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Rapidity dependence of entropy production in proton- and nucleus-induced reactions on heavy nuclei
(1984)
The entropy of hot nuclear systems is deduced from the mass distribution of fragments emitted from high energy proton- and nucleus-induced reactions via a quantum statistical model. It is found that the entropy per baryon, S/A, of intermediate rapidity ("participant") fragments is higher than the entropy of target rapidity ("spectator") fragments. The spectator fragments exhibit S/A values of ≅ 1.8 independent of the projectile energy from 30 MeV/nucleon up to 350 GeV. This value of the entropy coincides with the entropy at which nuclear matter becomes unbound.
Microscopic calculations of collective flow probing the short-range nature of the nuclear force
(1984)
Collisions between two nuclei have been modeled by numerical solution of classical approximations to the equations of motion of the constituent nucleons. For the reaction Nb(400 MeV/u)+Nb, a correlated sidewards emission of nucleons is observed. This is attributed to the repulsive short-range component of the nucleon-nucleon potential. A strong dependence of the flow angle on the impact parameter is observed, in accord with recent experimental results.
Intranuclear cascade calculations and fluid dynamical predictions of the kinetic energy flow are compared for collisions of 40Ca + 40Ca and 238U + 238U. The aspect ratio, R13, as obtained from the global analysis, is independent of the bombarding energy for the intranuclear cascade model. Fluid dynamics, on the other hand, predicts a dramatic increase of R13 at medium energies Elab≲200 MeV/nucleon. In fact, R13(Elab) directly reflects the incompressibility of the nuclear matter and can be used to extract the nuclear equation of stat at high densities. Distortions of the flow tensor due to few nucleon scattering are analyzed. Possible procedures to remove this background from experimental data are discussed.
We compare a proximity-type potential for two interacting nuclei with the double-folding method. Both spherical and deformed systems are considered. Special "orientation windows" are found for two deformed nuclei giving rise to nuclear cohesion. If the same nucleon-nucleon interaction is utilized, the proximity and the double-folding potentials agree fairly well for a spherical + deformed system. However, deviations are found in the case of two deformed nuclei.
For the scattering of 28Si on 28Si coupled channel calculations of the elastic scattering and inelastic single excitation of the first 2+ state of 28Si are carried out. The real coupling potentials are calculated in the framework of an adiabatic model. The resulting cross sections reveal structures in agreement with the observed ones and support their interpretation as nuclear molecular resonances.
Atomic excitations are used to obtain information on the course of a nuclear reaction. Employing a semiclassical picture we calculate the emission of δ electrons and positrons in deep inelastic nuclear reactions for the example of U+U collisions incorporating nuclear trajectories resulting from two different nuclear friction models. The emission spectra exhibit characteristic deviations from those expected for elastic Coulomb scattering. The theoretical probabilities are compared with recent experimental data by Backe et al. A simple model is used to estimate the influence of a threebody breakup of the compound system upon atomic excitations.
Strong indirect evidence exists for the existence of attractive forces between nuclei making surface contact. Experimentally, the recent observations of spontaneous positron production in heavy-ion collisions can only be understood if nuclei stick together for times long compared to the collision time. We show that any such tendency for nuclei to attract implies the existence of nuclear molecules with entirely new kinds of collective modes. We present a simple model for these modes and apply it to 238U-238U.
Strange particle abundances in small volumes of hot hadronic gas are determined in the canonical ensemble with exact strangeness and baryon number conservation. Substantial density and baryon number dependence is found. A p¯d experiment is examined and applications to p¯-nucleus annihilations are considered.
The role of nonequilibrium and quantal effects in fast nucleus-nucleus collisions is studied via the Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck theory which includes the nuclear mean field dynamics, two-body collisions, and Pauli blocking. The intranuclear cascade model, where the dynamics is governed by independent NN collisions, and the Vlasov equation, where the nuclear mean field determines the collision dynamics, are also studied as reference cases. The Vlasov equation (no collision term) yields single particle distribution functions which–after the reaction–are only slightly modified in momentum space; even in central collisions, transparency is predicted. This is in agreement with the predictions of the quantal time-dependent Hartree-Fock method. In contrast, large momentum transfer is obtained when the Uehling-Uhlenbeck collision term is incorporated; then the final momentum distribution is nearly spherically symmetric in the center of mass and a well-equilibrated nuclear system is formed: the nuclei stop each other; the translational kinetic energy is transformed into randomized microscopic motion. The Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck theory is supplemented with a phase space coalescence model of fragment formation. Calculated proton spectra compare well with recent data for Ar(42, 92, and 137 MeV/nucleon) + Ca. Also the total yields of medium mass fragments are well reproduced in the present approach. The mean field dynamics without two-body collisions, on the other hand, exhibits forward peaked proton distributions, in contrast to the data. The cascade approach underpredicts the yields of low energy protons by more than an order of magnitude.
Nuclear collisions from 0.3 to 2 GeV/nucleon are studied in a microscopic theory based on Vlasov's self-consistent mean field and Uehling-Uhlenbeck's two-body collision term which respects the Pauli principle. The theory explains simultaneously the observed collective flow and the pion multiplicity and gives their dependence on the nuclear equation of state.
By using the analytical superasymmetric fission model it is shown that all ‘‘stable’’ nuclei lighter than lead with Z>40 are metastable relative to the spontaneous emission of nuclear clusters. An even-odd effect is included in the zero point vibration energy. Half-lives in the range 1040–1050 s are obtained for Z>62. The region of metastability against these new decay modes is extended beyond that for α decay and in some cases, in the competing region, the emission rates for nuclear clusters are larger than for α decay.
The great majority of the known nuclides with Z>40, including the so-called stable nuclides, are metastable with respect to several modes of spontaneous superasymmetric splitting. A model extended from the fission theory of alpha decay allows one to estimate the lifetimes and the branching ratios relative to the alpha decay for these natural radioactivities. From a huge amount of systematic calculations it is concluded that the process should proceed with maximum intensity in the trans-lead nuclei, where the minimum lifetime is obtained from parent-emitted heavy ion combinations leading to a magic (208Pb) or almost magic daughter nucleus. More than 140 nuclides with atomic number smaller than 25 are possible candidates to be emitted from heavy nuclei, with half-lives in the range of 1010–1030 s: 5He, 8–10Be, 11,12B, 12–16C, 13–17N, 15–22O, 18–23F, 20–26Ne, 23–28Na, 23–30Mg, 27–32Al, 28–36Si, 31–39P, 32–42S, 35–45Cl, 37–47Ar, 40–49 K, 42-51. . .Ca, 44–53 Sc, 46–53Ti, 48–54V, and 49–55 Cr. The shell structure and the pairing effects are clearly manifested in these new decay modes.
A detailed study of pion production in inelastic and central nucleus-nucleus collisions was carried out using a 2 m streamer spectrometer. Nuclear targets mounted inside the streamer chamber were exposed to nuclear beams of 4.5 GeV/c/nucleon momentum. A systematic study of the influence of the central trigger on observed data is performed. The data on multiplicities, rapidities, transverse momenta, and emission angles of negative pions are presented for various pairs of colliding nuclei. Intercorrelations between various characteristics are studied and discussed. The results are compared with predictions of some theoretical models. It is shown that the main features of the pion production in nuclear collisions can be satisfactorily described by a model assuming independent nucleon-nucleon collisions with subsequent cascading process. However, the observed correlation between Lambda and pion characteristics seems to be unexplained by this picture.
Nuclear resonance fluorescence experiments with linearly polarized bremsstrahlung were performed to determine parities of strong dipole transitions in 40Ar. A total of 14 transitions—ten of them previously unknown—in the energy range from 4.7 to 10.2 MeV could be identified. From this experiment it is evident that the main dipole strength to bound states is due to E1 excitations. An upper limit of B(M1) [up arrow] <0.5 µN2 was found for individual magnetic dipole excitations in 40Ar in the energy region below neutron threshold.
Nuclear resonance fluorescence measurements with linearly polarized bremsstrahlung were performed to determine parities of bound dipole transitions in 206Pb. A new 1+ level at 5800 keV was found, which has almost the same strength as the isoscalar M1 transition in 208Pb. Twenty-four further dipole states in 206Pb below 7.6 MeV possess negative parity.
Im Jahre 1871 wurde durch den Naturwissenschaftlichen Verein Osnabrück (gegründet 1870) eine meteorologische Station eingerichtet. Sie hatte ihren Standort am Sommerhaus des damaligen Obergerichtsrats JOHANN-VOLLRATH KETTLER,Osnabrück, Ziegelstraße 7. KETTLER hat 1872 im 1. Jahresbericht des . Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins über die "Entstehung, Einrichtung und die ersten Ergebnisse" berichtet. Dieser Bericht ist hier wiedergegeben, legt er uns dar, daß alle Messungen exakt und gewissenhaft durchgeführt wurden.
