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We study the effect of the chiral symmetry restoration (CSR) on heavy-ion collisions observables in the energy range sNN=3–20GeV within the Parton-Hadron-String Dynamics (PHSD) transport approach. The PHSD includes the deconfinement phase transition as well as essential aspects of CSR in the dense and hot hadronic medium, which are incorporated in the Schwinger mechanism for particle production. Our systematic studies show that chiral symmetry restoration plays a crucial role in the description of heavy-ion collisions at sNN=3–20GeV, realizing an increase of the hadronic particle production in the strangeness sector with respect to the non-strange one. Our results provide a microscopic explanation for the horn structure in the excitation function of the K+/π+ ratio: the CSR in the hadronic phase produces the steep increase of this particle ratio up to sNN≈7GeV, while the drop at higher energies is associated to the appearance of a deconfined partonic medium. Furthermore, the appearance/disappearance of the horn structure is investigated as a function of the system size. We additionally present an analysis of strangeness production in the (T,μB)-plane (as extracted from the PHSD for central Au+Au collisions) and discuss the perspectives to identify a possible critical point in the phase diagram.
We study anisotropic fluid dynamics derived from the Boltzmann equation based on a particular choice for the anisotropic distribution function within a boost-invariant expansion of the fluid in one spatial dimension. In order to close the conservation equations we need to choose an additional moment of the Boltzmann equation. We discuss the influence of this choice of closure on the time evolution of fluid-dynamical variables and search for the best agreement to the solution of the Boltzmann equation in the relaxation-time approximation.
We present first data on centrality dependent K+, K− and ϕ production in Au+Au collisions at a kinetic beam energy of 1.23A GeV measured with HADES. We observe no significant increase of the K+/K− and ϕ/K− multiplicity ratios with centrality of the collision. The measured ϕ/K− ratio is found to be larger than results at higher energies. The significant ϕ feed-down contribution to the K− yield substantially softens the measured transverse mass spectrum of K−, explaining its lower observed effective temperature in comparison to the one of K+.
We review the results from the event-by-event next-to-leading order perturbative QCD + saturation + viscous hydrodynamics (EbyE NLO EKRT) model. With a simultaneous analysis of LHC and RHIC bulk observables we systematically constrain the QCD matter shear viscosity-to-entropy ratio η/s(T), and test the initial state computation. In particular, we study the centrality dependences of hadronic multiplicities, pT spectra, flow coefficients, relative elliptic flow fluctuations, and various flow-correlations in 2.76 and 5.02 TeV Pb+Pb collisions at the LHC and 200 GeV Au+Au collisions at RHIC. Overall, our results match remarkably well with the LHC and RHIC measurements, and predictions for the 5.02 TeV LHC run are in an excellent agreement with the data. We probe the applicability of hydrodynamics via the average Knudsen numbers in the space-time evolution of the system and viscous corrections on the freeze-out surface.
HADES has a large acceptance combined with a good mass-resolution and therefore allows the study of dielectron and hadron production in heavy-ion collisions with unprecedented precision. With the statistics of seven billion Au-Au collisions at 1.23A GeV recorded in 2012, the investigation of higher-order flow harmonics is possible. At the BEVALAC and SIS18 directed and elliptic flow has been measured for pions, charged kaons, protons, neutrons and fragments, but higher-order harmonics have not yet been studied. They provide additional important information on the properties of the dense hadronic medium produced in heavy-ion collisions. We present here a high-statistics, multidifferential measurement of v1 and v2 for protons in Au+Au collisions at 1.23A GeV.
We investigated the excitation of surface plasmon polaritons on gold films with the metallized probe tip of a scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscope (s-SNOM). The emission of the polaritons from the tip, illuminated by near-infrared laser radiation, was found to be anisotropic and not circularly symmetric as expected on the basis of literature data. We furthermore identified an additional excitation channel via light that was reflected off the tip and excited the plasmon polaritons at the edge of the metal film. Our results, while obtained for a non-rotationally-symmetric type of probe tip and thus specific for this situation, indicate that when an s-SNOM is employed for the investigation of plasmonic structures, the unintentional excitation of surface waves and anisotropic surface wave propagation must be considered in order to correctly interpret the signatures of plasmon polariton generation and propagation.
The interaction between the Heat Shock Proteins 70 and 40 is at the core of the ATPase regulation of the chaperone machinery that maintains protein homeostasis. However, the structural details of the interaction remain elusive and contrasting models have been proposed for the transient Hsp70/Hsp40 complexes. Here we combine molecular simulations based on both coarse-grained and atomistic models with coevolutionary sequence analysis to shed light on this problem by focusing on the bacterial DnaK/DnaJ system. The integration of these complementary approaches resulted in a novel structural model that rationalizes previous experimental observations. We identify an evolutionarily conserved interaction surface formed by helix II of the DnaJ J-domain and a structurally contiguous region of DnaK, involving lobe IIA of the nucleotide binding domain, the inter-domain linker, and the β-basket of the substrate binding domain.
Modern societies face the challenge that the time scale of opinion formation is continuously accelerating in contrast to the time scale of political decision making. With the latter remaining of the order of the election cycle we examine here the case that the political state of a society is determined by the continuously evolving values of the electorate. Given this assumption we show that the time lags inherent in the election cycle will inevitable lead to political instabilities for advanced democracies characterized both by an accelerating pace of opinion dynamics and by high sensibilities (political correctness) to deviations from mainstream values. Our result is based on the observation that dynamical systems become generically unstable whenever time delays become comparable to the time it takes to adapt to the steady state. The time needed to recover from external shocks grows in addition dramatically close to the transition. Our estimates for the order of magnitude of the involved time scales indicate that socio-political instabilities may develop once the aggregate time scale for the evolution of the political values of the electorate falls below 7–15 months.
The 23Al(p, γ)24Si stellar reaction rate has a significant impact on the light-curve emitted in X-ray bursts. Theoretical calculations show that the reaction rate is mainly determined by the properties of direct capture as well as low-lying 2+ states and a possible 4+ state in 24Si. Currently, there is little experimental information on the properties of these states.
In this proceeding we will present a new experimental study to investigate this reaction, using the surrogate reaction 23Al(d,n) at 47 AMeV at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory (NSCL). We will discuss our new experimental setup which allows us to use full kinematics employing the Gamma-Ray Energy Tracking In-beam Nuclear Array (GRETINA) to detect the γ-rays following the de-excitation of excited states of the reaction products and the Low Energy Neutron Detector Array (LENDA) to detect the recoiling neutrons. The S800 was used for identification of the 24Si recoils. As a proof of principle to show the feasibility of this concept the Q-value spectrum of 22Mg(d,n)23Al is reconstructed.
The neutron capture cross section of several key unstable isotopes acting as branching points in the s-process are crucial for stellar nucleosynthesis studies, but they are very challenging to measure due to the difficult production of sufficient sample material, the high activity of the resulting samples, and the actual (n,γ) measurement, for which high neutron fluxes and effective background rejection capabilities are required. As part of a new program to measure some of these important branching points, radioactive targets of 147Pm and 171Tm have been produced by irradiation of stable isotopes at the ILL high flux reactor. Neutron capture on 146Nd and 170Er at the reactor was followed by beta decay and the resulting matrix was purified via radiochemical separation at PSI. The radioactive targets have been used for time-of-flight measurements at the CERN n_TOF facility using the 19 and 185 m beam lines during 2014 and 2015. The capture cascades were detected using a set of four C6D6 scintillators, allowing to observe the associated neutron capture resonances. The results presented in this work are the first ever determination of the resonance capture cross section of 147Pm and 171Tm. Activation experiments on the same 147Pm and 171Tm targets with a high-intensity 30 keV quasi-Maxwellian flux of neutrons will be performed using the SARAF accelerator and the Liquid-Lithium Target (LiLiT) in order to extract the corresponding Maxwellian Average Cross Section (MACS). The status of these experiments and preliminary results will be presented and discussed as well.
We derive three exact sum rules for the spectral function of the electromagnetic current with zero spatial momentum at finite temperature. Possible applications of the three sum rules to lattice computations of the spectral function and transport coefficients are also discussed: We propose an ansatz for the spectral function that can be applied to all three sum rules and fit it to available lattice data of the Euclidean vector correlator above the critical temperature. As a result, we obtain estimates for both the electrical conductivity σ and the second order transport coefficient τJ.
An important experimental program on Nuclear Astrophysics is being carried out at the n_TOF since several years, in order to address the still open issues in stellar and primordial nucleosynthesis. Several neutron capture reactions relevant to s-process nucleosynthesis have been measured so far, some of which on important branching point radioisotopes. Furthermore, the construction of a second experimental area has recently opened the way to challenging measurements of (n, charged particle) reactions on isotopes of short half-life. The Nuclear Astrophysics program of the n_TOF Collaboration is here described, with emphasis on recent results relevant for stellar nucleosynthesis, stellar neutron sources and primordial nucleosynthesis.
The spent fuel of current nuclear reactors contains fissile plutonium isotopes that can be combined with 238U to make mixed oxide (MOX) fuel. In this way the Pu from spent fuel is used in a new reactor cycle, contributing to the long-term sustainability of nuclear energy. The use of MOX fuels in thermal and fast reactors requires accurate capture and fission cross sections. For the particular case of 242Pu, the previous neutron capture cross section measurements were made in the 70's, providing an uncertainty of about 35% in the keV region. In this context, the Nuclear Energy Agency recommends in its “High Priority Request List” and its report WPEC-26 that the capture cross section of 242Pu should be measured with an accuracy of at least 7–12% in the neutron energy range between 500 eV and 500 keV. This work presents a brief description of the measurement performed at n_TOF-EAR1, the data reduction process and the first ToF capture measurement on this isotope in the last 40 years, providing preliminary individual resonance parameters beyond the current energy limits in the evaluations, as well as a preliminary set of average resonance parameters.
The Cosmological Lithium Problem refers to the large discrepancy between the abundance of primordial 7Li predicted by the standard theory of Big Bang Nucleosynthesis and the value inferred from the so-called “Spite plateau” in halo stars. A possible explanation for this longstanding puzzle in Nuclear Astrophysics is related to the incorrect estimation of the destruction rate of 7Be, which is responsible for the production of 95% of primordial Lithium. While charged-particle induced reactions have mostly been ruled out, data on the 7Be(n,α) and 7Be(n,p) reactions are scarce or completely missing, so that a large uncertainty still affects the abundance of 7Li predicted by the standard theory of Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. Both reactions have been measured at the n_TOF facility at CERN, providing for the first time data in a wide neutron energy range.
The 33S(n,α)30Si cross section measurement, using 10B(n,α) as reference, at the n_TOF Experimental Area 2 (EAR2) facility at CERN is presented. Data from 0.01 eV to 100 keV are provided and, for the first time, the cross section is measured in the range from 0.01 eV to 10 keV. These data may be used for a future evaluation of the cross section because present evaluations exhibit large discrepancies. The 33S(n,α)30Si reaction is of interest in medical physics because of its possible use as a cooperative target to boron in Neutron Capture Therapy (NCT).
High precision measurement of the radiative capture cross section of 238U at the n_TOF CERN facility
(2017)
The importance of improving the accuracy on the capture cross-section of 238U has been addressed by the Nuclear Energy Agency, since its uncertainty significantly affects the uncertainties of key design parameters for both fast and thermal nuclear reactors. Within the 7th framework programme ANDES of the European Commission three different measurements have been carried out with the aim of providing the 238U(n,γ) cross-section with an accuracy which varies from 1 to 5%, depending on the energy range. Hereby the final results of the measurement performed at the n_TOF CERN facility in a wide energy range from 1 eV to 700 keV will be presented.
