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We investigate the possible formation of a Bose-Einstein condensed phase of pions in the early Universe at nonvanishing values of lepton flavor asymmetries. A hadron resonance gas model with pion interactions, based on first-principle lattice QCD simulations at nonzero isospin density, is used to evaluate cosmic trajectories at various values of electron, muon, and tau lepton asymmetries that satisfy the available constraints on the total lepton asymmetry. The cosmic trajectory can pass through the pion condensed phase if the combined electron and muon asymmetry is sufficiently large: |le+lμ|≳0.1, with little sensitivity to the difference le−lμ between the individual flavor asymmetries. Future constraints on the values of the individual lepton flavor asymmetries will thus be able to either confirm or rule out the condensation of pions during the cosmic QCD epoch. We demonstrate that the pion condensed phase leaves an imprint both on the spectrum of primordial gravitational waves and on the mass distribution of primordial black holes at the QCD scale, e.g., the black hole binary of recent LIGO event GW190521 can be formed in that phase.
We estimate the feeddown contributions from decays of unstable A=4 and A=5 nuclei to the final yields of protons, deuterons, tritons, 3He, and 4He produced in relativistic heavy-ion collisions at sNN>2.4 GeV, using the statistical model. The feeddown contribution effects do not exceed 5% at LHC and top RHIC energies due to the large penalty factors involved, but are substantial at intermediate collision energies. We observe large feeddown contributions for tritons, 3He, and 4He at sNN≲10 GeV, where they may account for as much as 70% of the final yield at the lower end of the collision energies considered. Sizable (>10%) effects for deuteron yields are observed at sNN≲4 GeV. The results suggest that the excited nuclei feeddown cannot be neglected in the ongoing and future analysis of light nuclei production at intermediate collision energies, including HADES and CBM experiments at FAIR, NICA at JINR, RHIC beam energy scan and fixed-target programmes, and NA61/SHINE at CERN. We further show that the freeze-out curve in the T-μB plane itself is affected significantly by the light nuclei at high baryochemical potential.
The statistical model with exact conservation of baryon number, electric charge, and strangeness – the Canonical Statistical Model (CSM) – is used to analyze the dependence of yields of light nuclei at midrapidity on charged pion multiplicity at the LHC. The CSM calculations are performed assuming baryon-symmetric matter, using the recently developed Thermal-FIST package. The light nuclei-to-proton yield ratios show a monotonic increase with charged pion multiplicity, with a saturation at the corresponding grand-canonical values in the high-multiplicity limit, in good qualitative agreement with the experimental data measured by the ALICE collaboration in pp and Pb–Pb collisions at different centralities and energies. Comparison with experimental data at low multiplicities shows that exact conservation of charges across more than one unit of rapidity and/or a chemical freeze-out temperature which decreases with the charged pion multiplicity improves agreement with the data.
The production of light (anti-)(hyper-)nuclei in heavy-ion collisions at the LHC is considered in the framework of the Saha equation, making use of the analogy between the evolution of the early universe after the Big Bang and that of “Little Bangs” created in the lab. Assuming that disintegration and regeneration reactions involving light nuclei proceed in relative chemical equilibrium after the chemical freeze-out of hadrons, their abundances are determined through the famous cosmological Saha equation of primordial nucleosynthesis and show no exponential dependence on the temperature typical for the thermal model. A quantitative analysis, performed using the hadron resonance gas model in partial chemical equilibrium, shows agreement with experimental data of the ALICE collaboration on d, 3He, HΛ3, and 4He yields for a very broad range of temperatures at T≲155 MeV. The presented picture is supported by the observed suppression of resonance yields in central Pb–Pb collisions at the LHC. Keywords: Light (anti-)(hyper-)nuclei production, Saha equation, Partial chemical equilibrium.