The novel momentum analysis technique introduced by Danielewicz and Odyniec can be used to detect and exhibit collective flow in the light system Ar(1800 MeV/nucleon) + KCl where the usual kinetic energy flow analysis fails. The microscopic Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck theory which includes the nuclear mean field, two-body collisions, and Pauli blocking is used to study this phenomenon. The resulting transverse momentum transfers turn out to be quite sensitive to the nuclear equation of state. From a comparison with experimental data, evidence is presented for a rather stiff nuclear equation of state. The cascade model is unable to describe the data.
Time dependent dirac equation with relativistic mean field dynamics applied to heavy ion scattering
(1986)
We treat the relativistic propagation of nucleons coupled to scalar- and vector-meson fields in a mean-field approximation. The time-dependent Dirac and mean-meson-field equations are solved numerically in three dimensions. Collisions of 16O(300, 600, and 1200 MeV/nucleon) + 16O are studied for various impact parameters. The results are compared to other recent theoretical approaches. The calculations predict spallation, large transverse-momentum transfer, and positive-angle sidewards flow, in qualitative agreement with the data in this energy regime.
We study the recent claim that the intranuclear cascade model exhibits collective sidewards flow. 4000 intranuclear cascade simulations of the reaction Nb(400 MeV/nucleon)+Nb are performed employing bound and unbound versions of the Cugnon cascade. We show that instability of the target and projectile nuclei in the unbound cascade produces substantial spurious sidewards flow angles, for spectators as well as for participants. Once the nuclear binding is included, the peak of the flow angle distributions for the participants alone is reduced from 35° to 17°. The theoretical ‘‘data’’ are subjected to the experimental multiplicity and efficiency cuts of the plastic ball 4π electronic spectrometer system. The flow angular distributions obtained from the bound cascade—with spectators and participants subjected to the plastic ball filter—are forward peaked, in contrast to the plastic ball data. We discuss the uncertainties encountered with the application of the experimental efficiency and multiplicity filter. The influence of the Pauli principle on the flow is also discussed. The lack of flow effects in the cascade model clearly reflects the absence of the nuclear compression energy that can cause substantially larger collective sidewards motion—there is too little intrinsic pressure built up in the cascade model.
The influence of fluctuations of the shape degree of freedom in collisions of deformed nuclei with energies between 0.8 and 2.1 GeV/nucleon is analyzed on the basis of an intranuclear cascade simulation for the strongly deformed systems 46Ti+ 46Ti and 166Er+ 166Er. While there is a considerable sensitivity of the global event variables to the orientation for polarized beams and targets, this dependence disappears in the average over all orientations for impact parameter selected and integrated events. The dependence of the nuclear stopping and thermalization on the size of the system under consideration and on the bombarding energy is also investigated.
The inelastic excitation of the (1/2)+ (871 keV) state of 17O in the reaction of 13C on 17O is described by a time-dependent quantum mechanical model with two diabatic states and a classical treatment of the radial relative motion. The structures in the angle-integrated cross section are interpreted as caused by the barriers of the angular momentum-dependent potentials. The transition strength is enhanced by the Landau-Zener effect between the levels considered.
Conversion processes in light nuclei with transition energies above the e+, e- pair creation threshold are investigated within an analytical framework. In particular, we evaluate the ratio of electron transition probabilities from the negative energy continuum into the atomic K shell and into the positive energy continuum, respectively. The possible role of monoenergetic positron conversion with respect to the striking peak structures observed in e+ spectra from very heavy collision systems is examined.
We formulate a group-theoretical projection technique for the quantum-statistical description of systems with exactly conserved charges corresponding to local non-Abelian gauge symmetries. The formalism is specified for SU(N) internal symmetry and a partition function related to a mixed canonical–grand-canonical ensemble is defined. Its perturbation expansion is derived, and we point out potential applications. We also study single-particle Green’s functions for the calculation of mixed ensemble averages with the help of a generalized Wick’s theorem and find that a connected-graphs expansion is impossible.
If the local color symmetry in a quark-gluon matter is broken, the expectation value of the gluon field 〈Aμa(x)〉 may be different from zero. Such a gluon-condensed phase has been found in mean field approximation. The gluon-condensed phase is characterized by a static, periodic chromomagnetic field, which is coupled to a periodic spin-color density distribution of quarks and antiquarks. Transitions of first and second order type have been found between the gluon-condensed and normal phases, the latter characterized by the vanishing value of the mean gluon field.
We compute the energy spectrum of photons which originate from the quark-annihilation process ss¯→γg in quark-gluon plasma. The spectrum peaks at an energy Eγmax∼2ms∼400 MeV in the rest frame of the plasma. We expect one photon from the above process in the energy range of 2ms±0.25ms per hundred quark-gluon plasmas of a size R=3 fm and a lifetime τ=6 fm/c formed in nuclear collisions.
Phenomenological consequences of a hypothetical light neutral particle in heavy ion collisions
(1986)
We discuss the possibility that the line structure observed in the spectrum of the positrons produced in heavy ion collisions is due to the decay of a new neutral elementary particle. We argue that this can be ruled out unless one is willing to accept fine tuning of parameters, or to assume the dominance of nonlinear effects.
We discuss the possibility that nuclei with very large baryon numbers can exist in the form of large quark blobs in their ground states. A calculation based on the picture of quark bags shows that, in principle, the appearance of such exotic nuclear states in present laboratory experiments cannot be excluded. Some speculations in connection with the recently observed anomalous positron production in heavy-ion experiments are presented.
We analyze the phase structure of the nonlinear mean-field meson theory of baryonic matter (nucleons plus delta resonances). Depending on the choice of the coupling constants, we find three physically distinct phase transitions in this theory: a nucleonic liquid-gas transition in the low temperature, Tc<20 MeV, low density, ρ≃0.5ρ0, regime, a high-temperature (T≃150 MeV) finite density transition from a gas of massive hadrons to a nearly massless baryon, antibaryon plasma, and, third, a strong phase transition from the nucleonic fluid to a resonance-dominated ‘‘delta-matter’’ isomer at ρ>2ρ0 and Tc<50 MeV. All three phase transitions are of first order. It is shown that the occurrence of these different phase transitions depends critically on the coupling constants. Since the production of pions also depends strongly on the coupling constants, it is seen that the equation of state cannot be derived unambiguously from pion data.
The recent attempts to extract the temperature in the late stage of medium energy (20–60 MeV/nucleon) heavy ion collisions from the yields of γ- and particle-instable fragments are discussed. The quantum statistical model is employed to demonstrate that feeding from instable states distorts the yields used for the temperature determination severely. Some particle instable fragments are only moderately affected by feeding. These selected species can still be useful for determining the temperature. The breakup temperatures of the fragment conglomerate extracted with this method are T≃4–8 MeV, much smaller than the corresponding slope factors, which indicate T∼15 MeV.
We demonstrate that momentum-dependent nuclear interactions (MDI) have a large effect on the dynamics and on the observables of high-energy heavy-ion collisions: A soft potential with MDI suppresses pion and kaon yields much more strongly than a local hard potential and results in transverse momenta intermediate between soft and hard local potentials. The collective-flow angles and the deuteron-to-proton ratios are rather insensitive to the MDI. Only simultaneous measurements of these observables can give clues on the nuclear equation of state at densities of interest for supernova collapse and neutron-star stability.
The final states of central Ca + Ca and Nb + Nb collisions at 400 and 1050 MeV/nucleon and at 400 and 650 MeV/nucleon, respectively, are studied with two independently developed statistical models, namely the classical microcanonical model and the quantum-statistical grand canonical model. It is shown that these models are in agreement with each other for these systems. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that there is essentially a one-to-one relationship between the observed relative abundances of the light fragments p, d, t, 3He, and α and the entropy per nucleon, for breakup temperatures greater than 30 MeV. Entropy values of 3.5–4 are deduced from high-multiplicity selected fragment yield data.
We study the dynamics of high energy heavy ion collisions through the Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck approach. Equilibration is observed, for central collisions. It is shown that the produced entropy, the pion multiplicity, flow angle, and transverse momentum distributions saturate at the moment of maximum compression and temperature. The effects of the nuclear equation of state and the Pauli principle are investigated. For the flow angle distribution there is a 20 deg reduction of the peak flow angle due to the Pauli principle. A stiff equation of state results in a 10–20 deg increase over the soft equation of state at all energies. The transverse momentum at projectile rapidity exhibits a peak structure as a function of impact parameter b. A 40% difference between soft and hard equation of state is observed for the peak impact parameter, i.e., for intermediate multiplicities.
