain in addition. While the only experimental SLC26 structure is monomeric, SLC26 proteins form structural and functional dimers in the lipid membrane. Here we resolve the structure of an SLC26 dimer embedded in a lipid membrane and characterize its functional relevance by combining PELDOR/DEER distance measurements and biochemical studies with MD simulations and spin-label ensemble refinement. Our structural model reveals a unique interface different from the SLC4 and SLC23 families. The functionally relevant STAS domain is no prerequisite for dimerization. Characterization of heterodimers indicates that protomers in the dimer functionally interact. The combined structural and functional data define the framework for a mechanistic understanding of functional cooperativity in SLC26 dimers.
Charmonia with different transverse momentum pT usually comes from different mechanisms in the relativistic heavy ion collisions. This work tries to review the theoretical studies on quarkonium evolutions in the deconfined medium produced in p-Pb and Pb-Pb collisions. The charmonia with high pT are mainly from the initial hadronic collisions, and therefore sensitive to the initial energy density of the bulk medium. For those charmonia within 0.1 < pT < 5 GeV/c at the energies of Large Hadron Collisions (LHC), They are mainly produced by the recombination of charm and anti-charm quarks in the medium. In the extremely low pT ∼ 1/RA (RA is the nuclear radius), additional contribution from the coherent interactions between electromagnetic fields generated by one nucleus and the target nucleus plays a non-negligible role in the J/ψ production even in semi-central Pb-Pb collisions.
The experimental area 2 (EAR-2) at CERNs neutron time-of-flight facility (n_TOF), which is operational since 2014, is designed and built as a short-distance complement to the experimental area 1 (EAR-1). The Parallel Plate Avalanche Counter (PPAC) monitor experiment was performed to characterize the beam pro↓le and the shape of the neutron 'ux at EAR-2. The prompt γ-flash which is used for calibrating the time-of-flight at EAR-1 is not seen by PPAC at EAR-2, shedding light on the physical origin of this γ-flash.
With the increasing energies and intensities of heavy-ion accelerator facilities, the problem of an excessive activation of the accelerator components caused by beam losses becomes more and more important. Numerical experiments using Monte Carlo transport codes are performed in order to assess the levels of activation. The heavy-ion versions of the codes were released approximately a decade ago, therefore the verification is needed to be sure that they give reasonable results. Present work is focused on obtaining the experimental data on activation of the targets by heavy-ion beams. Several experiments were performed at GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung. The interaction of nitrogen, argon and uranium beams with aluminum targets, as well as interaction of nitrogen and argon beams with copper targets was studied. After the irradiation of the targets by different ion beams from the SIS18 synchrotron at GSI, the γ-spectroscopy analysis was done: the γ-spectra of the residual activity were measured, the radioactive nuclides were identified, their amount and depth distribution were detected. The obtained experimental results were compared with the results of the Monte Carlo simulations using FLUKA, MARS and SHIELD. The discrepancies and agreements between experiment and simulations are pointed out. The origin of discrepancies is discussed. Obtained results allow for a better verification of the Monte Carlo transport codes, and also provide information for their further development. The necessity of the activation studies for accelerator applications is discussed. The limits of applicability of the heavy-ion beam-loss criteria were studied using the FLUKA code. FLUKA-simulations were done to determine the most preferable from the radiation protection point of view materials for use in accelerator components.