We develop a framework to relate proton number cumulants measured in heavy-ion collisions within a momentum space acceptance to the susceptibilities of baryon number, assuming that particles are emitted from a fireball with uniform distribution of temperature and baryochemical potential, superimposed on a hydrodynamic flow velocity profile. The rapidity acceptance dependence of proton cumulants measured by the HADES Collaboration in √sNN = 2.4 GeV Au-Au appears to be consistent with thermal emission of nucleons from a grand-canonical heat bath, with the extracted baryon number susceptibilities exhibiting an hierarchy χB 4 >> −χB 3 >> χB 2 >> χB 1 . Naively, this could indicate large nonGaussian fluctuations that might point to the presence of the QCD critical point close to the chemical freeze-out at T ∼ 70 MeV and μB ∼ 850 − 900 MeV. However, the description of the experimental data at large rapidity acceptances becomes challenging once the effect of exact baryon number conservation is incorporated, suggesting that more theoretical and experimental studies are needed to reach a firm conclusion.
The centrality dependence of the p/π ratio measured by the ALICE Collaboration in 5.02 TeV Pb-Pb collisions indicates a statistically significant suppression with the increase of the charged particle multiplicity once the centrality-correlated part of the systematic uncertainty is eliminated from the data. We argue that this behavior can be attributed to baryon annihilation in the hadronic phase. By implementing the BB¯↔5π reaction within a generalized partial chemical equilibrium framework, we estimate the annihilation freeze-out temperature at different centralities, which decreases with increasing charged particle multiplicity and yields Tann=132±5 MeV in 0-5% most central collisions. This value is considerably below the hadronization temperature of Thad∼160 MeV but above the thermal (kinetic) freeze-out temperature of Tkin∼100 MeV. Baryon annihilation reactions thus remain relevant in the initial stage of the hadronic phase but freeze out before (pseudo-)elastic hadronic scatterings. One experimentally testable consequence of this picture is a suppression of various light nuclei to proton ratios in central collisions of heavy ions.
We analyze the behavior of cumulants of conserved charges in a subvolume of a thermal system with exact global conservation laws by extending a recently developed subensemble acceptance method (SAM) [1] to multiple conserved charges. Explicit expressions for all diagonal and off-diagonal cumulants up to sixth order that relate them to the grand canonical susceptibilities are obtained. The derivation is presented for an arbitrary equation of state with an arbitrary number of different conserved charges. The global conservation effects cancel out in any ratio of two second order cumulants, in any ratio of two third order cumulants, as well as in a ratio of strongly intensive measures Σ and ∆ involving any two conserved charges, making all these quantities particularly suitable for theory-to-experiment comparisons in heavy-ion collisions. We also show that the same cancellation occurs in correlators of a conserved charge, like the electric charge, with any non-conserved quantity such as net proton or net kaon number. The main results of the SAM are illustrated in the framework of the hadron resonance gas model. We also elucidate how net-proton and net-Λ fluctuations are affected by conservation of electric charge and strangeness in addition to baryon number.
The first principle lattice QCD methods allow to calculate the thermodynamic observables at finite temperature and imaginary chemical potential. These can be compared to the predictions of various phenomenological models. We argue that Fourier coefficients with respect to imaginary baryochemical potential are sensitive to modeling of baryonic interactions. As a first application of this sensitivity, we consider the hadron resonance gas (HRG) model with repulsive baryonic interactions, which are modeled by means of the excluded volume correction. The Fourier coefficients of the imaginary part of the netbaryon density at imaginary baryochemical potential – corresponding to the fugacity or virial expansion at real chemical potential – are calculated within this model, and compared with the Nt = 12 lattice data. The lattice QCD behavior of the first four Fourier coefficients up to T 185 MeV is described fairly well by an interacting HRG with a single baryon–baryon eigenvolume interaction parameter b 1 fm3, while the available lattice data on the difference χB 2 − χB 4 of baryon number susceptibilities is reproduced up to T 175 MeV.