We present a mechanism for the separation of strangeness from antistrangeness in the deconfinement transition. For a net strangeness of zero in the total system, the population of s quarks is greatly enriched in the quark-gluon plasma, while the s¯ quarks drift into the hadronic phase. This separation could result in ‘‘strangelet’’ formation, i.e., metastable blobs of strange-quark matter, which could serve as a unique signature for quark-gluon plasma formation in heavy-ion collisions. PACS: 25.70.Np, 12.38.Mh
The molecular particle-core model is applied to the scattering of 13C on 13C. The model divides the 13C+ 13C system into two 12C cores and two valence neutrons. The valence neutrons are described with molecular eigenfunctions of the symmetric two-center shell model. Coupled channel calculations are carried out for the inelastic single and mutual excitation of the first (1/2+ state of 13C and the neutron transfer to the 12C+14C system. The results reproduce the experimental data. The analysis of the S matrix shows that the gross structure of the transfer excitation function is related to resonances in the relative motion of the elastic and transfer channels.
A method is presented to define unique continuum states for the two-center Dirac Hamiltonian. In the spherical limit these states become the familiar angular-momentum eigenstates of the radial Coulomb potential. The different states for a fixed total energy ‖E‖>m may be distinguished by considering the asymptotic spin-angular distribution of states with unique scattering phases. The first numerical solutions of the two-center Dirac equation for continuum states are presented.
We present calculations for the impact-parameter dependence of K-shell ionization rates in p¯-Cu and in p¯-Ag collisions at various projectile energies. We show that the effect of the attractive Coulomb potential on the Rutherford trajectory and the antibinding effect caused by the negative charge of the antiproton result in a considerable increase of the ionization probability. Total ionization cross sections for proton and antiproton projectiles are compared with each other and with experimental ionization cross sections for protons.
Semicentral Ar+KCl, La+La, and Ar+Pb collisions at 800 MeV/nucleon were studied using a streamer chamber. The results are analyzed in the framework of the transverse momentum analysis and in terms of the average sphericity matrix. A critical examination of the analysis procedures, both experimental and theoretical, is given. New procedures are described to account for overall momentum conservation in the reaction, and to correct for azimuthal variations in the detection efficiency. Average transverse momenta per nucleon in the reaction plane are presented for deuterons emitted in the forward hemisphere, as these provide the most reliable information. A Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck calculation with a stiff equation of state gives a good fit to the momenta in the Ar+Pb reaction. Flow effects parametrized further using the sphericity tensor are found stronger than in the cascade model and consistently weaker than predicted by hydrodynamics. Parameters from the sphericity tensor exhibit a larger variation as a function of multiplicity than do the average momenta per nucleon.
We demonstrate that strangeness separates in the Gibbs-phase coexistence between a baryon-rich quark-gluon plasma and hadron matter, even at T=0. For finite temperatures this is due to the associated production of kaons (containing s¯ quarks) in the hadron phase while s quarks remain in the deconfined phase. The s-s¯ separation results in a strong enhancement of the s-quark abundance in the quark phase. This mechanism is further supported by cooling and net strangeness enrichment due to the prefreezeout evaporation of pions and K+, K0, which carry away entropy and anti- strangeness from the system. Metastable droplets (i.e., stable as far as weak interactions are not regarded) of strange-quark matter (‘‘strangelets’’) can thus be formed during the phase transition. Such cool, compact, long-lived clusters could be experimentally observed by their unusually small Z/A ratio (≤0.1–0.3). Even if the strange-quark-matter phase is not stable under strong interactions, it should be observable by the delayed correlated emission of several hyperons. This would serve as a unique signature for the transient formation of a quark-gluon plasma.
We study effects of the mean field in hot compressed nuclear matter in the context of the Vlasov Uehling-Uhlenbeck theory. The expansion of a spherical distribution at different temperatures is studied along with collisions of Nb+Nb and Au+Au at lab energies from 50 to 1050 MeV/nucleon. In both the expansion and the actual heavy ion collision simulation, a transition behavior is seen only at the lowest temperature (T<10 MeV) or bombarding energy (E=50 MeV/nucleon), where the attractive part of the mean field is able to bind the expanding matter. At the lowest energy one thus sees the formation of a central residue, whereas at higher bombarding energies there is complete disintegration of the centrally colliding nuclei. The spectrum of emitted nucleons is found to be much hotter than the kinetic energy spectrum of the central emitting region. The extracted temperature slope parameters are in agreement with recent data.
Streamer chamber data for collisions of Ar + KCl and Ar + BaI2 at 1.2 GeV/nucleon are compared with microscopic model predictions based on the Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck equation, for various density-dependent nuclear equations of state. Multiplicity distributions and inclusive rapidity and transverse momentum spectra are in good agreement. Rapidity spectra show evidence of being useful in determining whether the model uses the correct cross sections for binary collisions in the nuclear medium, and whether momentum-dependent interactions are correctly incorporated. Sideward flow results do not favor the same nuclear stiffness parameter at all multiplicities.
We calculate angular correlations between coincident electron-positron pairs emitted in heavy-ion collisions with nuclear time delay. Special attention is directed to a comparison of supercritical and subcritical systems, where angular correlations of pairs produced in collisions of bare U nuclei are found to alter their sign for nuclear delay times of the order of 2 × 10-21 s. This effect is shown to occur exclusively in supercritical systems, where spontaneous positron creation is active.
We investigate the influence of additional nonlinear terms in the Dirac Lagrangian on strongly bound electron states in heavy and superheavy atoms. Upper bounds for the coupling constants are deduced by comparison with precision spectroscopy data in QED. We demonstrate that nonlinear interactions may cause significant modifications of electron binding energies in superheavy quasiatomic systems which would not be visible in ordinary atomic-physics measurements.
We study a relativistic model of the nucleus consisting of nucleons coupled to mesonic degrees of freedom via an effective Lagrangian whose parameters are determined by a fit to selected nuclear ground-state data. We find that the model allows a very good description of nuclear ground-state properties. Because of the relativistic nature of the model, the spin properties are uniquely fixed. We discuss variations of the parametrization and of the data which suggest that the present fit has exhausted the limits of the mean-field approximation, and discuss extensions which go beyond the mean field.
Positron creation in crossed-beam collisions of high-energy, fully stripped heavy ions is investigated within the coupled-channel formalism. In comparison with fixed-target collisions of highly stripped heavy-ion projectiles positron production probabilities are enhanced by more than one order of magnitude. The increase results from the possibility to excite electrons from the negative energy continuum into all bound states. The positron spectrum is shifted towards higher energies because of the absence of electron screening. Rutherford scattering as well as nuclear collisions with time delay are investigated. We also discuss the filling of empty bound states by electrons from pair-production processes.
Hf-Fokussierung
(1989)
The quantum molecular dynamic method is used to study multifragmentation and fragment flow and their dependence on in-medium cross sections, momentum dependent interactions, and the nuclear equation of state, for collisions of 197Au+197Au and 93Nb+93Nb in the bombarding energy regime from 100 to 800A MeV. Time and impact parameter dependence of the fragment formation and their implications for the conjectured liquid-vapor phase transition are investigated. We find that the inclusive fragment mass distribution is independent of the equation of state and exhibits a power-law behavior Y(A)∼A-τ with an exponent τ≊-2.3. True multifragmentation events are found in central collisions for energies Elab∼30–200 MeV/nucleon. The associated light fragment (d,t,α) to proton ratios increase with the multiplicity of charged particles and decrease with energy, in agreement with recent experiments. The calculated absolute charged particle multiplicities, the multiplicities of intermediate mass (A>4) fragments, and their respective rapidity distributions do compare well with recent 4π data, but are quite insensitive to the equation of state. On the other hand, these quantities depend sensitively on the nucleon-nucleon scattering cross section, and can be used to determine σ experimentally. The transverse momentum flow of the complex fragments increases with the stiffness of the equation of state. Reduced (in-medium) n-n scattering cross sections reduce the fragment flow. Momentum dependent interactions increase the fragment flow. It is shown that the measured fragment flow at 200A MeV can be reproduced in the model. We find that also the increase of the px/A values with the fragment mass is in agreement with experiments. The calculated fragment flow is too small as compared to the plastic ball data, if a soft equation of state with in-medium corrections (momentum dependent interactions plus reduced cross sections) is employed. An alternative, most intriguing resolution of the puzzle about the stiffness of the equation of state could be an increase of the scattering cross sections due to precritical scattering in the vicinity of a phase transition.
Nuclear transport models including density- and momentum-dependent mean-field effects are compared to intranuclear-cascade models and tested on recent data on inclusive p-like cross sections for 800A-MeV La+La. We find a remarkable agreement between most model calculations but a systematic disagreement with the measured yield at 20°, possibly indicating a need for modification of nuclear transport properties at high densities.
Shock discontinuities around the confinement-deconfinement transition in baryon-rich dense matter
(1989)
Parity mixing of electron states should be extremely strong for heliumlike uranium. We calculate its size and discuss whether it could be determined experimentally. We analyze one specific scheme for such an experiment. The required laser intensities for two-photon spectroscopy of the 23P0–2 1S0level splitting is of the order of 1017 W/cm2. A determination of parity mixing would require at least 1021 W/cm2.