New results are presented of the 234U neutron-induced fission cross section, obtained with high accuracy in the resonance region by means of two methods using the 235U(n,f) as reference. The recent evaluation of the 235U(n,f) obtained with SAMMY by L. C. Leal et al. (these Proceedings), based on previous n_TOF data [1], has been used to calculate the 234U(n,f) cross section through the 234U/235U ratio, being here compared with the results obtained by using the n_TOF neutron flux.
The CERN n_TOF neutron beam facility is characterized by a very high instantaneous neutron flux, excellent TOF resolution at the 185 m long flight path (EAR-1), low intrinsic background and coverage of a wide range of neutron energies, from thermal to a few GeV. These characteristics provide a unique possibility to perform high-accuracy measurements of neutron-induced reaction cross-sections and angular distributions of interest for fundamental and applied Nuclear Physics. Since 2001, the n_TOF Collaboration has collected a wealth of high quality nuclear data relevant for nuclear astrophysics, nuclear reactor technology, nuclear medicine, etc. The overall efficiency of the experimental program and the range of possible measurements has been expanded with the construction of a second experimental area (EAR-2), located 20 m on the vertical of the n_TOF spallation target. This upgrade, which benefits from a neutron flux 30 times higher than in EAR-1, provides a substantial extension in measurement capabilities, opening the possibility to collect data on neutron cross-section of isotopes with short half-lives or available in very small amounts. This contribution will outline the main characteristics of the n_TOF facility, with special emphasis on the new experimental area. In particular, we will discuss the innovative features of the EAR-2 neutron beam that make possible to perform very challenging measurements on short-lived radioisotopes or sub-mg samples, out of reach up to now at other neutron facilities around the world. Finally, the future perspectives of the facility will be presented.
Neutron-induced reaction cross sections are important for a wide variety of research fields ranging from the study of nuclear level densities, nucleosynthesis to applications of nuclear technology like design, and criticality and safety assessment of existing and future nuclear reactors, radiation dosimetry, medical applications, nuclear waste transmutation, accelerator-driven systems and fuel cycle investigations. Simulations and calculations of nuclear technology applications largely rely on evaluated nuclear data libraries. The evaluations in these libraries are based both on experimental data and theoretical models. CERN’s neutron time-of-flight facility n_TOF has produced a considerable amount of experimental data since it has become fully operational with the start of its scientific measurement programme in 2001. While for a long period a single measurement station (EAR1) located at 185 m from the neutron production target was available, the construction of a second beam line at 20 m (EAR2) in 2014 has substantially increased the measurement capabilities of the facility. An outline of the experimental nuclear data activities at n_TOF will be presented.
The 236U isotope plays an important role in nuclear systems, both for future and currently operating ones. The actual knowledge of the capture reaction of this isotope is satisfactory in the thermal region, but it is considered insufficient for Fast Reactor and ADS applications. For this reason the 236U(n, γ) reaction cross-section has been measured for the first time in the whole energy region from thermal energy up to 1 MeV at the n_TOF facility with two different detection systems: an array of C6D6 detectors, employing the total energy deposited method, and a FX1 total absorption calorimeter (TAC), made of 40 BaF2 crystals. The two n_TOF data sets agree with each other within the statistical uncertainty in the Resolved Resonance Region up to 800 eV, while sizable differences (up to ≃ 20%) are found relative to the current evaluated data libraries. Moreover two new resonances have been found in the n_TOF data. In the Unresolved Resonance Region up to 200 keV, the n_TOF results show a reasonable agreement with previous measurements and evaluated data.
The accurate knowledge of the neutron-induced fission cross-sections of actinides and other isotopes involved in the nuclear fuel cycle is essential for the design of advanced nuclear systems, such as Generation-IV nuclear reactors. Such experimental data can also provide the necessary feedback for the adjustment of nuclear model parameters used in the evaluation process, resulting in the further development of nuclear fission models. In the present work, the 240Pu(n,f) cross-section was measured at CERN's n_TOF facility relative to the well-known 235U(n,f) cross section, over a wide range of neutron energies, from meV to almost MeV, using the time-of-flight technique and a set-up based on Micromegas detectors. This measurement was the first experiment to be performed at n_TOF's new experimental area (EAR-2), which offers a significantly higher neutron flux compared to the already existing experimental area (EAR-1). Preliminary results as well as the experimental procedure, including a description of the facility and the data handling and analysis, are presented.
Short range particle repulsion is rather important property of the hadronic and nuclear matter equations of state. We present a novel equation of state which is based on the virial expansion for the multicomponent mixtures with hard-core repulsion. In addition to the hard-core repulsion taken into account by the proper volumes of particles, this equation of state explicitly contains the surface tension which is induced by another part of the hard-core repulsion between particles. At high densities the induced surface tension vanishes and the excluded volume treatment of hard-core repulsion is switched to its proper volume treatment. Possible applications of this equation of state to a description of hadronic multiplicities measured in A+A collisions, to an investigation of the nuclear matter phase diagram properties and to the neutron star interior modeling are discussed.
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.
We present a novel equation of state which is based on the virial expansion for the multicomponent mixtures with hard core repulsion. The suggested equation of state explicitly contains the surface tension which is induced by particle interaction. At high densities such a surface tension vanishes and in this way it switches the excluded volume treatment of hard core repulsion to its eigen volume treatment. The great advantage of the developed model is that the number of equations to be solved is two and it does not depend on the number of independent hard-core radii. Using the suggested equation of state we obtained a high quality fit of the hadron multiplicities measured at AGS, SPS, RHIC and ALICE energies and studied the properties of the nuclear matter phase diagram. It is shown the developed equation of state is softer than the gas of hard spheres and remains causal up to the several normal nuclear densities. Therefore, it could be applied to the neutron star interior modeling.
Neutron capture and β− -decay are competing branches of the s-process nucleosynthesis path at 85Kr [1], which makes it an important branching point. The knowledge of its neutron capture cross section is therefore essential to constrain stellar models of nucleosynthesis. Despite its importance for different fields, no direct measurement of the cross section of 85Kr in the keV-regime has been performed. The currently reported uncertainties are still in the order of 50% [2, 3]. Neutron capture cross section measurements on a 4% enriched 85Kr gas enclosed in a stainless steel cylinder were performed at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) using the Detector for Advanced Neutron Capture Experiments (DANCE). 85Kr is radioactive isotope with a half life of 10.8 years. As this was a low-enrichment sample, the main contaminants, the stable krypton isotopes 83Kr and 86Kr, were also investigated. The material was highly enriched and contained in pressurized stainless steel spheres.
We review the recent developments of analytic solutions in transverse magneto-hydrodynamics under Bjorken expansion. It is found that the time dependence of magnetic fields can either increase or reduce the energy density depending on the decay exponent of magnetic fields. Moreover, perturbative solutions under weak magnetic fields with spatial inhomogeneity results in transverse flow, where the directions of flow also depend on the decay exponent of magnetic fields in time.
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.
We measured the neutron capture cross sections of 69Ga and 71Ga for a quasi-stellar spectrum at kBT = 25 keV and a spectrum with a peak energy at 90 keV by the activation technique at the Joint Research Centre (JRC) in Geel, Belgium. Protons were provided by an electrostatic Van de Graaff accelerator to produce neutrons via the reaction 7Li(p,n). The produced activity was measured via the γ emission of the product nuclei by high-purity germanium detectors. We present preliminary results.
The aim of this work is to provide a precise and accurate measurement of the 238U(n,γ) reaction cross section in the energy region from 1 eV to 700 keV. This reaction is of fundamental importance for the design calculations of nuclear reactors, governing the behavior of the reactor core. In particular, fast reactors, which are experiencing a growing interest for their ability to burn radioactive waste, operate in the high energy region of the neutron spectrum. In this energy region most recent evaluations disagree due to inconsistencies in the existing measurements of up to 15%. In addition, the assessment of nuclear data uncertainty performed for innovative reactor systems shows that the uncertainty in the radiative capture cross section of 238U should be further reduced to 1–3% in the energy region from 20 eV to 25 keV. To this purpose, addressed by the Nuclear Energy Agency as a priority nuclear data need, complementary experiments, one at the GELINA and two at the n_TOF facility, were proposed and carried out within the 7th Framework Project ANDES of the European Commission. The results of one of these 238U(n,γ) measurements performed at the n_TOF CERN facility are presented in this work. The γ-ray cascade following the radiative neutron capture has been detected exploiting a setup of two C6D6 liquid scintillators. Resonance parameters obtained from this work are on average in excellent agreement with the ones reported in evaluated libraries. In the unresolved resonance region, this work yields a cross section in agreement with evaluated libraries up to 80 keV, while for higher energies our results are significantly higher.
When binary systems of neutron stars merge, a very small fraction of their rest mass is ejected, either dynamically or secularly. This material is neutron-rich and its nucleosynthesis provides the astrophysical site for the production of heavy elements in the Universe, together with a kilonova signal confirming neutron-star mergers as the origin of short gamma-ray bursts. We perform full general-relativistic simulations of binary neutron-star mergers employing three different nuclear-physics equations of state (EOSs), considering both equal- and unequal-mass configurations, and adopting a leakage scheme to account for neutrino radiative losses. Using a combination of techniques, we carry out an extensive and systematic study of the hydrodynamical, thermodynamical, and geometrical properties of the matter ejected dynamically, employing the WinNet nuclear-reaction network to recover the relative abundances of heavy elements produced by each configurations. Among the results obtained, three are particularly important. First, we find that, within the sample considered here, both the properties of the dynamical ejecta and the nucleosynthesis yields are robust against variations of the EOS and masses. Second, using a conservative but robust criterion for unbound matter, we find that the amount of ejected mass is ≲10−3 M⊙, hence at least one order of magnitude smaller than what normally assumed in modelling kilonova signals. Finally, using a simplified and gray-opacity model we assess the observability of the infrared kilonova emission finding, that for all binaries the luminosity peaks around ∼1=2 day in the H-band, reaching a maximum magnitude of −13, and decreasing rapidly after one day.
We investigate the effect of large magnetic fields on the (2 + 1)-dimensional reduced-magnetohydrodynamical expansion of hot and dense nuclear matter produced in √sNN = 200 GeV Au+Au collisions. For the sake of simplicity,we consider the casewhere themagnetic field points in the direction perpendicular to the reaction plane. We also consider this field to be external, with energy density parametrized as a two-dimensional Gaussian. The width of the Gaussian along the directions orthogonal to the beam axis varies with the centrality of the collision. The dependence of the magnetic field on proper time (τ ) for the case of zero electrical conductivity of the QGP is parametrized following Deng et al. [Phys. Rev. C 85, 044907 (2012)], and for finite electrical conductivity following Tuchin [Phys. Rev. C 88, 024911 (2013)].We solve the equations of motion of ideal hydrodynamics for such an external magnetic field. For collisions with nonzero impact parameter we observe considerable changes in the evolution of the momentum eccentricities of the fireball when comparing the case when the magnetic field decays in a conducting QGP medium and when no magnetic field is present. The elliptic-flow coefficient v2 of π− is shown to increase in the presence of an external magnetic field and the increment in v2 is found to depend on the evolution and the initial magnitude of the magnetic field.
Ion optical calculations for a storage ring at the present GSI facility for direct proton-induced reactions relevant for different astrophysical processes are presented. As an example case, the 59Cu(p,γ) and 59Cu(p,α) reactions are shown. The branching of these two reactions is important in X-ray burst scenarios, since it determines the breakout out of the major 56Ni waiting point.
Electron identification with a likelihood method and measurements of di-electrons for the CBM-TRD
(2017)
In this work a likelihood method has been implemented and investigated as particle identification algorithm for the CBM-TRD.
The creation of the probability distributions for the likelihood method via V0-topologies seems to be feasible and the purity of the obtained samples is sufficient for the usage in the likelihood method.
