Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Preprint (670)
- Article (436)
- Book (2)
- Working Paper (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (1109)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (1109)
Keywords
- Heavy Ion Experiments (20)
- Hadron-Hadron Scattering (11)
- Hadron-Hadron scattering (experiments) (11)
- LHC (9)
- Heavy-ion collision (6)
- ALICE experiment (4)
- Collective Flow (4)
- Jets (4)
- Quark-Gluon Plasma (4)
- ALICE (3)
- Heavy Ions (3)
- Jets and Jet Substructure (3)
- SARS-CoV-2 (3)
- pp collisions (3)
- Beauty production (2)
- Charm physics (2)
- Experimental nuclear physics (2)
- Experimental particle physics (2)
- Heavy Quark Production (2)
- Lepton-Nucleon Scattering (experiments) (2)
- Non-structural protein (2)
- Particle Correlations and Fluctuations (2)
- Particle and resonance production (2)
- Particle correlations and fluctuations (2)
- Pb–Pb collisions (2)
- QCD (2)
- Single electrons (2)
- Solution NMR-spectroscopy (2)
- chemotherapy (2)
- epilepsy (2)
- 3Cs technology (1)
- 900 GeV (1)
- ALICE detector (1)
- ATO (1)
- Abiraterone acetate (1)
- Addison’s disease (1)
- Adipose tissue (1)
- Advanced treatment technologies (1)
- Angiogenesis (1)
- Angiography (1)
- Anti-nuclei (1)
- Atmospheric chemistry (1)
- Atmospheric science (1)
- Bevacizumab (1)
- Bioaccumulation (1)
- Bleeding (1)
- Blood (1)
- Blood plasma (1)
- Boosted Jets (1)
- CNS tumor (1)
- COVID-19 (1)
- COVID19-NMR (1)
- Cell staining (1)
- Centrality Class (1)
- Centrality Selection (1)
- Chromatin and Epigenetics (1)
- Cirrhosis (1)
- Climate change (1)
- Clinical management (1)
- Collective Flow, (1)
- Comparison with QCD (1)
- Concurrent CNS diseases (1)
- Covid19-NMR (1)
- Crispr/Cas (1)
- DUBs (1)
- Deutsch (1)
- Dexamethasone (1)
- Doxorubicin (1)
- E3 Ligase (1)
- Edema (1)
- Electron-pion identification (1)
- Electroweak interaction (1)
- Elliptic flow (1)
- Emerging contaminants (ECs) (1)
- Endocrine-disrupting compounds (1)
- Environmental fate (1)
- Environmental partitioning (1)
- Environmental risk assessment (1)
- Equilibrium partitioning theory (1)
- FFLU (1)
- Femtoscopy (1)
- Fibre/foam sandwich radiator (1)
- Functional outcomes (1)
- Gene Regulation (1)
- Germany (1)
- Gewerkverein der Heimarbeiterinnen Deutschlands für Kleider- und Wäschekonfektion und verwandte Berufe (1900-) (1)
- HBT (1)
- Hadron production (1)
- Hadron-Hadron Scattering Heavy (1)
- Hadron-hadron interactions (1)
- Hard Scattering (1)
- Heavy Ion Experiment (1)
- Heavy flavor production (1)
- Heavy flavour production (1)
- Heavy ions (1)
- Heavy-flavour decay muons (1)
- Heavy-flavour production (1)
- Heavy-ion collisions (1)
- Hematoxylin staining (1)
- Histology (1)
- Hodgkin lymphoma (1)
- IAP (1)
- IFN (1)
- IGF (1)
- INR (1)
- Image processing (1)
- Inclusive spectra (1)
- Intensity interferometry (1)
- International normalized ratio (1)
- Invariant Mass Distribution (1)
- Ionisation energy loss (1)
- Jet Physics (1)
- Jet Substructure (1)
- Lipodystrophy (1)
- Lymph nodes (1)
- Lymphocytes (1)
- Macrodomain (1)
- Material budget (1)
- Metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (1)
- Mid-rapidity (1)
- Minimum Bias (1)
- Monte Carlo (1)
- Multi-Parton Interactions (1)
- Multi-strange baryons (1)
- Multi-wire proportional drift chamber (1)
- Multiple sclerosis (1)
- NMR spectroscopy (1)
- NOTCH1 (1)
- NVBP (1)
- NanoBRET (1)
- Neural network (1)
- Nuclear modification factor (1)
- Oncology (1)
- PCV (1)
- PROTAC (1)
- PYTHIA (1)
- Paediatric cancer (1)
- Particle and Resonance Production (1)
- Pathologists (1)