Collisions of Si(14.5A GeV+Au are investigated in the relativistic-quantum-molecular-dynamics approach. The calculated pseudorapidity distributions for central collisions compare well with recent experimental data, indicating a large degree of nuclear stopping and thermalization. Nevertheless, nonequilibrium effects play an important role in such complex multihadron reactions: They lead to a strong enhancement of the total kaon production cross sections, in good agreement with the experimental data, without requiring the formation of a deconfined quark-gluon plasma.
Nuclear resonance fluorescence experiments have been performed on the deformed actinide nucleus 236U. Bremsstrahlung of 3.9 MeV endpoint energy has been used as the photon source. The scattered photons were detected by three high resolution Ge- gamma -spectrometers installed at scattering angles of 92°, 128°, and 150°, respectively. Precise excitation energies, decay branching ratios, and ground state decay widths of numerous previously unknown spin 1 states in the excitation energy range 1.8-3.2 MeV have been extracted. The dipole strength has been found to be concentrated in the energy range 2.1-2.5 MeV. The systematics of the so-called scissors mode observed as a result of the previous ( gamma , gamma ') and (e,e') experiments on 232Th and 238U and, in particular, their combined analysis suggests likewise to attribute these new dipole excitations in 236U to the orbital M1 scissors mode.
Within a relativistic mean-field theory (RMFT) experimental data on the single-particle spectra of lambda hypernuclei are well reproduced. It is shown that the coupling constants cannot be fixed unambiguously from the single-particle spectra. The stability and structure of multi-lambda hypernuclei is explored on the basis of the RMFT using the coupling constants as determined from the observed single lambda hypernuclear levels. It is predicted that multistrange nuclei exhibit an enhanced interaction radius, which further increases in the case of finite temperatures. We suggest that multi-lambda hypernuclei could be produced in high-energy heavy ions and observed in secondary noncharge-changing reactions. The equation of state of lambda matter and the possibility of pure lambda droplets are also discussed.
Inclusive neutron spectra were measured at 0°, 4°, 8°, 15°, 30°, and 42° from Nb-Nb and Au-Au collisions at 800 MeV/nucleon. A peak that originates from neutron evaporation from the projectile appears in the spectra at angles out to 8°. The shapes and magnitudes of the spectra are compared with those calculated from models of nucleus-nucleus collisions. The differential cross sections for Au-Au collisions are about four times those for Nb-Nb collisions. The predictions of the Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck (VUU) and QMD theories agree with the angular distributions of the differential cross sections except at small angles; the VUU prediction overestimates the angular distributions from a few degrees to about 20°, whereas the QMD prediction underestimates the angular distributions below 8°. The Firestreak model overestimates the angular distribution for Nb-Nb collisions and underestimates it for Au-Au collisions. Also, the VUU and QMD models agree with the measured double-differential cross sections in more angular and energy regions than the Firestreak and intranuclear cascade models; however, none of the models can account for the peaks at small angles (θ≤15°).
We investigate the hydrodynamical flow of nuclear matter in a conical-shock-wave scenario of a central, asymmetric heavy-ion collision. This work is motivated by a suggestion of Chapline and Granik that the creation of a deconfined phase of quarks and gluons behind the shock will appreciably increase the deflection angle of the matter flow. We employ several hadron matter equations of state recently suggested to solve the conical-shock-wave problem and compare the results with a calculation using the bag equation of state. We find that large differences in the deflection angle obtained in the rest frame of the shock vanish in the laboratory system. However, a signature for the deconfinement transition may be the transverse momentum of the matter flow, which is up to a factor of 2 larger for the quark-gluon plasma. Thus, an excitation function of the mean transverse momentum would show an increase at a certain bombarding energy, signaling the onset of the deconfinement transition.
The angular distribution of electrons and positrons emitted in internal pair conversion is calculated. Coulomb-distorted waves are used as electron wave functions. Nuclear transitions of various multipolarities L>0 and of magnetic (ML) and of electric (EL) type are considered as well as E0 conversion. Analytical expressions for the angular correlation are derived, which are evaluated numerically assuming a finite extension of the nucleus and, for the EL and ML conversion, also in the point-nucleus approximation. The calculated angular correlations are compared with results obtained within the Born approximation and, for the E0 case, with experimental data.
The magnetic dipole scattering of neutrinos by the electrostatic potentials of single atoms as well as crystals is investigated. It is shown that scattering by a rigid cubic lattice can amplify the neutrino-atom cross section by a factor of N1/3, N being the number of scatterers. However, comparing the results with typical weak-interaction cross sections, the effect seems to be not observable in experiment.
The anion transport protein of the human erythrocyte membrane, band 3, was solubilized and purified in solutions of the non-ionic detergent nonaethylene glycol lauryl ether and then reconstituted in spherical egg phosphatidylcholine bilayers as described earlier (U. Scheuring, K. Kollewe, W. Haase, and D. Schubert, J. Membrane Biol. 90, 123-135 (1986)). The resulting paucilamellar proteoliposom es of average diameter 70 nm were transformed into smaller vesicles by French press treatment and fractionated according to size by gel filtration. The smallest protein-containing liposomes obtained had diameters around 32 nm; still smaller vesicles were free of protein. All proteoliposome samples studied showed a rapid sulfate efflux which was sensitive to specific inhibitors of band 3-mediated anion exchange. In addition, the orientation of the transport protein in the vesicle membranes was found to be “right-side-out” in all samples. This suggests that the orientation of the protein in the vesicle membranes is dictated by the shape of the protein’s intramembrane domain and that this domain has the form of a truncated cone or pyramid.
We study the transition from fusion-fission phenomena at about 20 MeV/nucleon multifragmentation at 100–200 MeV/nucleon in the reaction 16O+80Br employing the quantum molecular dynamics model. The time evolution of the density and mass distribution, the charged-particle multiplicity, and spectra as well as angular distributions of light particles are investigated. The results exhibit the transition of the disassembly mechanism, but no sharp change is found. The results are in good agreement with recently measured 4-Pi data.
We investigate the onset of multifragmentation employing an improved version of the N-body ‘‘quantum’’ molecular-dynamics approach. We study in detail the reaction 18O+197Au at 84 MeV/nucleon and find good agreement between the calculated results and the data for the double-differential proton cross section, the mass yield, the multiplicity, the kinetic energy of the fragments, and even for the kinematic correlations between intermediate mass fragments (IMF’s), which have been measured in this experiment for the first time. We observe a strong correlation between the impact parameter and both the size of the target remnant as well as the average proton multiplicity. Hence both observables can be used to determine the impact parameter experimentally. The IMF’s come from the most central collisions. The calculations confirm the experimental result that they are not emitted from an equilibrated system. Although the inclusive energy spectra look thermal, we cannot identify an impact parameter-independent isotropically emitting source. Even in central collisions global equilibrium is not observed. We find that multifragment emission at this bombarding energy is caused by a process very similar to that proposed in the macroscopic cold multifragmentation model. Thus it has a different origin than at beam energies around 1 GeV/nucleon, although the mass yield has an almost identical slope.
Nuclear transport models are important tools for interpretation of many heavy-ion experiments and are essential in efforts to probe the nuclear equation of state. In order to fulfill these roles, the model predictions should at least agree with observed single-particle-inclusive momentum spectra; however, this agreement has recently been questioned. The present work compares the Vlasov-Uehling-Uhlenbeck model to data for mass-symmetric systems ranging from 12C+12C to 139La+139La, and we find good agreement within experimental uncertainties at 0.4A and 0.8A GeV. For currently available data, these uncertainties are too large to permit effective nucleon-nucleon scattering cross sections in the nuclear medium to be extracted at a useful level of precision.
We present a new type of flow analysis, based on a particle-pair correlation function, in which there is no need for an event-by-event determination of the reaction plane. Consequently, the need to correct for dispersion in an estimated reaction plane does not arise. Our method also offers the option to avoid any influence from particle misidentification. Using this method, streamer chamber data for collisions of Ar+KCl and Ar+BaI2 at 1.2 GeV/nucleon are compared with predictions of a nuclear transport model.
Distillation and survival of strange quark matter droplets in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions
(1991)
Recently it has been suggested that rather cold droplets of absolutely stable or metastable strange-quark matter may be distilled in heavy-ion collisions during the phase transition from a baryon-rich quark-gluon plasma (QGP) to hadron matter. Here we present a model describing the hadronization of the QGP through particle emission, which is based solely on thermodynamical arguments. Pions and K+’s and K0’s carry away entropy and antistrangeness from the system, thus facilitating the cooling process and the strangelet formation. Our results are supported by revised more sophisticated rate calculations. Two rather unexpected results are obtained when this model is applied to the investigation of strangelet production. The strangeness separation mechanism and the formation process works well even for higher initial entropies per baryon, tantamount to higher bombarding energies. The surviving strangelets have a rather high strangeness content, fs∼1.2–2 [i.e., Z/A∼(-0.1)–(-0.5)]. Hence droplets of strange-quark matter with a baryon number of ∼10–30 and with a negative charge may be produced. They may serve as a unique signature for the transient formation of a quark-gluon plasma in heavy-ion collisions.