The comparison between the ANN and the likelihood method shows no differences in the identification performance. The pion suppression factor reaches the same values for the same electron identification efficiencies and the yields of the resulting di-lepton signals are comparable. The signal-to-background ratios for both methods have the same values and show a value of about 10−2 in the invariant mass range of minv = 1.5 - 2.5 GeV/c2, which is expected to be sufficient to provide access to the thermal in-medium and QGP radiation.
The investigation of a detector system without a TRD shows no pion suppression for a momentum above p = 6 GeV/c. Therefore, the background contributions increase drastically and the signal-to-background ratio decreases at all invariant masses, but especially in the invariant mass range of minv = 1.5 - 2.5 GeV/c2.
The background contributions in the invariant mass range of minv = 1.5 - 2.5 GeV/c 2 are also influenced by the selected electron identification efficiency of the TRD, which significantly shifts the fraction of the eπ contributions relative to the total number of pairs.
The 124Xe(p,γ) reaction has been measured for the first time at energies around the Gamow window by using stored ions at the ESR facility. The desired beam energies below 10 MeV/u introduce new experimental challenges like windowless ions detection under UHV conditions, extremely short beam lifetimes and efficient beam deceleration and cooling, all of which have been successfully met.
We discuss the possibility to build a neutron target for nuclear reaction studies in inverse kinematics utilizing a storage ring and radioactive ion beams. The proposed neutron target is a specially designed spallation target surrounded by a large moderator of heavy water (D2O). We present the resulting neutron spectra and their properties as a target. We discuss possible realizations at different experimental facilities.
Anisotropic collective flow of protons resulting from non-central heavy ion collisions is a unique hadronic observable providing information about the early stage of the nuclear collision. The analysis of collective flow in the energy regime between 1-2 AGeV enables the study of the phase diagram of hadronic matter at a high baryochemical potential µb, as well as the analysis of the equation of state at densities up to the threefold of the ground state density ρ0.
The algorithms of the standard event plane method and the scalar product method are used to analyse directed and elliptic flow of protons in a centrality range of 0-40 % most central events.
Prior to the analysis of experimental data, the respective influence of the reconstruction procedure on the algorithms is examined using Monte Carlo simulations based on the Ultra relativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics (UrQMD) model.
Subsequently, experimental data measured in April 2012 with the High Acceptance DiElectron Spectrometer (HADES) is analysed using both methods. About 7.3 · 109 Au+Au events at a kinetic beam energy of 1.23 AGeV, equivalent to a centre of mass energy of √sNN = 2.42 GeV were recorded. A multi-differential analysis is feasible as the HADES detector provides a good transverse momentum and rapidity coverage.
Both algorithms result in identical values for directed and elliptic flow across all centrality classes within the observable phase space of protons. The calculated integrated value of v2 at mid rapidity is in good agreement with world data.
In April and May 2012 data on Au+Au collisions at beam energies of Ekin = 1.23A GeV were collected with the High Acceptance Di-Electron Spectrometer (HADES) at the GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung facility in Darmstadt, Germany. In this thesis, the production of deuterons in this collision system is investigated.
A total number of 2.1 × 109 Au+Au events is selected, containing the most central 0-40% of events. After particle identification, based on a mass determination via time-of-flight and momentum and on a measurement of the energy loss, the transverse mass spectra of the deuteron candidates are extracted for various rapidities and subsequently corrected for acceptance and efficiency.
The inverse slope parameter of a Boltzmann fit applied to the transverse mass spectra at midrapidity, which is referred to as the effective temperature, is extracted. For a static thermal source, this parameter corresponds to the kinetic freeze-out temperature Tkin and is therefore expected to be smaller or equal to the chemical freeze-out temperature Tchem. The extracted effective temperature of Tef f = (190 ± 10) MeV however exceeds the chemical freeze-out temperature that was obtained by a statistical model fit to different particle yields. The effective temperatures of various particle species, obtained in previous analyses, suggest a systematic rise with increasing particle mass, which is confirmed by the deuteron results.
An explanation can be the influence of a collective expansion with a radial expansion velocity βr. By fitting a Siemens-Rasmussen function to the transverse mass spectra, the global temperature of T = (100 ± 8) MeV and radial expansion velocity βr = 0.37 ± 0.01 are obtained. This temperature is still very high and only takes into account the production of deuteron nuclei.
The simultaneous fit of a blast-wave function to the transverse mass spectra of deuterons and other particles, as obtained by previous analyses, considers a velocity profile for the radial expansion velocity and takes into account the production of various particle species. The resulting global temperature Tkin = (68 ± 1) MeV and average transverse expansion velocity hβri = 0.341 ± 0.003 are within the expected range for the collision energy.
The Siemens-Rasmussen fits are also used to extrapolate the transverse mass spectra into unmeasured regions, to integrate them and obtain a rapidity-dependent count rate. This count rate exhibits a thermal shape for central events and shows increasing spectator contributions for more peripheral events.
The invariant yield spectra of the deuterons are compared to those of protons, as obtained by a previous analysis, in the context of a nucleon coalescence model. The hereby extracted nucleon coalescence factor B2 = (4.6 ± 0.1) × 10−3 agrees with the expected result for the beam energy that was studied.
Das CBM Experiment konzentriert sich auf die Untersuchung des Phasendiagramms von stark wechselwirkender Materie im Bereich moderater Temperaturen, aber hoher Netto-Baryonendichte. Dabei sollen unter anderem Proben aus dem frühen und hochdichten Stadium des Quark-Gluon Plasmas detektiert werden. Ein Beispiel dafür ist das J/ψ-Meson. Das Vektormeson gilt wegen seiner Eigenschaften und Interaktion mit dem QGP als eine der wichtigen Proben stark wechselwirkender Materie.
In dieser Arbeit wird die Performance der Detektoren anhand einer Simulation in Hinsicht auf die Messung des J/ψ-Mesons studiert. Es werden hierfür unterschiedliche Simulationsansätze verglichen. Die Simulation wird im FairRoot und CbmRoot Framework durchgeführt. Es werden Proton+Gold Kollisionen bei einer Strahlenergie von 30 GeV pro Proton simuliert. Dabei verwenden wir das Standard-Setup des SIS100 für Elektronen. Das J/ψ-Meson wird über den e+e−-Zerfallskanal rekonstruiert. Bei der J/ψ-Rekonstruktion werden zuerst Schnitte gesetzt, mit der ein großer Teil der Teilchenspuren, die nicht aus J/ψ-Zerfällen stammen, aussortiert werden und so der Untergrund verringert wird.
Die Effizienz für Elektronen im Detektor-Setup RICH+TRD+TOF beträgt 65 Prozent. Für das J/ψ-Meson erhalten wir mit den gleichen Detektoren eine Effizienz von 25 Prozent. Das invariante Massenspektrum, das wir aus einer Simulation mit 8,5 Millionen Ereignisse bilden, zeigt uns, dass der hauptsächliche Anteil des Untergrunds aus Pion-Elektron-Kombinationen besteht. Es folgen im e+e−-Zerfallskanal unkorrelierte Elektron-Positron-Kombinationen als der zweitgrößte Beitrag zum Untergrund. Die Statistik ist bei der Full Simulation zu gering, um das J/ψ-Signal extrahieren zu können. Eine Integration liefert uns ein J/ψ Signal von 0,021 bei 8,5 Millionen Ereignisse, d.h. für die Detektion eines J/ψ-Mesons werden ca. 1010 Ereignisse benötigt.
Die Fast Simulation Methode ermöglicht uns in kürzerer Zeit eine größere Menge an Ereignissen zu simulieren. Dazu werden Information aus der Full Simulation entnommen, die als Antwort-Funktionen bezeichnet werden. Die Antwort-Funktionen werden der Fast Simulation übergeben, um so zeitintensive Prozesse in der Simulation überspringen zu können. Zum Zeitpunkt der Arbeit fehlen Pionen, Protonen und Kaonen in den invarianten Massenspektren der Fast Simulation. Das Problem soll in Zukunft behoben werden. Folglich haben wir ein invariantes Massenspektrum mit 85 Millionen simulierten Ereignissen, jedoch ohne Pionen, Protonen und Kaonen. Wir erhalten daher ein signifikantes J/ψ-Signal, allerdings mit einem unrealistisch hohen S/B-Verhältnis. Ein weiteres Ziel, nach der Implementierung der fehlenden Teilchen, soll die nochmalige Extrahierung des J/ψ-Signals mit korrektem Untergrund sein.
We present the charged-particle multiplicity distributions over a wide pseudorapidity range (−3.4<η<5.0) for pp collisions at s√=0.9,7, and 8 TeV at the LHC. Results are based on information from the Silicon Pixel Detector and the Forward Multiplicity Detector of ALICE, extending the pseudorapidity coverage of the earlier publications and the high-multiplicity reach. The measurements are compared to results from the CMS experiment and to PYTHIA, PHOJET and EPOS LHC event generators, as well as IP-Glasma calculations.
We present measurements of ρ0, ω and K∗0 spectra in π−+ C production interactions at 158 GeV / c and ρ0 spectra at 350 GeV / c using the NA61/SHINE spectrometer at the CERN SPS. Spectra are presented as a function of the Feynman’s variable xF in the range 0<xF<1 and 0<xF<0.5 for 158 and 350 GeV / c respectively. Furthermore, we show comparisons with previous measurements and predictions of several hadronic interaction models. These measurements are essential for a better understanding of hadronic shower development and for improving the modeling of cosmic ray air showers.
The production of beauty hadrons was measured via semi-leptonic decays at mid-rapidity with the ALICE detector at the LHC in the transverse momentum interval 1<p T < 8 GeV/c in minimum-bias p-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=5.02 TeV and in 1.3 < p T < 8 GeV/c in the 20% most central Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=2.76 TeV. The pp reference spectra at sNN−−−√=5.02 TeV and s√=2.76 TeV, needed for the calculation of the nuclear modification factors R pPb and R PbPb, were obtained by a pQCD-driven scaling of the cross section of electrons from beauty-hadron decays measured at s√=7 TeV. In the p T interval 3 < p T < 8 GeV/c, a suppression of the yield of electrons from beauty-hadron decays is observed in Pb-Pb compared to pp collisions. Towards lower p T, the R PbPb values increase with large systematic uncertainties. The R pPb is consistent with unity within systematic uncertainties and is well described by theoretical calculations that include cold nuclear matter effects in p-Pb collisions. The measured R pPb and these calculations indicate that cold nuclear matter effects are small at high transverse momentum also in Pb-Pb collisions. Therefore, the observed reduction of R PbPb below unity at high p T may be ascribed to an effect of the hot and dense medium formed in Pb-Pb collisions.
The measurement of azimuthal correlations of charged particles is presented for Pb-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=2.76 TeV and p-Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=5.02 TeV with the ALICE detector at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. These correlations are measured for the second, third and fourth order flow vector in the pseudorapidity region |η| < 0.8 as a function of centrality and transverse momentum p T using two observables, to search for evidence of p T-dependent flow vector fluctuations. For Pb-Pb collisions at 2.76 TeV, the measurements indicate that p T-dependent fluctuations are only present for the second order flow vector. Similar results have been found for p-Pb collisions at 5.02 TeV. These measurements are compared to hydrodynamic model calculations with event-by-event geometry fluctuations in the initial state to constrain the initial conditions and transport properties of the matter created in Pb–Pb and p–Pb collisions.
Two-particle angular correlations were measured in pp collisions at s√=7 TeV for pions, kaons, protons, and lambdas, for all particle/anti-particle combinations in the pair. Data for mesons exhibit an expected peak dominated by effects associated with mini-jets and are well reproduced by general purpose Monte Carlo generators. However, for baryon–baryon and anti-baryon–anti-baryon pairs, where both particles have the same baryon number, a near-side anti-correlation structure is observed instead of a peak. This effect is interpreted in the context of baryon production mechanisms in the fragmentation process. It currently presents a challenge to Monte Carlo models and its origin remains an open question.