- Pb–Pb (1)
- Point-of-care testing (1)
- Portal hypertension (1)
- Portal veins (1)
- Production Cross Section (1)
- Properties of Hadrons (1)
- Protein drugability (1)
- Proton–proton (1)
- Quark Deconfinement (1)
- Quark Gluon Plasma (1)
- Quark Production (1)
- Quark gluon plasma (1)
- Quarkonium (1)
- Radiation necrosis (1)
- Radical prostatectomy (1)
- Rapidity Range (1)
- Rare diseases (1)
- Real-world evidence (1)
- Registry (1)
- Relativistic heavy ion physics (1)
- Relativistic heavy-ion collisions (1)
- Resolution Parameter (1)
- Risk metrics (risk quotients, toxic units, hazard units) (1)
- SAVI (1)
- SHH (1)
- STING (1)
- Side effect (1)
- Signs and symptoms (1)
- Single muons (1)
- Substantivierter Infinitiv (1)
- Systematic Uncertainty (1)
- TR (1)
- Time Projection Chamber (1)
- Time to treatment failure (1)
- Tools and ressources (1)
- Tracking (1)
- Transition radiation detector (1)
- Transverse momentum (1)
- Trigger (1)
- Tschechisch (1)
- Tumour immunology (1)
- Ubiquitin (1)
- Urinary continence (1)
- Urinary incontinence (1)
- Vector Boson Production (1)
- WNT (1)
- Wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluents (1)
- White blood cells (1)
- Wide-scope chemical target screening (1)
- Xenon-based gas mixture (1)
- Zweisprachiges Wörterbuch (1)
- accessory proteins (1)
- acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) (1)
- adolescents’ health (1)
- adrenal insuffciency (1)
- adult (1)
- allocation (1)
- anticonvulsants (1)
- anxiety (1)
- awake surgery (1)
- bevacizumab (1)
- brain metastases (1)
- cell biology (1)
- cell-free protein synthesis (1)
- cerebral pseudoprogression (1)
- cerebral radiation necrosis (1)
- cerebrospinal fluid (1)
- ceritinib (1)
- child (1)
- clinical practice (1)
- clinical trial (1)
- cortisol (1)
- dE/dx (1)
- decompensated liver cirrhosis (1)
- detector (1)
- diffuse low-grade glioma (1)
- ectosomes (1)
- epileptic encephalopathies (1)
- exosomes (1)
- experimental results (1)
- extracellular vesicles (1)
- fourth (1)
- gRNA library (1)
- genetics and genomics (1)
- genome-wide (1)
- glioma (1)
- graft (1)
- guidelines (1)
- heavy ion experiments (1)
- human (1)
- immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) (1)
- immune related adverse events (irAE) (1)
- immunotherapy (1)
- inflammation (1)
- intrinsically disordered region (1)
- kidney (1)
- kidney transplantation (1)
- levetiracetam (1)
- loss (1)
- magnetic resonance imaging (1)
- medulloblastoma (1)
- microparticles (1)
- microvesicles (1)
- mindfulness (1)
- minimal information requirements (1)
- monocyte chemotactic protein 1 (MCP-1) (1)
- neurocognition (1)
- neurocognitive outcome (1)
- neurological complication (1)
- neurological side effects (1)
- nitro-fatty acids (1)
- nonstructural proteins (1)
- paediatric nephrology (1)
- palmitoylation (1)
- quality of life (1)
- quark gluon plasma (1)
- radiotherapy (1)
- randomized (1)
- re-transplantation (1)
- repeated (1)
- reproducibility (1)
- rigor (1)
- risk sport-specific stress (1)
- seizure (1)
- sensation seeking (1)
- spectra (1)
- standardization (1)
- structural proteins (1)
- subgrouping (1)
- survival (1)
- targeted therapy (1)
- temozolomide (1)
- third (1)
- transfer (1)
- transition (1)
- transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) (1)
- √sN N = 2.76 TeV (1)
Institute
- Physik (1055)
- Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies (FIAS) (954)
- Informatik (922)
- Medizin (30)
- Biochemie, Chemie und Pharmazie (4)
- Geowissenschaften (4)
- Geowissenschaften / Geographie (4)
- Georg-Speyer-Haus (3)
- Informatik und Mathematik (3)