The statistical model is used to illustrate the consequences of a successive binary decay mechanism as the initial nuclear excitation is pushed towards the limits of stability. The partition of the excitation energy between light and heavy fragments is explicitly calculated, as are the consequences of the decay of the primary light fragments to particle-bound residual nuclei which would be observed experimentally. The test nucleus 100 44 Ru is considered at initial excitations of 100, 200, 400, and 800 MeV. Exit channels of n, p, and α; and 100 clusters of 3 ≤ Z ≤ 20 ≤ 4, 6 ≤ A ≤ 48 are considered from all nuclides in the deexcitation cascade. The total primary and final cluster yields are shown versus Z and initial excitation. The primary versus final yields are also shown individually for 12C, 26Mg, and 48Ca. We show how multifragmentation yields will change with the excitation energy due to a successive binary decay mechanism. Measurements that may be prone to misinterpretation are discussed, as are those that should be representative of initial nucleus excitation.
We consider the contribution of nuclear polarization to the Lamb shift of K- and L-shell electrons in heavy atoms and quasiatoms. Our formal approach is based on the concept of effective photon propagators with nuclear-polarization insertions treating effects of nuclear polarization on the same footing as usual QED radiative corrections. We explicitly derive the modification of the photon propagator for various collective nuclear excitations and calculate the corresponding effective self-energy shift perturbatively. The energy shift of the 1s1/2 state in 92238U due to virtual excitation of nuclear rotational states is shown to be a considerable correction for atomic high-precision experiments. In contrast to this, nuclear-polarization effects are of minor importance for Lamb-shift studies in 82208Pb.
The energy dependence of rapidity distributions and flow effects was studied in central Ar+Pb collisions at 400, 800, and 1800 MeV/nucleon using a streamer chamber. Rapidity distributions for proton and pions are found to have a Gaussian shape whereas those for deuterons exhibit a two-peak structure at the two higher energies. The average in-plane transverse momentum per/nucleon and per/event shows saturation of flow around 800 MeV/nucleon for this asymmetric system. The aspect ratio of the sphericity tensor is closely correlated with the flow angle. This correlation appears to be independent of beam energy. The number of participating nucleons in central collisions varies from 213 at 400 to 135 at 1800 MeV/nucleon indicating that at the lowest energy almost the entire target nucleus participates in the collision.
Determination of field strength and quality factor of heavily HOM damped accelerator cavities
(1992)
Two methods of of measuring field strength in accelerator cavities, heavily damped with respect to higher order modes (HOM), are presented. From the results of the field measurements the coupling (damping) factor and thus the quality factor of the damped resonator can be derived. Measurements of a pillbox resonator with heavily damped TM110-mode (Q < 20) demonstrate the usefulness of the techniques presented, even in this extreme range.
Die vorliegende Arbeit befallt sich im theoretischen Teil mit den Grundlagen zu Strahl-Resonator-Wechselwirkungen bei Beschleunigerresonatoren und mit den sich daraus ergebenden Konsequenzen bei der Resonatorentwicklung für zukünftige lineare Kollider mit Multibunch-Betrieb. Zur Bekämpfung der vor allem im Multibunchbetrieb störenden Long-Range-Wakefelder müssen die schädlichen Moden möglichst so stark bedämpft werden, daß ihre Felder bis zum Eintreffen des nächsten Bunches auf ein erträgliches Maß abgeklungen sind. Im experimentellen Teil befaßt sich diese Arbeit daher mit der Entwicklung von Meßmethoden zur Bestimmung sehr kleiner Resonatorgüten sowie sehr kleiner transversaler Shuntimpedanzen bzw. sehr kleiner Feldpegel in stark störmodenbedämpften Beschleunigerresonatoren. Diese Meßmethoden sind an mehreren S-Band-Modellresonatoren (Betriebsfrequenz lag bei etwa 2.4 GHz) mit verschiedenen Dämpfungssystemen, die für den Einbau in einen normalleitenden Linearbeschleuniger für einen Kollider geeignet wären, erfolgreich getestet worden. Die Feldmessungen an den Modellresonatoren haben bisher unbekannte Gesetzmäßigkeiten bezüglich des Verhaltens dieser Dämpfungssysteme ergeben. In einer kurzen Beschreibung und Diskussion der sechs wichtigsten Vorschläge für zukünftige lineare Kollider wurde ein Überblick über die Unterschiede bei diesen verschiedenen Konzepten gegeben. Zunächst konnten über eine qualitative Diskussion der beim Linearbeschleuniger vom Iristyp vorkommenden Beam Blowup Phänomene, wie der regenerative BBU und der cumulative BBU, die Erscheinungsformen und die physikalischen Ursachen dieser BBU Phänomene verstanden werden. Hier zeigt sich, daß bei Irisstrukturen die HEM11-Moden die Hauptursache sowohl für den regenerativen- als auch für den cumulativen BBU sind. Der dritte Abschnitt führte in eine allgemeine Methode zur quantitativen Beschreibung der sogenannten Strahl-Resonator-Wechselwirkung ein. Diese Methode heißt Condon- Methode und erlaubt die Berechnung von BBU verursachenden Wakefeldern über eine Eigenwellenentwicklung aus den Eigenmoden des leeren Rersonators. Im vierten Abschnitt wurde durch die Herleitung des Theorems von Panofsky-Wenzel die Theorie der Strahl-Resonator-Wechselwirkung vervollständigt, wonach der einer Testladung während der Durchquerung eines felderfüllten Resonators mitgeteilte Transversalimpuls vollständig durch die räumliche Verteilung der elektrischen Longitudinalkomponente allein bestimmt ist. Damit erhält man also eine Aussage über die Wirkung der in Beschleunigerresonatoren feldanfachenden vorauslaufenden Ladungen auf die nachfolgenden. Dabei konnte auch die Frage geklärt werden, welche Moden zylindrischer Symmetrie wegen ihrer transversal ablenkenden Wirkung für den Teilchenstrahl gefährlich sind. Hier zeigt sich, daß alle BBU verursachenden Moden TM2np- bzw. TM2np-Moden sind, d.h., die Moden mit dipol- bzw. quadrupolartiger Symmetrie. Die Anwendung der in den Abschnitten drei und vier entwickelten Theorie zur Strahl-Resonator-Wechselwirkung konnte im Abschnitt fünf anhand dreier, für die Beschleunigerphysik sehr interessanter Beispiele gezeigt werden. Im ersten Beispiel gelang die Beschreibung der Wechselwirkung eines in Längsrichtung homogenen Strahls, welcher transversal Betatranschwingungen vollführt, mit der TM110-Mode eines Zylinderresonators. Dieses Beispiel ist von praktischer Bedeutung bei Linearbeschleunigern. die bei hohem Duty Cycle betrieben werden, also z.B. beim RACE TRACK Mikrotron oder bei supraleitenden Linacs. Beim zweiten Beispiel hat die Anwendung der Theorie auf eine Irisstruktur zu Formeln geführt, die sich Fair eine numerische Berechnung des Startstroms zum regenerativen BBU eignen, was jedoch relativ aufwendig ist. Es konnte aber auch eine einfache Abschätzungsformel für den Startstrom durch die Anwendung des Poyntingschen Satzes auf eine differentielle Länge des der Irisstruktur entsprechenden Wellenleiters abgeleitet werden. Aus der Bedingung, daß die durch den Strahl erzeugte Leistung pro Längeneinheit gleich den Leistungsverlusten pro Längeneinheit ist, findet man den Startstrom für den regenerativen BBU. Das letzte Beispiel, die Wechs 1 e Wirkung einer hochrelativistischen Punktladung mit einem beliebigen Resonator, ist auch das wichtigste. Hier wurden die Wakefelder aus einer simplen Energiebilanzbetrachtung abgeleitet, da eine Berechnung nach der Condon-Methode relativ aufwendig und langwierig wäre. Diese Vorgehensweise hat hier zu einem tieferen physikalischen Verständnis der Vorgänge im Resonator geführt. Die mit Hilfe einer Punktladung abgeleiteten Wakefelder sind Greensfunktionen. die zur quantitativen Beschreibung des cumulativen BBU’s bei linearen Kollidern benutzt werden können. Die Diskussion der anhand der Beispiele gewonnenen Ergebnisse am Ende des fiinften Abschnitts führte zu verschiedenen Maßnahmen zur Verringerung der schädlichen Strahl-Resonator-Wechselwirkung. Hier hat sich gezeigt, daß sowohl der regenerative BBU als auch der cumulative BBU u. a. durch eine Verringerung der