Measurement of deuteron spectra and elliptic flow in Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 2.76 TeV at the LHC
(2017)
The transverse momentum (pT) spectra and elliptic flow coefficient (v2) of deuterons and anti-deuterons at mid-rapidity (|y|<0.5) are measured with the ALICE detector at the LHC in Pb–Pb collisions at sNN−−−√ = 2.76 TeV. The measurement of the pT spectra of (anti-)deuterons is done up to 8 GeV/c in 0–10% centrality class and up to 6 GeV/c in 10–20% and 20–40% centrality classes. The v2 is measured in the 0.8 < pT < 5 GeV/c interval and in six different centrality intervals (0–5, 5–10, 10–20, 20–30, 30–40 and 40–50%) using the scalar product technique. Measured π ±, K± and p+p¯¯¯ transverse-momentum spectra and v2 are used to predict the deuteron pT spectra and v2 within the Blast-Wave model. The predictions are able to reproduce the v2 coefficient in the measured pT range and the transverse-momentum spectra for pT > 1.8 GeV/c within the experimental uncertainties. The measurement of the coalescence parameter B2 is performed, showing a pT dependence in contrast with the simplest coalescence model, which fails to reproduce also the measured v2 coefficient. In addition, the coalescence parameter B2 and the elliptic flow coefficient in the 20–40% centrality interval are compared with the AMPT model which is able, in its version without string melting, to reproduce the measured v2(pT) and the B2(pT) trend.
The invariant differential cross sections for inclusive π0 and η mesons at midrapidity were measured in pp collisions at s√=2.76 TeV for transverse momenta 0.4<pT<40 GeV/c and 0.6<pT<20 GeV/c, respectively, using the ALICE detector. This large range in pT was achieved by combining various analysis techniques and different triggers involving the electromagnetic calorimeter (EMCal). In particular, a new single-cluster, shower-shape based method was developed for the identification of high-pT neutral pions, which exploits that the showers originating from their decay photons overlap in the EMCal. Above 4 GeV/c, the measured cross sections are found to exhibit a similar power-law behavior with an exponent of about 6.3. Next-to-leading-order perturbative QCD calculations differ from the measured cross sections by about 30% for the π0, and between 30–50% for the η meson, while generator-level simulations with PYTHIA 8.2 describe the data to better than 10–30%, except at pT<1 GeV/c. The new data can therefore be used to further improve the theoretical description of π0 and η meson production.
The transverse momentum distributions of the strange and double-strange hyperon resonances (Σ(1385)±, Ξ(1530)0) produced in p–Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=5.02 TeV were measured in the rapidity range −0.5<yCMS<0 for event classes corresponding to different charged-particle multiplicity densities, ⟨dNch/dηlab⟩. The mean transverse momentum values are presented as a function of ⟨dNch/dηlab⟩, as well as a function of the particle masses and compared with previous results on hyperon production. The integrated yield ratios of excited to ground-state hyperons are constant as a function of ⟨dNch/dηlab⟩. The equivalent ratios to pions exhibit an increase with ⟨dNch/dηlab⟩, depending on their strangeness content.
The azimuthal correlations of D mesons with charged particles were measured with the ALICE apparatus in pp collisions at s√=7 TeV and p–Pb collisions at sNN−−−√=5.02 TeV at the Large Hadron Collider. D0, D+, and D∗+ mesons and their charge conjugates with transverse momentum 3<pT<16 GeV/c and rapidity in the nucleon-nucleon centre-of-mass system |ycms|<0.5 (pp collisions) and −0.96<ycms<0.04 (p–Pb collisions) were correlated to charged particles with pT>0.3 GeV/c. The yield of charged particles in the correlation peak induced by the jet containing the D meson and the peak width are compatible within uncertainties in the two collision systems. The data are described within uncertainties by Monte-Carlo simulations based on PYTHIA, POWHEG, and EPOS 3 event generators.
We present the charged-particle pseudorapidity density in Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 5.02 TeV in centrality classes measured by ALICE. The measurement covers a wide pseudorapidity range from −3.5 to 5, which is sufficient for reliable estimates of the total number of charged particles produced in the collisions. For the most central (0–5%) collisions we find 21 400 ± 1 300, while for the most peripheral (80–90%) we find 230 ± 38. This corresponds to an increase of (27 ± 4)% over the results at √sNN = 2.76 TeV previously reported by ALICE. The energy dependence of the total number of charged particles produced in heavy-ion collisions is found to obey a modified power-law like behaviour. The chargedparticle pseudorapidity density of the most central collisions is compared to model calculations — none of which fully describes the measured distribution. We also present an estimate of the rapidity density of charged particles. The width of that distribution is found to exhibit a remarkable proportionality to the beam rapidity, independent of the collision energy from the top SPS to LHC energies.
Electrons from heavy-flavour hadron decays (charm and beauty) were measured with the ALICE detector in Pb–Pb collisions at a centre-of-mass of energy √sNN = 2.76 TeV. The transverse momentum (pT) differential production yields at mid-rapidity were used to calculate the nuclear modification factor RAA in the interval 3 < pT < 18 GeV/c. The RAA shows a strong suppression compared to binary scaling of pp collisions at the same energy (up to a factor of 4) in the 10% most central Pb–Pb collisions. There is a centrality trend of suppression, and a weaker suppression (down to a factor of 2) in semi-peripheral (50–80%) collisions is observed. The suppression of electrons in this broad pT interval indicates that both charm and beauty quarks lose energy when they traverse the hot medium formed in Pb–Pb collisions at LHC.
We report the direct virtual photon invariant yields in the transverse momentum ranges 1 < pT < 3 GeV/c and 5 < pT < 10 GeV/c at mid-rapidity derived from the dielectron invariant mass continuum region 0.10 < Mee < 0.28 GeV/c2 for 0–80% minimum-bias Au+Au collisions at √sN N = 200 GeV. A clear excess in the invariant yield compared to the nuclear overlap function T A A scaled p + p reference is observed in the pT range 1 < pT < 3 GeV/c. For pT > 6 GeV/c the production follows T A A scaling. Model calculations with contributions from thermal radiation and initial hard parton scattering are consistent ithin uncertainties with the direct virtual photon invariant yield.
Monte Carlo (MC) simulations are an essential tool to determine fundamental features of a neutron beam, such as the neutron flux or the γ-ray background, that sometimes can not be measured or at least not in every position or energy range. Until recently, the most widely used MC codes in this field had been MCNPX and FLUKA. However, the Geant4 toolkit has also become a competitive code for the transport of neutrons after the development of the native Geant4 format for neutron data libraries, G4NDL. In this context, we present the Geant4 simulations of the neutron spallation target of the n_TOF facility at CERN, done with version 10.1.1 of the toolkit. The first goal was the validation of the intra-nuclear cascade models implemented in the code using, as benchmark, the characteristics of the neutron beam measured at the first experimental area (EAR1), especially the neutron flux and energy distribution, and the time distribution of neutrons of equal kinetic energy, the so-called Resolution Function. The second goal was the development of a Monte Carlo tool aimed to provide useful calculations for both the analysis and planning of the upcoming measurements at the new experimental area (EAR2) of the facility.
The accuracy on neutron capture cross section of fissile isotopes must be improved for the design of future nuclear systems such as Gen-IV reactors and Accelerator Driven Systems. The High Priority Request List of the Nuclear Energy Agency, which lists the most important nuclear data requirements, includes also the neutron capture cross sections of fissile isotopes such as 233,235U and 239,241Pu. A specific experimental setup has been used at the CERN n_TOF facility for the measurement of the neutron capture cross section of 235U by a set of micromegas fission detectors placed inside a segmented BaF2 Total Absorption Calorimeter.
New neutron cross section measurements of minor actinides have been performed recently in order to reduce the uncertainties in the evaluated data, which is important for the design of advanced nuclear reactors and, in particular, for determining their performance in the transmutation of nuclear waste. We have measured the 241Am(n,γ) cross section at the n_TOF facility between 0.2 eV and 10 keV with a BaF2 Total Absorption Calorimeter, and the analysis of the measurement has been recently concluded. Our results are in reasonable agreement below 20 eV with the ones published by C. Lampoudis et al. in 2013, who reported a 22% larger capture cross section up to 110 eV compared to experimental and evaluated data published before. Our results also indicate that the 241Am(n,γ) cross section is underestimated in the present evaluated libraries between 20 eV and 2 keV by 25%, on average, and up to 35% for certain evaluations and energy ranges.
The KASCADE-Grande experiment has significantly contributed to the current knowledge about the energy spectrum and composition of cosmic rays for energies between the knee and the ankle. Meanwhile, post-LHC versions of the hadronic interaction models are available and used to interpret the entire data set of KASCADE-Grande. In addition, a new, combined analysis of both arrays, KASCADE and Grande, was developed significantly increasing the accuracy of the shower observables. First results of the new analysis with the entire data set of the KASCADE-Grande experiment will be the focus of this contribution.
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.
The second and the third order anisotropic flow, V2 and V3, are mostly determined by the corresponding initial spatial anisotropy coefficients, ε2 and ε3, in the initial density distribution. In addition to their dependence on the same order initial anisotropy coefficient, higher order anisotropic flow, Vn (n > 3), can also have a significant contribution from lower order initial anisotropy coefficients, which leads to mode-coupling effects. In this Letter we investigate the linear and non-linear modes in higher order anisotropic flow Vn for n = 4, 5, 6 with the ALICE detector at the Large Hadron Collider. The measurements are done for particles in the pseudorapidity range |η| < 0.8 and the transverse momentum range 0.2 < pT < 5.0 GeV/c as a function of collision centrality. The results are compared with theoretical calculations and provide important constraints on the initial conditions, including initial spatial geometry and its fluctuations, as well as the ratio of the shear viscosity to entropy density of the produced system.
The inclusive J/ψ transverse momentum spectra and nuclear modification factors are reported at midrapidity (|y| < 1.0) in Au+Au collisions at √sN N = 39, 62.4 and 200 GeV taken by the STAR experiment. A suppression of J/ψ production, with respect to the production in p + p scaled by the number of binary nucleon–nucleon collisions, is observed in central Au+Au collisions at these three energies. No significant energy dependence of nuclear modification factors is found within uncertainties. The measured nuclear modification factors can be described by model calculations that take into account both suppression of direct J/ψ production due to the color screening effect and J/ψ regeneration from recombination of uncorrelated charm–anticharm quark pairs.
We present the first ever measurements of femtoscopic correlations between the K0 S and K± particles. The analysis was performed on the data from Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 2.76 TeV measured by the ALICE experiment. The observed femtoscopic correlations are consistent with final-state interactions proceeding via the a0(980) resonance. The extracted kaon source radius and correlation strength parameters for K0 SK− are found to be equal within the experimental uncertainties to those for K0 SK+. Comparing the results of the present study with those from published identical-kaon femtoscopic studies by ALICE, mass and coupling parameters for the a0 resonance are tested. Our results are also compatible with the interpretation of the a0 having a tetraquark structure instead of that of a diquark
HADES is a fixed target experiment using SIS18 heavy-ion beams. It investigates the microscopic properties of matter formed in heavy-ion, proton and pion - induced reactions in the 1-3.5 GeV/u energy regime. In 2014 HADES used a secondary pion beam produced by interaction between high-intensity nitrogen primary beam and a beryllium target. In these conditions beam losses, generated by slow extraction and beam transport to the experimental area, led to activation of the beam line elements and triggered radiation alarms. The primary beam intensity had to be reduced and the beam optics modified in order to keep radiation levels within the allowed limits. Similar beam conditions are requested by HADES experiment for upcoming run in 2018 and in the following years. Therefore, a number of measures have been proposed to improve beam transmission and quality. These measures are: additional shielding, additional beam instrumentation, modification of beam optics and increase of vacuum chambers' apertures in critical locations. The optics study and preliminary results of FLUKA simulations for optimization of location of loss detectors are presented.