- Biochemie und Chemie (2)
We report STAR results on the azimuthal anisotropy parameter v2 for strange particles K0S, Lambda , and Lambda -bar at midrapidity in Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN]=130 GeV at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. The value of v2 as a function of transverse momentum, pt, of the produced particle and collision centrality is presented for both particles up to pt~3.0 GeV/c. A strong pt dependence in v2 is observed up to 2.0 GeV/c. The v2 measurement is compared with hydrodynamic model calculations. The physics implications of the pt integrated v2 magnitude as a function of particle mass are also discussed.
Inclusive transverse momentum distributions of charged hadrons within 0.2<pT<6.0 GeV/c have been measured over a broad range of centrality for Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN]=130 GeV. Hadron yields are suppressed at high pT in central collisions relative to peripheral collisions and to a nucleon-nucleon reference scaled for collision geometry. Peripheral collisions are not suppressed relative to the nucleon-nucleon reference. The suppression varies continuously at intermediate centralities. The results indicate significant nuclear medium effects on high-pT hadron production in heavy-ion collisions at high energy.
We report the first measurement of strange ( Lambda ) and antistrange ( Lambda -bar) baryon production from sqrt[sNN]=130 GeV Au+Au collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). Rapidity density and transverse mass distributions at midrapidity are presented as a function of centrality. The yield of Lambda and Lambda -bar hyperons is found to be approximately proportional to the number of negative hadrons. The production of Lambda -bar hyperons relative to negative hadrons increases very rapidly with transverse momentum. The magnitude of the increase cannot be described by existing hadronic string fragmentation models alone.
Two-pion correlation functions in Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN] = 130 GeV have been measured by the STAR (solenoidal tracker at RHIC) detector. The source size extracted by fitting the correlations grows with event multiplicity and decreases with transverse momentum. Anomalously large sizes or emission durations, which have been suggested as signals of quark-gluon plasma formation and rehadronization, are not observed. The Hanbury Brown-Twiss parameters display a weak energy dependence over a broad range in sqrt[sNN].
The first measurements of light antinucleus production in Au+Au collisions at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider are reported. The observed production rates for d-bar and 3He-bar are much larger than in lower energy nucleus-nucleus collisions. A coalescence model analysis of the yields indicates that there is little or no increase in the antinucleon freeze-out volume compared to collisions at CERN SPS energy. These analyses also indicate that the 3He-bar freeze-out volume is smaller than the d-bar freeze-out volume.
We present the first measurement of midrapidity vector meson phi production in Au+Au collisions at RHIC (sqrt[sNN]=130 GeV) from the STAR detector. For the 11% highest multiplicity collisions, the slope parameter from an exponential fit to the transverse mass distribution is T=379±50(stat)±45(syst) MeV, the yield dN/dy=5.73±0.37(stat)±0.69(syst) per event, and the ratio N phi /Nh- is found to be 0.021±0.001(stat)±0.004(syst). The measured ratio N phi /Nh- and T for the phi meson at midrapidity do not change for the selected multiplicity bins.