Resonatorgüte der strahlstörenden Dipolmode verhindert werden können. Im sechsten Abschnitt erfolgte die noch ausstehende quantitative Beschreibung des cumulativen BBU mit Hilfe der im vorangehenden Abschnitt am dritten Beispiel gewonnenen Formeln für die Wakefelder. Die Berechnung der Strahlablage und Strahlrichtung geschieht hier über einen Matrizenformalismus, der aus der Idee heraus entstand, die Beschleunigersektionen des linearen Kolliders durch Resonatoren verschwindender Länge zu ersetzen. Uber den Matrizenformalismus konnte die durch den Einfluß von Beschleunigung, Fokussierung und Wakefeldern doch recht komplizierte Teilchenbewegung sehr elegant formuliert werden, jedoch eignet sich dieser Formalismus nur für numerische Zwecke. Abschätzungen sind in diesem allgemeinen Fall unmöglich. Durch die Einführung eines sehr restriktiven Modells, des sogenannten DAISY-CHAIN Modells, welches nur bei sehr stark bedämpften Beschleunigersektionen gültig ist. hat sich der Matrizenformalismus auf sehr einfache, der analytischen Berechnung zugängliche Gleichungen reduzieren lassen. Die Bedämpfung der Beschleunigersektionen muß dabei so stark sein, daß eine Ladung innerhalb einer ganzen Kette äquidistanter Ladungen nur ein signifikantes Wakefeld der unmittelbar vorrauslaufenden Ladung erfährt. Wie stark im Einzelfall bedämpft werden muß, um einen stabilen Transport einer Kette von Teilchenpaketen zu ermöglichen, konnte anhand zweier, in der Betriebsfrequenz unterschiedlicher Konzepte für normalleitende Linearbeschleuniger zukünftiger Kollider gezeigt werden. Dabei wurde deutlich, daß man bei ausschließlicher Anwendung von in Bezug auf die HEM11-pi-Mode stark bedämpften Beschleunigerstrukturen zur Kontrolle des cumulativen BBU bei einer hohen Betriebsfrequenz, z.B. im X-Band (11.45 GHz), sehr unbequem niedrige Gütewerte von ca. Q=5 erreichen muß. Das ist, wie sich im praktischen Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit gezeigt hat, vom technischen Aufwand her gesehen sehr schwierig. Für einen X-Band-Kollider wird man also eine Kombination von Maßnahmen zur Kontrolle des cumulativen BBU’s bevorzugen, z.B. neben dem Bedämpfen auch das sogenannte “Detunen” der Beschleunigersektionen. Bei einem Linearbeschleuniger im S-Band (Betriebsfrequenz bei 3 GHz) befindet man sich von vornherein bei ausschließlicher Verwendung gedämpfter Strukturen in bequemeren Gütebereichen Q ungefähr gleich 20-50, was ohne weiteres praktikabel ist. Aber auch hier kann man durch Zusatzmaßnahmen die Anforderungen an die Resonatordämpfung weiter reduzieren. Als erste Methode zur Bestimmung der Güte eines störmodenbedämpften Beschleunigerresonators wurde die Chipman-Methode angewendet. Meßobjekt war hier das dreizellige Modell einer Irisstruktur mit Halbzellenabschluß. Zur Auskopplung der dominanten Störmode, der sogenannten HEM11-Mode, war die mittlere Irisblende einseitig geschlitzt. Bei diesem Modell lag die Frequenz der als Beschleunigermode vorgesehenen TM010-2pi/3-Mode etwa bei 2.35 GHz und die Frequenz der dominanten Störmode, der HEM11-pi-Mode, lag bei etwa 2.81 GHz. Die mittlere geschlitzte Irisblende war austauschbar, so daß eine Messung der durch das Dämpfungssystem belasteten Güte QL bzw. des Koppelfaktors K in Abhängigkeit von der Schlitzhöhe möglich war. Die Messungen ließen sich bei diesem Koppelsystem ohne Schwierigkeiten durchrühren, bei der größten möglichen Schlitzhöhe von 10 mm wurde auch der größte Koppelfaktor mit 46 gemessen. Bei einer vom Dämpfungssystem unbelasteten Güte von Q0=4500 korrespondiert ein Koppelfaktor von K=46 mit einer durch das Dämpfungssystem belasteten Güte von QL = 100. Ein Mangel wurde bei der Anwendung der Chipman-Methode sofort sichtbar: Durch die Anregung der HEM11-pi-Mode von der Meßleitung aus sind im Koppelsystem offenbar Störmoden angeregt worden. Liegen diese Störmoden nahe bei der zu messenden Resonanz, dann ist eine präzise Bestimmung des Koppelfaktors unmöglich. Glücklicherweise war das hier nicht der Fall. Die Messungen mit der einseitig geschlitzten Irisblende haben gezeigt, daß dieses Dämpfungssystem Anwendung finden könnte bei Beschleunigerstrukturen im S-Band. wie sie z.B beim DESY/THD-Kollider vorgeschlagen wurden. Natürlich kann bei den hier erreichten Koppelfaktoren nicht die Dämpfung der schädlichen HEM11-pi- Mode die alleinige Maßnahme sein, die einseitig geschlitzte Irisblende könnte nur zusammen mit dem Detunen angewendet werden. Da die einseitig geschlitzte Irisblende auch eine Feldasymmetrie bei der Beschleunigermode erzeugt, müssen die Dämpfer entlang einer Beschleunigersektion alternierend angebracht werden, d.h. jeder Dämpfer ist im Bezug zum nächsten Nachbardämpfer um 90° gedreht. Die 90° ergeben sich aus der Notwendigkeit, auch die Dämpfung der zweit en Polarisationsebene der HEM11-pi-Mode zu gewährleisten. Als zweite, der Chipman-Methode sehr ähnliche Methode, wurde die Kurzschlußschiebermethode angewendet. Erstes Untersuchungsobjekt war die bei der Chipman- Methode bereits erwähnte dreizeilige Irisstruktur. Ein Vorteil im Vergleich zur Chipman-Methode ist vor allem die schnelle Durchführbarkeit der Messung bei wenig experimentellem Aufwand, wenn auch die Kurzschlußschiebermethode weniger präzise ist, und man auf einige Informationen, wie z.B. der Verlauf des Reflexionsfaktors und dessen Phase, verzichten muß. Im Vergleich mit der Chipman-Methode waren die mit der Kurzschlußschiebermethode gemessenen Koppelfaktoren immer um etwa 10-15% höher. Das liegt vor allem daran, daß die Theorie zur Kurzschlußschiebermethode von einem verlustfreien Resonator-Hohlleitersystem ausgeht, so daß die nach dieser Theorie ermitteten Koppelfaktoren prinzipiell zu groß sind. Auch bei dieser Methode hat sich gezeigt, daß eine Auswertung der Meßergebnisse scheitern muß, falls ein Modenüberlapp auftritt. Bei Experimenten mit komplizierteren Dämpfungssystemen, bestehend aus mehr als vier Hohlleitern an Resonatoren mit mehr als zwei Zellen ist deutlich geworden, daß eine Bestimmung des Koppelfaktors über die Kurzschlußschiebermethode durch die entstehende Modenvielfalt praktisch unmöglich ist. Es stellte sich heraus, daß bei der Auswertung der Meßergebnisse dadurch ein Fehler entsteht, wenigstens bei sehr starker Dämpfung, daß man die Feldverteilung als konstant animmt, denn bei dem Vergleich der unbelasteten Güte Q0 mit der vom Dämpfungssystem belasteten Güte QL geht man davon aus, daß die Feldverteilungen im ungedämpften- und gedämpften Fall identisch sind. Das kann bei Koppelfaktoren im Bereich von einigen zehn bis zu einigen hundert nicht mehr zutreffen, da das Feld der Mode immer stärker in das Dämpfungssystem eindringt, je stärker die Kopplung ist. Das ändert die Modengeometrie natürlich in dramatischer Weise und die belastete Güte QL kann dann nicht mehr einfach über die Gleichung QL=Q0/(1+ K) aus den gemessenen Größen Q, und K ausgerechnet werden, da der Koppelfaktor K nun nicht mehr konstant sein kann, sondern im Gegenteil sich sehr stark ändert, je nachdem an welcher Stelle die Felder gemessen werden. Ein weiterer Mangel bei beiden Methoden ist, daß über diese Methoden weder die longitudinale noch die transversale Shuntimpedanz bestimmt werden kann. Ein Ausweg aus diesem Dilemma war die Anwendung zweier neuer Meßmethoden, die Antennenmethode und die nichtresonante Störkörpermethode. Diese beiden Methoden beruhen im Gegensatz zu den ersten beiden Methoden auf einer direkten Bestimmung der Feldpegel bzw. der transversalen Shuntimpedanz im bedämpften Resonator was den Vorteil hat, daß im Resonator genau das Feld bzw. die Shuntimpedanz vermessen wird, welches die Teilchen bei der Durchquerung des Resonators auch tatsächlich sehen. Die Antennenmethode war eine komplette Neuentwicklung, während es sich bei der nichtresonante Störkörpermethode um die Anwendung einer seit 1966 bekannten, jedoch in Vergessenheit geratenen Theorie handelte. Beide Meßmethoden konnten am Beispiel eines im Bezug auf die TM110-Mode (Frequenz bei ca. 3.2 GHz) sehr stark bedämpften Zylinderresonators (Die Frequenz der TM010-Mode lag bei ca. 2.049 GHz) erfolgreich getestet werden. Die durch das Dämpfungssystem belastete Güte QL war hier ca. 10. Bei der Bestimmung der longitudinalen elektrischen Feldstärken bzw. der longitudinalen Shuntimpedanz der TM110-Mode in Abhängigkeit