Due to the massive parallel operation modes at GSI accelerators, a lot of accelerator setup and re-adjustment has to be made by operators during a beam time. This is typically done manually using potentiometers and is very time-consuming. With the FAIR project the complexity of the accelerator facility increases further and for efficiency reasons it is recommended to establish a high level of automation for future operation. Modern Accelerator Control Systems allow a fast access to both, accelerator settings and beam diagnostics data. This provides the opportunity to implement algorithms for automated adjustment of e.g. magnet settings to maximize transmission and optimize required beam parameters. The fast-switching magnets in GSI-beamlines are an optimal basis for an automatic exploration of the parameter-space. The optimization of the parameters for the SIS18 multi-turn-injection using a genetic algorithm has already been simulated*. The first results of our automatized online parameter optimization at the CRYRING@ESR injector are presented here.
We study simulated animats in terms of wheeled robots with the most simple neural controller possible – a single neuron per actuator. The system is fully self-organized in the sense that the controlling neuron receives uniquely the actual angle of the wheel as an input. Non-trivial locomotion results in structured environments, with the robot determining autonomously the direction of movement (time-reversal symmetry is spontaneously broken). Our controller, which mimics the mechanism used to transmit power in steam locomotives, abstracts from the body plan of the animat, working without problems also in the presence of noise and for chains of individual two-wheeled cars. Being fully compliant our controller may be also used, in the spirit of morphological computation, as a basic unit for higher-level evolutionary algorithms.
We study the correlation between the distributions of the net-charge, net-kaon, net-baryon and net-proton number at hadronization and after the final hadronic decoupling by simulating ultra relativistic heavy ion collisions with the hybrid version of the ultrarelativistic quantum molecular dynamics (UrQMD) model. We find that due to the hadronic rescattering these distributions are not strongly correlated. The calculated change of the correlation, during the hadronic expansion stage, does not support the recent paradigm, namely that the measured final moments of the experimentally observed distributions do give directly the values of those distributions at earlier times, when the system had been closer to the QCD crossover.
Distillation of scalar exchange by coherent hypernucleus production in antiproton–nucleus collisions
(2017)
The total and angular differential cross sections of the coherent process p¯ + A Z → A (Z − 1) + ¯ are evaluated at the beam momenta 1.5 ÷ 20 GeV/c within the meson exchange model with bound proton and -hyperon wave functions. It is shown that the shape of the beam momentum dependence of the hypernucleus production cross sections with various discrete states is strongly sensitive to the presence of the scalar κ-meson exchange in the p p¯ → ¯ amplitude. This can be used as a clean test of the exchange by scalar π K correlation in coherent p A¯ reactions.
What is the magnetic field distribution for the equation of state of magnetized neutron stars?
(2017)
In this Letter, we report a realistic calculation of the magnetic field profile for the equation of state inside strongly magnetized neutron stars. Unlike previous estimates, which are widely used in the literature, we find that magnetic fields increase relatively slowly with increasing baryon chemical potential (or baryon density) of magnetized matter. More precisely, the increase is polynomial instead of exponential, as previously assumed. Through the analysis of several different realistic models for the microscopic description of stellar matter (including hadronic, hybrid and quark models) combined with general relativistic solutions endowed with a poloidal magnetic field obtained by solving Einstein–Maxwell's field equations in a self-consistent way, we generate a phenomenological fit for the magnetic field distribution in the stellar polar direction to be used as input in microscopic calculations.
Unparticle Casimir effect
(2017)
In this paper we present the un-Casimir effect, namely the study of the Casimir energy in the presence of an unparticle component in addition to the electromagnetic field contribution. The distinctive feature of the un-Casimir effect is a fractalization of metallic plates. This result emerges through a new dependence of the Casimir energy on the plate separation that scales with a continuous power controlled by the unparticle dimension. As long as the perfect conductor approximation is valid, we find bounds on the unparticle scale that are independent of the effective coupling constant between the scale invariant sector and ordinary matter. We find regions of the parameter space such that for plate distances around 5 μm and larger the un-Casimir bound wins over the other bounds.
Motivated by a recent finding of an exact solution of the relativistic Boltzmann equation in a Friedmann–Robertson–Walker spacetime, we implement this metric into the newly developed transport approach Simulating Many Accelerated Strongly-interacting Hadrons (SMASH). We study the numerical solution of the transport equation and compare it to this exact solution for massless particles. We also compare a different initial condition, for which the transport equation can be independently solved numerically. Very nice agreement is observed in both cases. Having passed these checks for the SMASH code, we study a gas of massive particles within the same spacetime, where the particle decoupling is forced by the Hubble expansion. In this simple scenario we present an analysis of the freeze-out times, as function of the masses and cross sections of the particles. The results might be of interest for their potential application to relativistic heavy-ion collisions, for the characterization of the freeze-out process in terms of hadron properties.
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 study the charmonium coherent photoproduction and hadroproduction consistently with modifications from both cold and hot nuclear matters. The strong electromagnetic fields from fast moving nucleus interact with the other target nucleus, producing abundant charmonium in the extremely low transverse momentum region pT<0.1 GeV/c. This results in significative enhancement of J/ψ nuclear modification factor in semi-central and peripheral collisions. In the middle pT region such as pT<3∼5 GeV/c, J/ψ final yield is dominated by the combination process of single charm and anti-charm quarks moving in the deconfined matter, c+c¯→J/ψ+g. In the higher pT region, J/ψ production are mainly from parton initial hard scatterings at the beginning of nucleus–nucleus collisions and decay of B hadrons. We include all of these production mechanisms and explain the experimental data well in different colliding centralities and transverse momentum regions.
The Karl Schwarzschild Meeting 2017 (KSM2017) has been the third instalment of the conference dedicated to the great Frankfurter scientist, who derived the first black hole solution of Einstein's equations about 100 years ago.
The event has been a 5 day meeting in the field of black holes, AdS/CFT correspondence and gravitational physics. Like the two previous instalments, the conference continued to attract a stellar ensemble of participants from the world's most renowned institutions. The core of the meeting has been a series of invited talks from eminent experts (keynote speakers) as well as the presence of plenary research talks by students and junior speakers.
List of Conference photo and poster, Sponsors and funding acknowledgments, Committees and List of participants are available in this PDF.
Das Zusammentreffen zu Beginn der Sommerferien von 60 wissbegierigen und experimentierfreudigen Schülerinnen und Schülern mit einem ebensolchen Team aus Hochschullehrenden und Kulturschaffenden, versprach wie immer eine intensive und aufregende Zeit zu werden. Diese positive Erwartung wurde auch voll erfüllt und gipfelte am Gästenachmittag mit Eltern, Verwandten, Freunden und interessierten Besuchern in einen feierlich-fröhlichen Abschluss mit spannenden und auch überraschenden Werkschauen der Kurse. Ein besonderes Highlight war die großformatige Gestaltung eines Modells der BURG FÜRSTENECK als interdisziplinäres Ergebnis des Hauptkurses Mathematik und des Wahlkurses Modellbau.
Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war die Optimierung der Kristallzüchtung von eisenbasierten Supraleitern. Im ersten Teil lag der Fokus dabei auf der Züchtung der 1111-Verbindung unter Hochdruck/Hochtemperaturbedingungen (HD/HT), sowie der systematischen Untersuchung verschiedener Einflüsse der Züchtung dieser Familie unter Normaldruckbedingungen.
Die HD/HT-Experimente führten unter den gewählten Parametern, sowohl unter der Verwendung eines Flussmittels als auch ohne, nicht zur Stabilisierung der gewünschten Zielphase. Stattdessen kam es zur Phasenseparation So bildete sich immer im Inneren des verwendeten BN-Tiegels ein, häufig kugelförmig ausgeformtes, Gebilde, bestehend aus einer Fe-As-Phase. Dies gilt sowohl für NdFeAsO als auch LaFeAsO1-xFx. Bei der Verwendung von Salz als Flussmittel kam es neben dieser Fe-As-Phase auch häufig zur Bildung einer Cl-haltigen Phase. Auch zeigte sich, dass es zu einer B-Diffusion während des Versuches kam, sodass Selten-Erd-Oxoborate nachgewiesen werden konnten. Durch einen Versuch unter Normaldruckbedingungen zeigte sich, dass dies kein Problem in der Hochdrucksynthese ist, sondern ein grundlegendes Problem bei der Verwendung von BN mit den Selten-Erden ist.
Nachdem gezeigt wurde, dass eine systematische Untersuchung bzw. Optimierung der Züchtungsparameter der 1111-Verbindungen unter HD/HT-Bedingungen enorm schwierig ist, lag der weitere Fokus auf der Züchtung unter Normaldruckbedingungen. Dazu wurde zu Beginn gezeigt, dass die Verwendung von Quarzampullen bei Temperaturen bis zu 1200 °C nicht zu einer zusätzlichen Sauerstoffdiffusion führen. Dies ermöglichte es ohne zusätzliche Schweißarbeit oder hohen Kosten den Optimierungsprozess für ein geeignetes Temperatur-Zeit-Profil durchzuführen. Das so erhaltene Profil wurde anschließen für alle weiteren Versuche verwendet. Mit dieser Basis wurde daraufhin untersucht, welchen Einfluss die Menge an Flussmittel auf die Stabilisierung der Phase und demnach auf die Kristallzüchtung hat. Dabei zeigte sich, dass ein molares Material-zu-Flussmittel-Verhältnis von 1:7 die besten Resultate liefert. Der nächste Optimierungsschritt, die Frage nach einem geeigneten Sauerstoffspender, in Angriff genommen. Bei dieser Frage wurde sich auf einen Sauerstoffspender aus der Gruppe der Eisenoxide konzentriert. Es zeigte sich, dass, für das gewählte Temperatur-Zeit-Profil die Verbindung FeO und Fe3O4 die besten Resultate liefern. In diesen Versuchen ist es gelungen Kristalle zu züchten die Kantenlängen bis zu 800 μm aufweisen. Allerdings zeigten Vergleichsversuche mit einen anderen Temperatur-Zeit-Profil, dass Fe2O3 in diesen Fällen die besten Resultate liefern. Dies macht deutlich, dass es bisher keine vollständige Kontrolle in der Züchtung der 1111-Verbindung gibt. Die Veränderung eines Züchtungsparameters bedeutet, dass auch alle anderen Parameter erneut geprüft werden müssen. Somit zeigte sich, dass eine fundierte und systematische Untersuchung der Züchtungsparameter notwendig ist.
Nachdem die grundlegenden Fragen für die undotierte Verbindung NdFeAsO beantwortet wurden, wurde untersucht, welche Sauerstoff-Fluorspenderkombination bei gegebenem Temperatur-Zeit-Profil optimal für den Kristallwachstum und den Fluoreinbau ist. Die erhaltenen Resultate belegten, dass in diesem Fall Fe3O4 und FeF2 zu den besten Resultaten führte. Die so gezüchteten Kristalle wiesen Kantenlängen bis zu 800 μm auf und Messungen des elektrischen Widerstandes zeigten einen maximalen Tc ≈ 53 K mit einen RRR-Wert im magnetischem Bereich von über 10. Damit unterscheiden sich die gezüchtete Kristalle hinsichtlich ihrer Qualität um den Faktor ~3 von den bisherigen Einkristallen bekannt aus der Literatur.
Durch die Ermittlung des reellen Fluorgehalts der Proben mittels WDX in Kombination mit elektrischen Widerstandsmessungen wurde ein vorläufiges Phasendiagramm erstellt.
Magnetische Messungen unter Normaldruck und Hochdruckbedingungen ermöglichten es die Anisotropie zwischen der ab- Ebene und der c-Ebene zu messen, sowie das Verhalten des elektrischen Widerstandes in Abhängigkeit vom Druck.