We derive the relation between cumulants of a conserved charge measured in a subvolume of a thermal system and the corresponding grand-canonical susceptibilities, taking into account exact global conservation of that charge. The derivation is presented for an arbitrary equation of state, with the assumption that the subvolume is sufficiently large to be close to the thermodynamic limit. Our framework – the subensemble acceptance method (SAM) – quantifies the effect of global conservation laws and is an important step toward a direct comparison between cumulants of conserved charges measured in central heavy ion collisions and theoretical calculations of grand-canonical susceptibilities, such as lattice QCD. As an example, we apply our formalism to net-baryon fluctuations at vanishing baryon chemical potentials as encountered in collisions at the LHC and RHIC.
The QCD equation of state at finite baryon density is studied in the framework of a Cluster Expansion Model (CEM), which is based on the fugacity expansion of the net baryon density. The CEM uses the two leading Fourier coefficients, obtained from lattice simulations at imaginary μB, as the only model input and permits a closed analytic form. Excellent description of the available lattice data at both μB = 0 and at imaginary μB is obtained. We also demonstrate how the Fourier coefficients can be reconstructed from baryon number susceptibilities.
The conducting properties in the basal ab plane of pure and Al-doped YBa2Cu3O7-γ single crystals before and after long-time exposure in air atmosphere are investigated. It is shown that prolonged aging leads to an increase of the density of effective scattering centers for the normal carriers. The aluminum doping has been revealed to partially slowdown the degradation of the conducting properties in process of aging. The excess conductivity, Δδ(T), has been found to obey exponential dependence in the broad temperature range Tc<T<T*. In the pseudogap regime, the mean-field transition temperature and the 3D-2D crossover point in the excess conductivity have been quantified. Near the critical temperature, is described well within the Aslamazov-Larkin theoretical model. Herewith, both aluminum doping and prolonged aging have been found to essentially expand the temperature interval of implementation of the pseudogap state, thus narrowing the linear section in the dependence ρab(T).
With the discovery of light beyond human visibility, scientists strove to extend the range of observation to invisible parts of the light’s spectrum. Realising that light of all frequencies is part the same physical phenomenon, brought a leap in understanding about electromagnetic waves. With the development of more advanced technology, detectors with higher sensitivity for adjacent frequencies to the visible were built. From this, with each new observable wavelength, more insight into otherwise invisible processes and phenomenons were observed. Hand in hand with this went the enhancement of the output power of corresponding sources. This has lead to higher sensitivity setups throughout the spectrum, leading to observations which have given a deeper understanding in various fields of science. Nowadays, detectors and emitters in many different regions of the invisible electro magnetic spectrum have found their way in our every day life. Innovations in technology has lead to practical applications such as X-rays in medicine, motion sensors and remote controls using infrared light, distance sensors and data transmission using radar and radio devices. The frequency regions above infrared are optically generated and below radar can be produced using electric methods. There is no straight line that separates these frequencies. There rather is a whole intermediate region known as the terahertz (THz) regime. Due to the lack of sensitive detectors and efficient sources, the THz frequency region has not been exploited for application use on a widespread basis so far. It combines properties from the surrounding frequency ranges which make it an ideal spectrum for various applications. Consequently, THz radiation and THz imaging are active fields of research.
The work presented in this thesis consists of the development and testing of novel THz imaging concepts, which uses a THz antenna coupled field effect transistor (TeraFET) detector. Two detection principles are applied using two different optical setups. The first uses a pulsed optical parametric oscillator (OPO) THz source where the optical output power is detected. The source relies on a nonlinear effect of a lithium niobate crystal to generate tunable THz pulses from a Q-switched pump laser. The THz signal is detected and amplified by a double stage operational amplifier for monitoring the real time 20 ns pulses on an oscilloscope where a signal to noise ratio (SNR) of ⇠ 25 at a frequency range from 0.75 to 1.1 THz is reached. Imaging of the area of interest with a resolution of 1.2 mm is achieved through raster scanning of the THz pulses. Also spectroscopy with a frequency resolution of ⇠ 50 GHz is demonstrated using a para-aminobenzoic acid sample. The second setup utilises two synchronised electronic multiplier chain sources where their output is mixed on the detector. To form a heterodyne detection setup, the intermediate frequency is fed to a lock-in amplifier which then amplifies the so called beat signal from the TeraFET detector. One source is fixed relative to the detector even through scanning to ensure a stable signal. This detection method allows for amplitude and phase detection for every scanning position, making numerical light field propagation and object reconstruction possible. Numerical focussing is a key feature achieving a lateral resolution of the input transmittance of ⇡ 2 mm.