vom axialen Abstand vor und nach der Bedämpfung konnten zunächst folgende Feststellungen gemacht werden: 1) Die Modengeometrie im ungedämpften- und gedämpften Fall unterscheiden sich sehr stark voneinander. Dadurch mißt man verschiedene Koppelfaktoren, je nachdem an welcher Stelle man die Felder mißt. 2) der maximal gemessene Koppelfaktor liefert über die Gleichung QL=Q0/(1+K) die richtige beklastete Güte QL. 3) Der höchste Koppelfaktor wurde bei der Feldmessung in einem Achsortabstand vom halben Radius des Zylinderresonators gemessen. Da die beiden Meßmethoden das Verhältnis der elektrischen Feldstärkequadrate in Abhängigkeit vom Meßort vor und nach der Bedämpfung liefern, konnte die zweite Feststellung nur durch eine Kontrollmessung mit Hilfe der Kurzschlußschiebermethode, die hier dank des einfachen Aufbaus leicht durchfiihrbar war, gemacht werden. Die Kurzschlußschiebermessung lieferte eine Güte QL ungefähr gleich 9, während der höchste bzw. der niedrigste mit den beiden neuen Megmethoden ermittelte Koppelfaktor mit einer Güte von QL ungefähr gleich 11 bzw. mit einer Güte von QL ungefähr gleich 14 korrespondierte, d.h. also. daß der höchste gemessene Koppelfaktor für dieses Dämpfungssystem die richtige Resonatorgüte liefert. Anhand eines zweizeiligen Resonators (Die Frequenz der TM010-2pi/3-Beschleunigermode lag bei ca. 2.35 GHz) mit beidseitig geschlitzter Irisblende als Dämpfungssystem für die HEM11-pi-Mode (ca. 3.5 GHz) konnte gezeigt werden, daß die zweite Feststellung eine Gesetzmäßigkeit bei spiegelsymmetrischen Dämpfungssystemen ist. Im Unterschied zum Zylinderresonator wurde der höchste mit der richtigen bedämpften Güte QL ungefähr gleich 37 korrespondierend Koppelfaktor K ungefähr gleich 153 jedoch direkt auf der Resonatorachse gemessen. Die bedämpfte Güte wurde auch hier wieder mit Hilfe der Kurzschlußschiebermethode kontrolliert. Ein sehr interessantes Verhalten zeigte der gleiche zweizeilige Resonator mit einseitig geschlitzter Irisblende als Dämpfungssystem. Hier korrespondierte der in der Nähe der Resonatorwand gemessene niedrigste Koppelfaktor mit der bedämpften Güte QL ungefähr gleich 230 des Resonators. In Achsennähe hingegen war der Koppelfaktor etwa dreimal höher, K ungefähr gleich 82, als aus der der Güteerniedrigung K ungefähr gleich 35 nach der Dämpfung hervorgegangen wäre, die transversale Shuntimpedanz ist also auch etwa um den Faktor 3 erniedrigt. Durch dieses Verhalten ist der einseitig bedämpfte Resonator für die Verwendung bei einem linearen Kollider im S-Band (hier muß nicht so stark bedämpft werden) interessant geworden, denn wenn nur wenige Zellen einer Beschleunigersektion mit einem Dämpfungssystem ausgerüstet werden müssen, ist es wichtig in diesen Zellen ein effektives Dämpfungssystem bei Gewährleistung eines einwandfreien Transports der Feldenergie der HEM11-pi-Mode in diese gedämpften zu haben. Das funktioniert einerseits nur, wenn sich die Resonanzfrequenz der gedämpften Zellen in Bezug auf die HEM11-pi-Mode auf die Resonanzfrequenz der benachbarten ungedämpften Zellen einstellen läßt und andererseits die mit einer Dämpfung einhergehende schlechtere Anregungsfähigkeit dieser Störmode in den gedämpften Zellen nicht zu schlecht ist. Bei einer zu starken Dämpfung wäre beides nicht möglich. Zusammenfassend kann man sagen, daß durch die Antennen- und die nichtresonante Störkörpermethode ein für die Entwicklung von störmodenbedämpften Beschleunigerresonatoren für zukünftige lineare Kollider und natürlich auch anderer Elektronenbeschleuniger sehr wirksames Instrument zur Verfügung steht. Ein detailliertes Design eines für einen bestimmten Beschleuniger passenden Dämpfungssystems ist mit Hilfe dieser Meßmethoden möglich geworden, da kleine Unterschiede zwischen verschiedenen Ausführungen von Dämpfungssystemen meßbar sind. Durch die bei der Anwendung der Meßmethoden auf unterschiedliche bedämpfte Resonatoren gefundenen Gesetzmäßigkeiten ist unter anderem auch die Frage geklärt worden, auf welche Weise ein Dämpfungssystem auch auf numerischem Wege mit Hilfe von Computerprogrammen wie z.B. MAFIA berechnet werden kann.
By replacing the irises in an electron linac by a slit one gets a structure capable of focussing/defocussing an electron beam (rf-quadrupoles). Therefore one can think of a combination of rf- and conventional magnetic quadrupoles for transversal focussing in linear-colliders. Furthermore they can meet the demands of BNS-damping without initial energy spread. Considering multibunch-operation of a collider, the long-range wake behaviour of this kind of structure has to be investigated. A three-cell structure has been built and investigated for dipole-type transversal long-range wakes. The experimental results are compared to numerical simulations done with MAFIA.
We present a calculation of antiproton yields in Si+Al and Si+Au collisions at 14.5A GeV in the framework of the relativistic quantum molecular dynamics approach (RQMD). Multistep processes lead to the formation of high-mass flux tubes. Their decay dominates the initial antibaryon yield. However, the subsequent annihilation in the surrounding baryon-rich matter suppresses the antiproton yield considerably: Two-thirds of all antibaryons are annihilated even for the light Si+Al system. Comparisons with preliminary data of the E802 experiment support this analysis.
Strong correlations between baryon stopping in the projectile rapidity hemisphere and target excitation have been found in the light-ion-induced reactions at the BNL Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS) (E814 group). Results in the framework of the relativistic molecular dynamics approach (RQMD) describe recent E814 data quite well. We discuss the RQMD results together with proton and pion data from the E802 group near midrapidity. They have raised the question of whether partial transparency could be seen in these experiments. The RQMD results indicate strong transverse baryon flow in central Si+Au collisions after the projectile has been stopped in the target.
A quasiclassical Pauli potential is used to simulate the Fermi motion of nucleons in a molecular dynamical simulation of heavy ion collisions. The thermostatic properties of a Fermi gas with and without interactions are presented. The inclusion of this Pauli potential into the quantum molecular dynamics (QMD) approach yields a model with well defined fermionic ground states, which is therefore also able to give the excitation energies of the emitted fragments. The deexcitation mechanisms (particle evaporation and multifragmentation) of the new model are investigated. The dynamics of the QMD with Pauli potential is tested by a wide range of comparisons of calculated and experimental double-differential cross sections for inclusive p-induced reactions at incident energies of 80 to 160 MeV. Results at 256 and 800 MeV incident proton energy are presented as predictions for completed experiments which are as yet unpublished.
Relativistic heavy ion collisions constitute a prolific source of hyperons: tens of hyperons per event are predicted at energies E≥10 GeV/nucleon, providing a scenario for the formation of metastable exotic multihypernuclear objects. They may exhibit exceptional properties: bound neutral (e.g., 4M2Λ2n, 10M2Λ8n, pure Λ droplets, 8Λ) and even negatively charged composites objects with positive baryon number (e.g., 4M2Σ-2n, 6M2Λ2Ξ-2n) could be formed in rare events. Such negative nuclei can easily be identified in a magnetic spectrometer. They could be considerably more abundant than antinuclei of the same A. We use the relativistic meson-baryon field theory—which gives an excellent description of normal nuclear and single-Λ hypernuclear properties—to calculate the rich spectrum of such exotic objects, their stability, and their structure. We also find solutions for a large variety of bound short-lived nuclei (e.g., 8M2Λ,2Σ-2p2n), which may decay strongly via formation of cascade (Ξ) particles. Multi-Ξ hypernuclei are also evaluated. A variety of potential candidates for such metastable exotic nuclei is presented. It turns out that the properties of such exotic multihypernuclear objects reveal quite similar features as the strangelet proposed as a unique signature for quark-gluon plasma formation in heavy ion collisions.