Es zeigte sich dabei, dass ab einem Druck von etwa 22.9 GPa die Supraleitung in diesen Kristallen nicht mehr vorhanden ist, und der Kristall wieder normalleitend ist. Mit weiter steigendem Druck steigen die Absolut-Widerstandswerte ebenfalls wieder an, was auf eine mögliche ferromagnetische Ordnung deutet.
Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit lag der Fokus auf einer Verbindung aus der 122-Familie der Pniktide: SrFe2As2. Zu Beginn wurde untersucht, welches der drei gewählten Tiegelmaterialien BN, Al2O3 oder Glaskohlenstoff, für Züchtungen dieser Phase am geeigneten ist. In allen Versuchen konnte die gewünschte Zielphase stabilisiert werden, jedoch kam es bei der Verwendung von Glaskohlenstoff zu Diffusion von Kohlenstoff aus dem Tiegel in die Probe hinein, sodass C-haltige Phasen nachweisbar waren. Ebenso zeigte sich, dass es auch eine Diffusion vom Material in den Tiegel hinein gegeben hat. Diese Probleme traten auch bei der Verwendung von Al2O3 auf. Durch ein Röntgenpulverdiffrakgtogramm konnte eine Al-haltige Verbindung in der Probe nachgewiesen werden. Ein weiterer Nachteil dieses Materials ist die Benutzung des Tiegels durch die Schmelze. Von den drei Materialien erwies sich BN als am besten geeignetes Tiegelmaterial. Es kommt zu keiner Benetzung oder Diffusion, auch der Fremdphasenanteil ist sehr gering in dieser Probe.
Mit diesem Wissen wurde im weiteren Verlauf ein quasi-binäres Phasendiagramm des Systems SrFe2As2-FeAs erstellt. Die intermetallische Verbindung FeAs fungiert hierbei als Flussmittel. Eine wichtige Frage in diesem Zusammenhand ist die Frage ob das System kongruent erstarrend ist. Diese Frage lässt sich anhand der vorhandenen DTA-kurven nicht eindeutig beantworten, zeigte das System bei Aufheizen keine zusätzlichen Schmelzprozesse, es scheint allerdings, dass es in der Schmelze zu einem Abdampfen von Arsen kommt. Somit verschiebt sich die Zusammensetzung der Schmelze und beim Abkühlen treten zusätzliche Erstarrungsprozesse auf. Die Schmelztemperatur TM wurde so auf T = 1320 °C bestimmt. Mit steigendem Flussmittelanteil verschob sich diese Temperatur zu niedrigeren Temperaturen unter 1200 °C, was eine Züchtung in Quarzampullen wieder möglich macht.
Die Ergebnisse in dieser Arbeit liefern eine fundierte Grundlage für weitere Optimierungen. So ist zum Beispiel der Frage nach dem am besten geeigneten Sauerstoffspender nicht auf die Selten-Erd-Oxide eingegangen worden. Auch ob die Verwendung eines anderen Salzes, wie zum Beispiel den Iodiden für die Züchtung bessere Resultate liefert kann weiterhin untersucht werden.
Nachdem der Schmelzpunkt von SrFe2As2 bestimmt wurde und im quasi-binärem Phasendiagramm ein Eutektikum vorhanden ist, kann mit den weiteren Optimierungsschritten für die Kristallzüchtung dieses Systems begonnen werden. Dazu gehört die Entwicklung eines Temperatur-Zeit-Profils, sowie im nächsten Schritt Züchtungen von dotierten Verbindungen.
Background: The Hawking–Perry–Strominger (HPS) work states a new controversial idea about the black hole (BH) information paradox , where BHs maximally entropize and encode information in their event horizon area , with no “hair” thought to reveal information outside but angular momentum, mass, and electric charge only in a unique quantum gravity (QG) vacuum state. New conservation laws of gravitation and electromagnetism , appear to generate different QG vacua, preserving more information in soft photon/graviton hair implants. We find that BH photon hair implants can encode orbital angular momentum (OAM) and vorticity of the electromagnetic (EM) field. Methods: Numerical simulations are used to plot an EM field with OAM emitted by a set of dipolar currents together with the soft photon field they induce. The analytical results confirm that the soft photon hair implant carries OAM and vorticity. Results: a set of charges and currents generating real EM fields with precise values of OAM induce a “curly”, twisted, soft-hair implant on the BH with vorticity and OAM increased by one unit with respect to the initial real field. Conclusions: Soft photon implants can be spatially shaped ad hoc, encoding structured and densely organized information on the event horizon
In this study, we investigate the interaction of jets with their environment at a microscopic level, which is a key open question in the study of relativistic jets. Using small simulation systems during past research, we initially studied the evolution of both electron–proton and electron–positron relativistic jets containing helical magnetic fields, by focusing on their interactions with an ambient plasma. Here, using larger jet radii, we have performed simulations of global jets containing helical magnetic fields in order to examine how helical magnetic fields affect kinetic instabilities, such as the Weibel instability, the kinetic Kelvin–Helmholtz instability (kKHI) and the mushroom instability (MI). We found that the evolution of global jets strongly depends on the size of the jet radius. For example, phase bunching of jet electrons, in particular in the electron–proton jet, is mixed with a larger jet radius as a result of the more complicated structures of magnetic fields with excited kinetic instabilities. In our simulation, these kinetic instabilities led to new types of instabilities in global jets. In the electron–proton jet simulation, a modified recollimation occurred, and jet electrons were strongly perturbed. In the electron–positron jet simulation, mixed kinetic instabilities occurred early, followed by a turbulence-like structure. Simulations using much larger (and longer) systems are required in order to further thoroughly investigate the evolution of global jets containing helical magnetic fields.
The neutron capture cross sections of several unstable key isotopes acting as branching points in the s-process are crucial for stellar nucleosynthesis studies, but they are very challenging to measure directly due to the difficult production of sufficient sample material, the high activity of the resulting samples, and the actual (n, γ) measurement, where high neutron fluxes and effective background rejection capabilities are required. At present there are about 21 relevant s-process branching point isotopes whose cross section could not be measured yet over the neutron energy range of interest for astrophysics. However, the situation is changing with some very recent developments and upcoming technologies. This work introduces three techniques that will change the current paradigm in the field: the use of γ-ray imaging techniques in (n, γ) experiments, the production of moderated neutron beams using high-power lasers, and double capture experiments in Maxwellian neutron beams.
The huge neutron fluxes offer the possibility to use research reactors to produce isotopes of interest, which can be investigated afterwards. An example is the half-lives of long-lived isotopes like 129I. A direct usage of reactor neutrons in the astrophysical energy regime is only possible, if the corresponding ions are not at rest in the laboratory frame. The combination of an ion storage ring with a reactor and a neutron guide could open the path to direct measurements of neutron-induced cross sections on short-lived radioactive isotopes in the astrophysically interesting energy regime.
I review a number of recent developments in the physics of compact stars containing deconfined quark matter, including (a) their cooling with possible phase transition from a fully gapped to a gapless phase of QCD at low temperatures and large isospin; (b) the transport coeffcients of the 2SC phase and the role played by the Aharonov-Bohm interactions between flux-tubes and unpaired fermions; (c) rapidly rotating compact stars and spin-down and spin-up induced phase transition between hadronic and QCD matter as well as between different phases of QCD.
The Gribov mode in hot QCD
(2017)
In thesis I investigate the possibility that at the smallest length scale (Planck scale) the very notion of "dimension" needs to be revisited. Due to "quantum effects" spacetime might become very turbulent at these scales and properties like those of "fractals" emerge, including a "scale dependent dimension". It seems that this "spontaneous dimensional reduction" and the appearance of a minimal physical length are very general effects that most approaches to quantum gravity share. Main emphasis is given to the"spectral dimension" and its calculation for strings and p-branes.
The thermodynamics of Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) in external (electro-)magnetic fields shows some unexpected features like inverse magnetic catalysis, which have been revealed mainly through lattice studies. Many effective descriptions, on the other hand, use Landau levels or approximate the system by just the lowest Landau level (LLL). Analyzing lattice configurations we ask whether such a picture is justified. We find the LLL to be separated from the rest by a spectral gap in the two-dimensional Dirac operator and analyze the corresponding LLL signature in four dimensions. We determine to what extent the quark condensate is LLL dominated at strong magnetic fields.
The QCD phase diagram at finite temperature and density has attracted considerable interest over many decades now, not least because of its relevance for a better understanding of heavy-ion collision experiments. Models provide some insight into the QCD phase structure but usually rely on various parameters. Based on renormalization group arguments, we discuss how the parameters of QCD low-energy models can be determined from the fundamental theory of the strong interaction. We particularly focus on a determination of the temperature dependence of these parameters in this work and comment on the effect of a finite quark chemical potential. We present first results and argue that our findings can be used to improve the predictive power of future model calculations.
We present the black hole accretion code (BHAC), a new multidimensional general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamics module for the MPI-AMRVAC framework. BHAC has been designed to solve the equations of ideal general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamics in arbitrary spacetimes and exploits adaptive mesh refinement techniques with an efficient block-based approach. Several spacetimes have already been implemented and tested. We demonstrate the validity of BHAC by means of various one-, two-, and three-dimensional test problems, as well as through a close comparison with the HARM3D code in the case of a torus accreting onto a black hole. The convergence of a turbulent accretion scenario is investigated with several diagnostics and we find accretion rates and horizon-penetrating fluxes to be convergent to within a few percent when the problem is run in three dimensions. Our analysis also involves the study of the corresponding thermal synchrotron emission, which is performed by means of a new general-relativistic radiative transfer code, BHOSS. The resulting synthetic intensity maps of accretion onto black holes are found to be convergent with increasing resolution and are anticipated to play a crucial role in the interpretation of horizon-scale images resulting from upcoming radio observations of the source at the Galactic Center.
We present entropy-limited hydrodynamics (ELH): a new approach for the computation of numerical fluxes arising in the discretization of hyperbolic equations in conservation form. ELH is based on the hybridisation of an unfiltered high-order scheme with the first-order Lax-Friedrichs method. The activation of the low-order part of the scheme is driven by a measure of the locally generated entropy inspired by the artificial-viscosity method proposed by Guermond et al. (J. Comput. Phys. 230(11):4248-4267, 2011, doi:10.1016/j.jcp.2010.11.043). Here, we present ELH in the context of high-order finite-differencing methods and of the equations of general-relativistic hydrodynamics. We study the performance of ELH in a series of classical astrophysical tests in general relativity involving isolated, rotating and nonrotating neutron stars, and including a case of gravitational collapse to black hole. We present a detailed comparison of ELH with the fifth-order monotonicity preserving method MP5 (Suresh and Huynh in J. Comput. Phys. 136(1):83-99, 1997, doi:10.1006/jcph.1997.5745), one of the most common high-order schemes currently employed in numerical-relativity simulations. We find that ELH achieves comparable and, in many of the cases studied here, better accuracy than more traditional methods at a fraction of the computational cost (up to ∼50% speedup). Given its accuracy and its simplicity of implementation, ELH is a promising framework for the development of new special- and general-relativistic hydrodynamics codes well adapted for massively parallel supercomputers.