After the introduction, the second chapter describes the setup, measurement results and challenges which arise using a TeraFET together with the pulsed THz source “Firefly-THz”. In the description of the setup, special attention is given to the shielding of the detector and the electronics. General findings discuss first the overall performance and later spectroscopy and imaging as application examples. Another subsection continues with potential noise sources before the chapter is concluded. Chapter three expands on the topic of Fourier optics from a theoretical point of view. First, parts of the theory of the Fourier Transform (FT) are set out for the reader and how the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) results from the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT). This approach is used for theoretical considerations and the implementation of a Fourier optic script that allows for numerical investigations on electro magnetic field propagation through an optical system. The boundary conditions are chosen to be practical relevant to make predictions on measurements presented in chapter four. The following fourth chapter describes the realisation of a heterodyne THz detection setup. Before the measurement results are presented, the setup and its electric configuration are shown. The results come close to the analytical predictions so that the same algorithm which propagates the field from an object to the Fourier plane is used to propagate the measured field back to the object. The influence of phase noise on the measurement results are discussed before simulation and measurement is compared. The last chapter in this thesis concludes on the findings in the pulsed THz detection and the heterodyne THz Fourier imaging and gives an outlook for both configurations.
Starting from IP-Glasma initial conditions, we investigate the effects of bulk pressure on low mass dilepton production at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) energies. Though thermal dilepton is affected by the presence of both bulk and shear viscosity, whether or not these effects can be measured depends on the dilepton “cocktail” contribution to the the low mass dilepton . Combining the thermal and “cocktail” dileptons, the effects of bulk viscosity on total dilepton is investigated.
Das Standardmodell der Elementarteilchenphysik beschreibt nach aktuellem Kenntnisstand die Entstehung, den Aufbau und das Verhalten der Materie in unserem Universum am erfolgreichsten. Dennoch gibt es einige Phänomene, die sich nicht in dessen Rahmen beschreiben lassen, wie z. B. die Existenz von dunkler Materie und Energie, nicht-verschwindende Neutrinomassen oder die Baryonenasymmetrie. Speziell im Hinblick auf die starke Wechselwirkung, welche im Standardmodell durch die Quantenchromodynamik (QCD) beschrieben wird, gibt es noch immer viele offene Fragen.
Eine Umgebung, in der man die QCD experimentell ergründen kann, bieten vor allem Schwerionenkollisionen, die insbesondere am Large Hadron Collider (LHC) oder am Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) durchgeführt werden.
In dieser Arbeit soll ein Beitrag von theoretischer Seite aus hinsichtlich eines besseren Verständnisses dieser Schwerionenkollisionen und der zugrundeliegenden QCD erbracht werden. Der Fokus liegt dabei auf dem Isotropisierungsprozess unmittelbar nach der Kollision der beiden Kerne.
Neben etlichen effektiven Theorien, die sehr gute Ergebnisse in den entsprechenden Grenzbereichen liefern, ist die Beschreibung der QCD im Rahmen der Gittereichtheorie (Gitter-QCD) die am meisten etablierte. Diese beinhaltet in den meisten Fällen einen Übergang zur euklidischen Raumzeit, da somit ein Auswerten der hochdimensionalen Pfadintegrale mithilfe von Monte-Carlo-Simulation basierend auf dem sogenannten Importance Sampling ermöglicht wird. Aufgrund der Komplexwertigkeit der euklidischen Zeitkomponente ist man jedoch an das Studieren von statischen Observablen gebunden. Da wir aber gerade an einer Zeitentwicklung des Systems interessiert sind, sehen wir von dem Übergang zur euklidischen Raumzeit ab, was den Namen “real-time” im Titel der Arbeit erklärt.