Experimental results are presented on the charge, velocity, and angular distributions of intermediate mass fragments (IMFs) for the reaction Fe+Au at bombarding energies of 50 and 100 MeV/nucleon. Results are compared to the quantum molecular dynamics (QMD) model and a modified QMD which includes a Pauli potential and follows the subsequent statistical decay of excited reaction products. The more complete model gives a good representation of the data and suggests that the major source of IMFs at large angles is due to multifragmentation of the target residue.
Stopping power and thermalization in relativistic heavy ion collisions is investigated employing the quantum molecular dynamics approach. For heavy systems stopping of the incoming nuclei is predicted, independent of the energy. The influence of the quantum effects and their increasing importance at low energies, is demonstrated by inspection of the mean free path of the nucleons and the n-n collision number. Classical models, which neglect these effects, overestimate the stopping and the thermalization as well as the collective flow and squeeze out. The sensitivity of the transverse and longitudinal momentum transfer to the in-medium cross section and to the pressure is investigated.
We investigate the production of heavy quarks in continuum and bound states in nuclear collisions. Creation rates for free bb and tt quark pairs and for bottomonium and toponium in the ground state are computed at energies of the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC), and Superconducting Super Collider. Central and peripheral heavy-ion collisions are discussed. For top-quark creation we assumed a mass range of 90≤mt≤250 GeV. The creation rate for top quarks in peripheral collisions is estimated to be by a factor 40 to 130 smaller compared with corresponding central collisions. For mt=130 GeV we calculated a creation rate of about 4760 top-quark pairs per day at the LHC (3.5 TeV/nucleon) for Pb-Pb collisions.
We discuss the multiplicity distribution of electron-positron pairs created in the strong electromagnetic fields of ultrarelativistic heavy-ion transits. Based on nonperturbative expressions for the N-pair creation amplitudes, the Poisson distribution is derived by neglecting interference terms. The source of unitarity violation is identified in the vacuum-to-vacuum amplitude, and a perturbative expression for the mean number of pairs is given.
The properties of nuclear matter are studied in the framework of quantum hadrodynamics. Assuming an ω-meson field, periodic in space, a self-consistent set of equations is derived in the mean-field approximation for the description of nucleons interacting via σ-meson and ω-meson fields. Solutions of these self-consistent equations have been found: The baryon density is constant in space, however, the baryon current density is periodic. This high density phase of nuclear matter can be produced by anisotropic external pressure, occurring, e.g., in relativistic heavy ion reactions. The self-consistent fields developing beyond the instability limit have a special screw symmetry. In the presence of such an ω field, the energy spectrum of the relativistic nucleons exhibits allowed and forbidden bands, similar to the energy spectrum of the electrons in solids.
QCD-Summenregeln mit Massen
(1993)
Untersuchungen zu mikrowellenfokussierenden Beschleunigerstrukturen für zukünftige lineare Collider
(1993)
Zur Erforschung immer kleinerer Strukturen der Materie benötigt die Elementarteilchenphysik Teilchenstrahlen höchster Energie. Gegenwärtig sind das Higgs-Boson und das Top-Quarks‘ die Objekte des größten physikalischen Interesses. Das sog. “Top” ist das sechste und bisher noch nicht nachgewiesene Mitglied der Quark-Familie. Seine Masse wird unterhalb von etwa 180GeV vermutet. Das Higgs-Boson spielt im sog. Standardmodell der Elementarteilchen eine wichtige Rolle. Seine Masse wird ebenfalls im Bereich zwischen 100 und 200GeV vermutet. Es gibt eine gute Chance, das Top am Protonen- Antiprotonen-Beschleuniger TEVATRON des Fermilab in Chicago nachzuweisen. Seine physikalischen Eigenschaften lassen sich aber erst an zukünfligen Beschleunigem mit höherer Energie bestimmen. Gegenwärtig werden daher mehrere verschiedene Beschleunigerkonzepte erwogen oder sind bereits in Planung bzw. im Bau. Das Spektrum reicht dabei von Protonen-Antiprotonen- bis zu Elektronen-Positronen-Maschinen. Ein vielversprechender Ansatz zur Erzeugung der benötigten Teilchenenergien ist der lineare Elektronen-Positronen-Collider, im folgenden immer als linearer Collider bezeichnet. Das Verhältnis von Meßsignal zu Hintergrund ist bei e+-e-Kollisionen besser als bei Protonen-Kollisionen. Es entstehen keine Partonen, wodurch die zur Verfugung stehende Energie effektiver genutzt werden kann [ 11. Weiterhin ist der lineare Collider im Vergleich zu einer zirkularen Maschine gleicher Endenergie und Luminosität auf lange Sicht kostengünstiger, da keine zusätzliche Hf-Leistung zur Kompensation von Synchrotronstrahlungsverlusten nötig ist. Die für die Experimente erforderliche hohe Luminosität bedingt Teilchenstrahlen von niedrigster Emittanz und geringster Energieverschmierung sowohl innerhalb eines einzelnen Teilchenpaketes als auch zwischen den Bunchen selbst [2]. Zur Erhaltung der Strahlqualität über die volle Lange des Beschleunigers ist es deshalb notwendig, ein akkurates Strahlführungssystem zu entwickeln, das es gestattet, auftretenden Strahlinstabilitäten wirksam zu begegnen. Grund der Instabilitäten sind elektromagnetische Felder, sogenannte Wake- oder Kielwellenfelder, die die Teilchen bei der Durchquerung des Beschleunigers selbst anfachen. Die Teilchenpakete werden dadurch radial von der Achse abgelenkt, sie werden verformt und erfahren eine Impulsverschmierung. Transversale Einzelbunch-Instabilitäten (SBBU, Single Bunch Beam Breakup) kann man durch die Einführung einer Energieverschmierung innerhalb eines Teilchenpakets bekämpfen; in Verbindung mit einer äußeren Strahlführung erreicht man eine Bedämpfung der Instabilität [3]. Als Alternative oder Ergänzung zu äußeren Fokussierungsmaßnahmen erscheint es deshalb interessant, inwieweit man durch geeignete Modifikationen an den Beschleunigerstrukturen die Hochfrequenzfelder selbst zur Erzeugung der benötigten Fokussierung heranziehen kann. Da es sehr schwierig ist, die für das Experiment geforderte Luminosität mit einem einzelnen Bunch zu erzeugen, muß man mehrere Teilchenpakete in kurzem Abstand durch den Beschleuniger schicken. Jetzt erfährt aber jeder Bunch die aufsummierten Wakefelder der ihm vorausfliegenden Teilchenpakete. Um zu verhindern, daß die transversale Strahlablage inakzeptabel groß wird, müssen Maßnahmen zur Kontrolle dieser Vielteilchen-Instabilitäten (MBBU, Multibunch Beam Breakup) getroffen werden. Das bedeutet, die Güten dieser als Long-Range-Wakes bezeichneten Störmoden müssen, je nach Collider, durch konstruktive Maßnahmen auf Werte in der Größenordnung von zehn abgesenkt werden. Die vorliegende Arbeit befaßt sich mit theoretischen Anwendungsmöglichkeiten von hochfrequenzfokussierenden Beschleunigerstrukturen in linearen Collidem bei Einzel- und Multibunch-Betrieb. In Kap. 2 wird eine kurze Einführung in die Problematik von Höchstenergiebeschleunigem gegeben. Anschließend werden in Kap. 3 Irisstrukturen und ihre Kenngrößen behandelt. Kap. 4 gibt eine Einführung in das Wakefeld-Konzept. Es wird untersucht, welche Resonatormoden für den Strahl gefährlich sind; die Wakepotentiale werden mit Resonatorkenngrößen in Verbindung gebracht. In Kap. 5 schließt sich eine Betrachtung zum SBBU an. Es wird untersucht, inwieweit Irisstrukturen und Rechteckblendenstrukturen (MWQ-Strukturen) zur direkten Hochfrequenzfokussierung eingesetzt werden können. Die Eigenschaften einer MWQ-Struktur werden vermessen und mit theoretischen Vorhersagen verglichen. Beispiele fiir hypothetische Collider in verschiedenen Frequenzbereichen werden diskutiert. Im anschließenden Kap. 6 wird der Mechanismus des MBBU erläutert und Möglichkeiten zur Bedämpfung insbesondere von MWQ-Strukturen im Multibunch-Betrieb untersucht. Meßergebnisse an Modellstrukturen werden vorgestellt und am Beispiel von einem S- und X-Band- Collider diskutiert.