Terahertz (THz) physics are an emerging field of research dealing with electromagnetic radiation in the far-infrared to microwave region. The development of innovative technologies for the generation and detection of THz radiation has only in the recent past led to a tremendous rise of both fundamental research as well as investigation of possible fields of application for THz radiation. The most prominent reason has long been the scarce accessibility of the THz region of the electromagnetic spectrum - commonly loosely located between 0.1 and 30 THz - to broad research, and it was mostly limited to astronomy and high energy physics facilities. Over the recent years, numerous novel concepts on both the source and detector side have been proposed and successfully implemented to overcome this so-called THz gap. New technology has become available and paved the way for wide-spread experimental laboratory work and accompanying theoretical investigations. First application studies have emerged and in some cases even commercial development of the field of THz physics is on the rise. Despite these enormous progresses, a continuing demand for more efficient THz detectors still impels current technological research. Relatively low source powers are often a major limiting factor and the request for new detection concepts, their understanding and implementation, as well as the optimization on a device basis has been and still remains in place. One of these concepts is the use of field-effect transistors (FETs) high above their conventional cut-off frequencies as electronic THz detectors. The concept has been proposed in a number of theoretical publications by M. Dyakonov and M. Shur in the early 1990's, who pioneered to show that under certain boundary conditions, non-linear collective excitations of the charge carrier system of a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) by incident THz radiation can exhibit rectifying behaviour - a detection principle, which has become known as plasma wave or plasmonic mixing. Up until this day, the concept has been successfully implemented in many device realizations - most advanced in established silicon CMOS technology - and stands on the edge of becoming commercially available on a large scale. The main direction of the work presented in this thesis was the modeling and experimental characterization of antenna-coupled FETs for THz detection - termed TeraFETs in this and the author's previous works - which have been implemented in different material systems. The materials presented in this thesis are AlGaN/GaN HEMTs and graphene FETs. In a number of scientific collaborations, TeraFETs were designed based on a hydrodynamic transport model, fabricated in the respective materials, and characterized mainly in the lower THz frequency region from 0.2 to 1.2 THz. The theoretical description of the plasma wave mixing mechanism in TeraFETs, as initiated by Dyakonov and Shur, was based on a fluid-dynamic transport model for charge carriers in the transistor channel. The THz radiation induces propagating charge density oscillations (plasma waves) in the 2DEG, which via non-linear self-mixing cause rectification of the incident THz signals. Over the course of this work, it became evident in the on-going detector characterization experiments that this original theoretical model of the detection process widely applied in the respective literature does not suffice to describe some of the experimental findings in TeraFET detection signals. Thorough measurements showed signal contributions, which are identified in this work to be of thermoelectric origin arising from an inherent asymmetric local heating of charge carriers in the devices. Depending on the material, these contributions constituted a mere side effect to plasmonic detection (AlGaN/GaN) or even reached a comparable magnitude (graphene FETs). To include these effects in the detector model, the original reduced fluid-dynamic description was extended to a hydrodynamic transport model. The model yields at the current stage a reasonable qualitative agreement to the measured THz detection signals. This thesis presents the formulation of a hydrodynamic charge carrier transport model and its specific implementation in a circuit simulation tool. A second modeling aspect is that the transport equations cover only the intrinsic plasmonic detection process in the active gated part of the TeraFET's transistor channel. In order to model and simulate the behavior of real devices, extrinsic detector parts such as ungated channel regions, parasitic resistances and capacitances, integrated antenna impedance, and others must be considered. The implemented detector model allows to simulate THz detection in real devices with the above influences included. Besides presentation of the detector model, experimental THz characterization of the fabricated TeraFETs is presented in this work. Careful device design yielded record detection performance for detectors in both investigated materials. The respective results are shown and the experimental observations of the thermoelectric effect in TeraFETs are compared to modeling results. It is the goal of this work to provide a framework for further theoretical and experimental studies of the plasmonic and thermoelectric effect in TeraFETs, which could eventually lead to a new type of THz detectors particularly exploiting the thermoelectric effect to enhance the sensitivity of today's plasmonic TeraFETs.
Zur Unterstützung von Lehrkräften bei der Auswahl eines Sachunterrichtsschulbuchs im Hinblick auf die didaktische Aufbereitung physikalischer Themen wurde ein bereits bestehendes und in der Schweiz eingesetztes Schulbuchraster weiterentwickelt. Die ergänzenden Bewertungskriterien berücksichtigen, inwieweit die Schulbücher physikalische Inhalte in einer Weise präsentieren, dass a) häufige Präkonzepte der Schülerinnen und Schüler aufgegriffen, b) Inhalte strukturiert dargestellt werden, c) multiple externe Repräsentationen zum Einsatz kommen, d) Selbsterklärungen angeregt wie auch e) offene Schülerexperimente angeboten werden. Zudem sollten f) für die Lehrkräfte Zusatzmaterialen mit fachwissenschaftlichen und fachdidaktischen Erläuterungen zur Verfügungen stehen. Ergänzende Erläuterungen der Rasterkriterien sollen eine möglichst objektive Beurteilung unterstützen. Anhand dieses weiterentwickelten Rasters wurden exemplarisch die 2017 in Hessen zugelassenen Sachunterrichtsschulbücher analysiert.
The transverse momentum distributions of the strange and double-strange hyperon resonances (Σ(1385)±,Ξ(1530)0) produced in p–Pb collisions at √sNN = 5.02 TeV were measured in the rapidity range −0.5<yCMS<0 for event classes corresponding to different charged-particle multiplicity densities, ⟨dNch/dηlab⟩. The mean transverse momentum values are presented as a function of ⟨dNch/dηlab⟩, as well as a function of the particle masses and compared with previous results on hyperon production. The integrated yield ratios of excited to ground-state hyperons are constant as a function of ⟨dNch/dηlab⟩. The equivalent ratios to pions exhibit an increase with ⟨dNch/dηlab⟩, depending on their strangeness content.
The interaction of (quasi)particles with a periodic potential arises in various domains of science and engineering, such as solid-state physics, chemical physics, and communication theory. An attractive test ground to investigate this interaction is represented by superconductors with artificial pinning sites, where magnetic flux quanta (Abrikosov vortices) interact with the pinning potential U(r) = U(r + R) induced by a nanostructure. At a combination of microwave and dc currents, fluxons act as mobile probes of U(r): The ac component shakes the fluxons in the vicinity of their equilibrium points which are unequivocally determined by the local pinning force counterbalanced by the Lorentz force induced by the dc current, linked to the curvature of U(r) which can then be used for a successful fitting of the voltage responses. A good correlation of the deduced dependences U(r) with the cross sections of the nanostructures points to that pinning is primarily caused by vortex length reduction. Our findings pave a new route to a non-destructive evaluation of periodic pinning in superconductor thin films. The approach should also apply to a broad class of systems whose evolution in time can be described by the coherent motion of (quasi)particles in a periodic potential.
The description of quantized collective excitations stands as a landmark in the quantum theory of condensed matter. A prominent example occurs in conventional magnets, which support bosonic magnons—quantized harmonic fluctuations of the ordered spins. In striking contrast is the recent discovery that strongly spin-orbital-coupled magnets, such as α-RuCl3, may display a broad excitation continuum inconsistent with conventional magnons. Due to incomplete knowledge of the underlying interactions unraveling the nature of this continuum remains challenging. The most discussed explanation refers to a coherent continuum of fractional excitations analogous to the celebrated Kitaev spin liquid. Here, we present a more general scenario. We propose that the observed continuum represents incoherent excitations originating from strong magnetic anharmonicity that naturally occurs in such materials. This scenario fully explains the observed inelastic magnetic response of α-RuCl3 and reveals the presence of nontrivial excitations in such materials extending well beyond the Kitaev state.
In this work the flexibility requirements of a highly renewable European electricity network that has to cover fluctuations of wind and solar power generation on different temporal and spatial scales are studied. Cost optimal ways to do so are analysed that include optimal distribution of the infrastructure, large scale transmission, storage, and dispatchable generators. In order to examine these issues, a model of increasing sophistication is built, first considering different flexibility classes of conventional generation, then adding storage, before finally considering transmission to see the effects of each.
To conclude, in this work it was shown that slowly flexible base load generators can only be used in energy systems with renewable shares of less than 50%, independent of the expansion of an interconnecting transmission network within Europe. Furthermore, for a system with a dominant fraction of renewable generation, highly flexible generators are essentially the only necessary class of backup generators. The total backup capacity can only be decreased significantly if interconnecting transmission is allowed, clearly favouring a European-wide energy network. These results are independent of the complexity level of the cost assumptions used for the models. The use of storage technologies allows to reduce the required conventional backup capacity further. This highlights the importance of including additional technologies into the energy system that provide flexibility to balance fluctuations caused by the renewable energy sources. These technologies could for example be advanced energy storage systems, interconnecting transmission in the electricity network, and hydro power plants.
It was demonstrated that a cost optimal European electricity system with almost 100% renewable generation can have total system costs comparable to today's system cost. However, this requires a very large transmission grid expansion to nine times the line volume of the present-day system. Limiting transmission increases the system cost by up to a third, however, a compromise grid with four times today's line volume already locks in most of the cost benefits. Therefore, it is very clear that by increasing the pan-European network connectivity, a cost efficient inclusion of renewable energies can be achieved, which is strongly needed to reach current climate change prevention goals.
It was also shown that a similarly cost efficient, highly renewable European electricity system can be achieved that considers a wide range of additional policy constraints and plausible changes of economic parameters.
Gabor lenses were invented for focusing hadron beams by the electric field of a confined electron column. A homogenous magnetic field created by a solenoid confines electrons in transverse direction while a potential well created by a cylindrical electrode system confines them longitudinally.
In this thesis the investigation and characterization of a nonneutral electron plasma (NNP) in a Gabor lens with a toroidal magnetic confinement and a 30 degree-bent anode is presented. Motivated by fundamental research on NNPs in this special environment, diagnostic methods were investigated to characterize the plasma. As a non-invasive method a PCO camera is placed in front of the experimental setup. A ring of 31 photodiodes is used inside the plasma for light intensity and distribution measurements. The experimental data is evaluated and the following results will be presented.
This thesis investigates second-order relativistic hydrodynamics and transport coefficients in strongly correlated systems. Our focus is mainly on the physical conditions relevant to heavy-ion collisions, as well as compact dense stellar objects at nonzero temperatures and in strong magnetic fields.
Chapter 1 provides a brief introduction to the area of research covered by this thesis, specifically relativistic hydrodynamics and transport in hot and dense media, which occur in heavy-ion collisions and heated stellar matter.
In Chapter 2 we give a new formulation of second-order dissipative hydrodynamics for relativistic systems using Zubarev's non-equilibrium statistical operator approach. We first solve the quantum Liouville equation with an infinitesimal source term to construct a non-equilibrium statistical operator which is a non-local functional of the thermodynamic parameters and their space-time gradients. Exploiting then the gradient expansion of the statistical operator we derive transport equations for the shear stress tensor, the bulk viscous pressure and the flavour diffusion currents up to the second order in hydrodynamic gradients.
We show that the second-order corrections to the dissipative fluxes arise from (i) the quadratic terms of the Taylor expansion of the statistical operator; and (ii) the linear terms which are nonlocal in space and time. These non-local corrections generate finite relaxation time scales in the evolution of the dissipative quantities. We derive the most generic form of the transport equations which involve gradients of the dissipative fluxes, as well as products of two first-order quantities (i.e., either thermodynamic forces or dissipative fluxes). We then go on to express the first- and the second-order transport coefficients, which appear in these equations, via certain two- and three-point equilibrium correlation functions. Finally, we express the relaxation times for the dissipative fluxes via the frequency-derivatives of the corresponding first-order transport coefficients.
In Chapter 3 we compute the transport coefficients of quark matter in the strong coupling regime within the two-flavor Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model. We apply the Kubo-Zubarev formalism to obtain the thermal and the electrical conductivities as well as the shear and the bulk viscosities by evaluating the corresponding equilibrium two-point correlation functions at the leading order in the 1/N_c expansion. In this approximation the conductivities and the shear viscosity are given by single-loop skeleton diagrams, whereas the bulk viscosity includes an infinite geometrical series of multi-loop diagrams. The dispersive effects that lead to nonzero transport coefficients arise from quark-meson fluctuations above the Mott transition temperature T_M, where meson decay into two on-mass-shell quarks is kinematically allowed.