Wir folgen dem sogenannten Hamilton-Ansatz und leiten damit Feldgleichungen in Form von partiellen Differentialgleichungen her, die wir dann mit den Methoden der Gitter-QCD numerisch lösen. Dabei bedienen wir uns der effektive Theorie des Farb-Glas-Kondensats (CGC, aus dem Englischen: “Color Glass Condensate”), um geeignete Anfangsbedingungen zu erhalten. Genauer gesagt basieren unsere Gitter-Anfangsbedingungen auf dem McLerran-Venugopalan-Modell (MV-Modell), das eine klassische Approximation in niedrigster Ordnung darstellt und nur Beiträge rein gluonischer Felder berücksichtigt.
Die klassische Näherung sowie das Vernachlässigen der fermionischen Felder wird insbesondere mit den hohen Besetzungszahlen der Feldmoden begründet. Einerseits dominieren Infrarot-Effekte, welche klassischer Natur sind, und andererseits ist dadurch der Einfluss der Fermionen, die dem Pauli-Prinzip gehorchen, unterdrückt. Gerade bei letzterer Aussage fehlt es jedoch an numerischen Belegen. Wir erweitern daher die klassische MV-Beschreibung durch stochastische Gitter-Fermionen, um diesem Punkt nachzugehen. Da sich Fermionen nicht klassisch beschreiben lassen, spricht man hierbei oft von einem semi-klassischen Ansatz.
Eines der Hauptziele dieser Arbeit liegt darin, den Isotropisierungsprozess, der bislang noch viele Fragen aufwirft, aber unter anderem Voraussetzung für das Anwenden von hydrodynamischen Modellen ist, zu studieren. Wir legen dabei einen besonderen Fokus auf die systematische Untersuchung der verschiedenen Parameter, die durch die CGC-Anfangsbedingungen in unsere Beschreibung einfließen, und deren Auswirkungen auf etwa die Gesamtenergiedichte des Systems oder die zugehörigen Isotropisierungszeiten. Währenddessen überprüfen wir zudem den Einfluss von unphysikalischen Gitter-Artefakten und präsentieren eine eichinvariante Methode zur Analyse der Güte unserer klassischen Näherung. Die Zeitentwicklung des Systems betrachten wir dabei sowohl in einer statischen Box als auch in einem expandierenden Medium, wobei Letzteres durch sogenannte comoving Koordinaten beschrieben wird. Zudem liefern wir einen Vergleich von der realistischen SU(3)-Eichgruppe und der rechentechnisch ökonomischeren SU(2)-Eichgruppe.
Mit unseren numerischen Ergebnissen zeigen wir, dass das System hochempfindlich auf die verschiedenen Modellparameter reagiert, was das Treffen quantitativer Aussagen in dieser Formulierung deutlich erschwert, insbesondere da einige dieser Parameter rein technischer Natur sind und somit keine zugehörigen physikalisch motivierten Größen, die den Definitionsbereich einschränken könnten, vorhanden sind. Es ist jedoch möglich, die Anzahl der freien Parameter zu reduzieren, indem man ihren Einfluss auf die Gesamtenergie des Systems analysiert und sich diesen zunutze macht. Dadurch gelingt es uns mithilfe von Konturdiagrammen einige Abhängigkeiten zu definieren und somit die Unbestimmtheit des Systems einzuschränken. Des Weiteren finden wir dynamisch generierte Filamentierungen in der Ortsdarstellung der Energiedichte, die ein starkes Indiz für die Präsenz von sogenannten chromo-Weibel-Instabilitäten sind. Unsere Studie des fermionischen Einflusses auf den Isotropisierungsprozess des CGC-Systems weist auf, dass dieser bei kleiner Kopplung vernachlässigbar ist. Bei hinreichend großen Werten für die Kopplungskonstante sehen wir allerdings einen starken Effekt hinsichtlich der Isotropisierungszeiten, was ein bemerkenswertes Resultat ist.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wird die Gestaltung eines Teststandes für die optische Tomographie eines Ionenstrahles untersucht. Nachdem Ionenstrahlen hoher Intensität immer mehr Leistung in den Diagnosegeräten deponieren, müssen neue nicht Strahlzerstörende Diagnosemethoden gefunden werden. Die Diagnose mittels strahlinduziertem Restgasleuchten ist dabei eine viel versprechende nicht zerstörende Methode. Neben der Definition der Anforderungen für einen solchen Teststand werden verschiedene Realisierungsmöglichkeiten untersucht. Mit einem Testaufbau wird das strahlinduzierte Leuchten in Abhängigkeit verschiedener Restgase und Restgasdrücke untersucht, sowie die Eigenschaften des optischen Systems und der Kamera analysiert. Weiterhin wird die Möglichkeit der Emittanzbestimung aus einer optischen Aufnahme mit vorhandenen Methoden untersucht.