Elliptic flow from nuclear collisions is a hadronic observable sensitive to the early stages of system evolution. We report first results on elliptic flow of charged particles at midrapidity in Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN] = 130 GeV using the STAR Time Projection Chamber at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. The elliptic flow signal, v2, averaged over transverse momentum, reaches values of about 6% for relatively peripheral collisions and decreases for the more central collisions. This can be interpreted as the observation of a higher degree of thermalization than at lower collision energies. Pseudorapidity and transverse momentum dependence of elliptic flow are also presented.
The Tarim River basin, located in Xinjiang, NW China, is the largest endorheic river basin in China and one of the largest in all of Central Asia. Due to the extremely arid climate, with an annual precipitation of less than 100 mm, the water supply along the Aksu and Tarim rivers solely depends on river water. This is linked to anthropogenic activities (e.g., agriculture) and natural and semi-natural ecosystems as both compete for water. The ongoing increase in water consumption by agriculture and other human activities in this region has been enhancing the competition for water between human needs and nature. Against this background, 11 German and 6 Chinese universities and research institutes have formed the consortium SuMaRiO (Sustainable Management of River Oases along the Tarim River; http://www.sumario.de), which aims to create a holistic picture of the availability of water resources in the Tarim River basin and the impacts on anthropogenic activities and natural ecosystems caused by the water distribution within the Tarim River basin. On the basis of the results from field studies and modeling approaches as well as from suggestions by the relevant regional stakeholders, a decision support tool (DST) will be implemented that will then assist stakeholders in balancing the competition for water, acknowledging the major external effects of water allocation to agriculture and to natural ecosystems. This consortium was formed in 2011 and is funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research. As the data collection phase was finished this year, the paper presented here brings together the results from the fields from the disciplines of climate modeling, cryology, hydrology, agricultural sciences, ecology, geoinformatics, and social sciences in order to present a comprehensive picture of the effects of different water availability schemes on anthropogenic activities and natural ecosystems along the Tarim River. The second objective is to present the project structure of the whole consortium, the current status of work (i.e., major new results and findings), explain the foundation of the decision support tool as a key product of this project, and conclude with application recommendations for the region. The discharge of the Aksu River, which is the major tributary of the Tarim, has been increasing over the past 6 decades. From 1989 to 2011, agricultural area more than doubled: cotton became the major crop and there was a shift from small-scale to large-scale intensive farming. The ongoing increase in irrigated agricultural land leads to the increased threat of salinization and soil degradation caused by increased evapotranspiration. Aside from agricultural land, the major natural and semi-natural ecosystems are riparian (Tugai) forests, shrub vegetation, reed beds, and other grassland, as well as urban and peri-urban vegetation. Within the SuMaRiO cluster, focus has been set on the Tugai forests, with Populus euphratica as the dominant tree species, because these forests belong to the most productive and species-rich natural ecosystems of the Tarim River basin. At sites close to the groundwater, the annual stem diameter increments of Populus euphratica correlated with the river runoffs of the previous year. However, the natural river dynamics cease along the downstream course and thus hamper the recruitment of Populus euphratica. A study on the willingness to pay for the conservation of the natural ecosystems was conducted to estimate the concern of the people in the region and in China's capital. These household surveys revealed that there is a considerable willingness to pay for conservation of the natural ecosystems, with mitigation of dust and sandstorms considered the most important ecosystem service. Stakeholder dialogues contributed to creating a scientific basis for a sustainable management in the future.
We report first results on elliptic flow of identified particles at midrapidity in Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN] = 130 GeV using the STAR TPC at RHIC. The elliptic flow as a function of transverse momentum and centrality differs significantly for particles of different masses. This dependence can be accounted for in hydrodynamic models, indicating that the system created shows a behavior consistent with collective hydrodynamical flow. The fit to the data with a simple model gives information on the temperature and flow velocities at freeze-out.