We find that the conductivities and the shear viscosity are decreasing functions of temperature and density above T_M. We also show that the Wiedemann-Franz law does not hold. The ratio of the shear viscosity to the entropy density is larger than unity close to the Mott temperature and approaches the AdS/CFT bound at higher temperatures. We conjecture on the basis of the uncertainty principle that the ratio of the thermal conductivity to the heat capacity per unit volume is bounded from below by 1/18.
The case of the bulk viscosity turns out to be special, because the multi-loop contributions dominate the single-loop contribution close to the Mott line in the case where the chiral symmetry is explicitly broken. We find that in this case only at high temperatures the one-loop contribution becomes dominant. The resulting bulk viscosity exceeds the shear viscosity close to the Mott temperature by factors 5-20 when multi-loop contributions are included. In the high-temperature domain the bulk viscosity is negligible compared to the shear viscosity. For practical applications we provide simple, but accurate fits to the transport coefficients, which can facilitate the implementation of our results in hydrodynamics codes.
In Chapter 4 we compute the electrical conductivity of finite temperature, strongly magnetized crust of a compact star which may be formed in the aftermath of a supernova explosion, binary neutron star merger, or during accretion processes in X-ray binaries. We focus on the temperature-density regime where plasma is in the liquid state and, therefore, the conductivity is dominated by the electron scattering off correlated nuclei. The dynamical screening of electron-ion interaction is implemented in terms of the polarization tensor computed in the hard-thermal-loop (HTL) effective field theory of QED plasma. The correlations of the background ionic component are accounted for via a structure factor derived from Monte Carlo simulations of one-component plasma.
With this input we solve the Boltzmann kinetic equation in relaxation time approximation taking into account the anisotropy of transport due to the magnetic field. The electrical conductivity tensor is studied numerically as a function of temperature, density, magnetic field and the crust composition in a broad parameter range. We find that the conductivity as a function of temperature attains a minimum at the transition from the degenerate to the nondegenerate regime of electrons. We also provide accurate fit formulas to our numerical results for three components of the conductivity tensor. In addition, we provide supplemental tables which can be used in dissipative magneto-hydrodynamics(MHD) simulations of warm compact stars.
We summarize our results and discuss the perspectives in Chapter 5.
The theory of strong interactions — Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) — is well-defined mathematically. However, direct applications of this theory to experiment are rather limited due to significant technical obstacles. Even some general features of QCD remain unclear to date.
Hence, phenomenological input is important and needed for practical applications, e.g. for theoretical analysis of the heavy-ion collision experiments. In this thesis the role of hadronic interactions is studied in the hadron resonance gas (HRG) model — a popular model for the confined phase of QCD. The description of hadronic interactions is based on the famous van der Waals (VDW) equation and its quantum statistical generalization. While this is not the conventional choice for nuclear/hadronic physicspplications, the simplicity of the VDW approach makes it extremely useful.
In particular, this framework allows to include the two most basic ingredients of hadron-hadron interaction: the short-range repulsion, modeled by excluded-volume (EV) corrections, and the intermediate range attraction. The first part of the thesis considers just the repulsive EV interactions between hadrons. A hitherto unknown, but surprisingly strong sensitivity of the long known thermal fits to heavy-ion hadron yield data to the choice of hadron eigenvolumes is uncovered. It challenges the robustness of the chemical freeze-out temperature and baryochemical potential determination from the thermal fits. However, at the same time, the extracted value of the entropy per baryon is found to be a robust observable which depends weakly on this systematic uncertainty of the HRG model.
A Monte Carlo procedure to treat EV interactions in HRG is also introduced in this thesis. It allows to study simultaneous effects of EV and of exact charge conservation in HRG for the first time. Generalizations of the classical VDW equation are required for its applications in hadronic physics. he grand canonical ensemble (GCE) formulation of the classical VDW equation is presented. Remarkably, this important aspect of the VDW equation was not discovered before. The GCE formulation yields the analytic structure of the critical fluctuations, both in the vicinity of and far off the critical point. These critical fluctuations are presently actively being used as probes for the QCD critical point. Another extension is the hitherto undiscovered generalization of the VDW equation to include quantum Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac statistics. It is performed for both single-component and multi-component fluids. The Fermi-Dirac VDW equation is applied for the first time. It is used to describe nucleons and basic properties of nuclear matter. The quantum statistical generalization of the VDW equation developed in this work is quite general, and can be applied for any fluid. Thus, its applications are not restricted to QCD physics, but may also find themselves in chemistry and/or industry. The quantum statistical VDW equation is used to describe baryonic interactions in full HRG. The VDW parameters $a$ and $b$ are fixed to the nuclear ground state and the predictions of the model are confronted with lattice QCD calculations. The inclusion of baryonic interactions leads to a qualitatively different behavior of the fluctuations of conserved charges in the crossover region. In many cases it resembles the lattice data. These results suggest that hadrons do not melt quickly with increasing temperature, as one could conclude on the basis of the common simple ideal HRG model. Calculations at finite chemical potentials show that the nuclear liquid-gas transition manifests itself by non-trivial fluctuations of the net baryon number in heavy ion collisions. In the final part of the thesis the pure glue initial scenario for high-energy hadron and heavy-ion collisions is explored. This scenario is shown not to spoil the existing agreement of the hadronic and electromagnetic observables description in Pb+Pb collisions at energies available at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. Hydrodynamic calculations suggest that collisions of small-sized nuclei at lower collision energies available at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider are promising in the search for the traces of the chemically non-equilibrium gluon-dominated phase transition.
Im Weltall existieren hunderte sehr helle Objekte, die eine hohe konstante Leuchtkraft im Wellenlängenbereich von Gammastrahlung besitzen. Die konstante Leuchtkraft mancher dieser Objekte wird in regelmäßigen Abständen von starken Ausbrüchen, den sogenannten X-Ray-Bursts, unterbrochen. Hauptenergiequelle dieser X-RayBursts ist der „rapid-proton-capture“-Prozess (rp-Prozess). Dieser zeichnet sich durch eine Abfolge von (p,γ)-Reaktionen und β+-Zerfällen aus, die die charakteristischen Lichtkurven produzieren. Für viele am Prozess beteiligte Reaktionen ist der Q-Wert sehr klein, wodurch die Rate der einzelnen Reaktionen von den resonanten Einfängen in die ungebundenen Zustände dominiert wird. Die Unsicherheiten in der Beschreibung der Lichtkurve sind derzeit aufgrund fehlender kernphysikalischer Informationen von vielen am Prozess beteiligten Isotopen sehr groß. Sensitivitätsstudien zeigen, dass dabei die Unsicherheiten der 23Al(p,γ)24Si-Reaktion eine der größten Auswirkungen auf die Lichtkurve hat. Diese werden durch ungenaue und widersprüchliche Informationen zu den ungebundenen Zuständen im kurzlebigen 24Si hervorgerufen.
Um Informationen über die Kernstruktur von 24Si zu erhalten, wurde am National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory (NSCL), Michigan, USA, die 23Al(d,n)24Si Transferreaktion untersucht. Der in dieser Form erstmals umgesetzte Versuchsaufbau bestand aus einem Gammadetektor zur Messung der Übergangsenergien des produzierten 24Si, einem Neutronendetektor zur Messung der Winkelverteilung der emittierten Neutronen und einem Massensprektrometer zur Identifikation des produzierten Isotops. Mit diesem Aufbau, der eine Detektion der kompletten Kinematik der (d,nγ)-Reaktion ermöglichte, konnten folgende Erkentnisse gewonnen werden:
Aus der Energie der nachgewiesenen Gammas konnten die Übergänge zwischen den Kernniveaus von 24Si bestimmt und daraus die Energien der einzelnen Zustände ermittelt werden. Dabei konnte neben dem bereits bekannten gebundenen 2+-Zustand (in dieser Arbeit gemessen bei 1874 ± 2,9keV) und dem ungebundenen 2+-Zustand (3448,8 ± 4,6keV), erstmals ein weiterer ungebundener (4+,0+)-Zustand bei 3470,6 ± 6,2 keV beobachtet werden. Zusätzlich konnte die Diskrepanz, die bezüglich der Energie des ungebundenen 2+-Zustands aufgrund früherer Messungen bestand, beseitigt und die Energieunsicherheit reduziert werden.
Aus der Anzahl der nachgewiesenen Gammas konnten ebenfalls die (d,n)-Wirkungsquerschnitte in die einzelnen Zustände von 24Si bestimmt werden. Unter Verwendung der Ergebnisse von DWBA-Rechnungen konnte mithilfe dieser die spektroskopischen Faktoren berechnet werden. Für die angeregten Zustände musste dabei zwischen verschiedenen Drehimpulsüberträgen unterschieden werden. Mittels der Winkelverteilung der nachgewiesenen Neutronen konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Gewichtung anhand der theoretischen spektroskopischen Faktoren zur Berechnung der Anteile des jeweiligen Drehimpulsübertrags am gesamten Wirkungsquerschnitt für den entsprechenden Zustand gute Ergebnisse liefert. Für eine quantitative Bestimmung der spektroskopischen Faktoren der Zustände anhand der Neutronenwinkelverteilungen in 24Si war allerdings die Statistik zu gering. Für den Fall der deutlich häufiger beobachteten 22Mg(d,n)23Al-Reaktion konnte hingegen ein spektroskopischer Faktor für den 23Al-Grundzustand von 0,29 ± 0,04 bestimmt werden. Abschließend wurden die Auswirkungen der gewonnenen Erkenntnisse zur Kernstruktur von 24Si auf die Rate der 23Al(p,γ)-Reaktion untersucht. Dabei konnte aufgrund der besseren Energiebestimmung zum einen die Diskrepanz zwischen den Raten die auf Grundlage der beiden früheren Untersuchungen berechnet wurden und bis zu einem Faktor von 20 voneinander abweichen, beseitigt werden. Zum anderen konnte aufgrund der kleineren Unsicherheit in der Energiebestimmung der Fehlerbereich der Rate verkleinert werden. Die Untersuchungen zeigen, dass die Unsicherheit in der neuen Rate von der Ungenauigkeit der Massenbestimmung der beiden beteiligten Isotope und damit dem Q-Wert der Reaktion dominiert wird. Durch eine bessere Bestimmung des Q-Werts könnte die Unsicherheit in der Rate aufgrund der neuen experimentellen Ergebnisse auf ein Zehntel gesenkt werden.
Zur effizienten Beschleunigung von Ionen wird meist nach deren Erzeugung in einer Ionenquelle ein Radio Frequenz Quadrupol verwendet. Die vorliegende Dissertation befasst sich mit Entwicklung, Bau und Messung des Prototyps eines neuartigen Leiter-RFQs, der bei 325 MHz betrieben wird. Der Leiter-RFQ verfügt über ein neuartiges mechanisches Design und versucht die Vorteile der beiden vorrangig im Betrieb befindlichen RFQ Typen, des 4-Rod und 4-Vane RFQs, zu verbinden. Die physikalischen Parameter sind der Spezifikation des RFQs für den geplanten Protonenlinac (p-Linac) am FAIR-Projekt an der GSI Darmstadt entnommen. Darüber hinaus wird der aktuelle Planungs- und Simulationsstand eines modulierten Prototyps mit der vollen Länge von ca. 3,5 m zur Durchführung von Strahltests dargestellt.
The pathological skin phenotype caused by hyperglycemia is an important indicator for the progress of diabetes mellitus. An early detection of diabetes assures an early intervention to regulate the carbohydrate metabolism. In this publication a non-invasive detection principle based on the measurement of complex scattering parameters in the millimeter-wave frequency range is presented. The measurement principle provides evidence of the applicability for the identification of different glycemic states in animal models. The method proposed here can be used to predict diabetes status in animal models and is interesting for application on humans in view of safeness of millimeter-wave radiation. Furthermore the complex scattering parameters give important information about the anatomic varieties between the analyzed skin samples of the different mice strains. In contrast to other methods, our approach is less sensitive to skin variations between animals.