A test stand for optical beam tomography was developed. As a new non-destructive beam-diagnostic system for high current ion beams, the test stand will be installed in the low energy beam transport section (LEBT) of the Frankfurt Neutron Source (FRANZ) behind the chopper system. The test stand consists of a rotatable vacuum chamber with a mounted CCD camera. The maximum rotation angle amounts to 270°. In a first phase the optical beam profile measurement and 3D density reconstruction is tested with a time independent 10 keV He beam. The measurements and performance of data processing algorithms are compared with the beam transport simulations. In a later phase the performance with time dependent beams (120 keV, 200 mA) at a repetition rate of 250 kHz and a duty cycle of 2.5% has to be evaluated. An overview of the first phase results is shown.
This thesis provides a detailed derivation of dissipative spin hydrodynamics from quantum field theory for systems composed of spin-0, spin-1/2, or spin-1 particles.
The Wigner function formalism is introduced for quantum fields in the respective representations of the Poincaré group, and the conserved currents, i.e., the energy-momentum tensor and the total angular momentum tensor, in various so-called pseudogauges are derived. An expansion around the semiclassical limit in powers of the Planck constant is performed.
Subsequently, kinetic equations are obtained for binary elastic scattering, using both the de Groot-van Leeuwen-van Weert and Kadanoff-Baym method, with the latter retaining the effect of quantum statistics. The resulting collision term features both local and nonlocal contributions, with the latter providing a relaxation mechanism for the spin degrees of freedom of the quasiparticles. The local-equilibrium distribution function is derived from the requirement that the local part of the collision term vanishes.
From quantum kinetic theory, dissipative spin hydrodynamics is then constructed via the method of moments, extended to particles with spin. The system of moment equations is closed via the Inverse-Reynolds Dominance (IReD) approach, resulting in a set of equations of motion describing the evolution of both ideal and dissipative degrees of freedom. The application to polarization phenomena relevant to heavy-ion collisions is discussed.
The pseudoparticle approach is a numericalmethod to compute path integrals without discretizing spacetime. The basic idea is to consider only those field configurations, which can be represented as a linear superposition of a small number of localized building blocks (pseudoparticles), and to replace the functional integration by an integration over the pseudoparticle degrees of freedom. In previous papers we have successfully applied the pseudoparticle approach to SU(2) Yang-Mills theory. In this work we discuss the inclusion of fermionic fields in the pseudoparticle approach. To test our method, we compute the phase diagram of the 1+1-dimensional Gross-Neveu model in the large-N limit as well as the chiral condensate in the crystal phase.
The isospin, spin and parity dependent potential of a pair of static-light mesons is computed using Wilson twisted mass lattice QCD with two flavors of degenerate dynamical quarks. From the results a simple rule can be deduced stating, which isospin, spin and parity combinations correspond to attractive and which to repulsive forces.