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- Physik (131) (remove)
Physics at its core is an experimental pursuit. If one theory does not agree with experimental results, then the theory is wrong. However, it is becoming harder and harder to directly test some theories of fundamental physics at the high energy/small distance frontier exactly because this frontier is becoming technologically harder to reach. The Large Hadron Collider is getting near the limit of what we can do with present accelerator technology in terms of directly reaching the energy frontier. The motivation for this special issue was to try and collect together ideas and potential approaches to experimentally probe some of our ideas about physics at the high energy/small distance frontier. Some of the papers in this special issue directly deal with the issue of what happens to spacetime at small distance scales. In the paper by A. Aurilia and E. Spallucci a picture of quantum spacetime is given based on the effects of ultrahigh velocity length contractions on the structure of the spacetime. The work of P. Nicolini et al. further pursues the idea that spacetime has a minimal length. The consequences of this minimal length are investigated in terms of the effects it would have on the gravitational collapse of a star to form a black hole. In the article by G. Amelino-Camelia et al. the quantum structure of spacetime is studied through the Fermi LAT data on the Gamma Ray Burst GRB130427A. The article by S. Hossenfelder addressed the question of whether spacetime is fundamentally continuous or discrete and postulates that in the case when spacetime is discrete it might have defects which would have important observational consequences. ...
This paper studies the geometry and the thermodynamics of a holographic screen in the framework of the ultraviolet self-complete quantum gravity. To achieve this goal we construct a new static, neutral, nonrotating black hole metric, whose outer (event) horizon coincides with the surface of the screen. The spacetime admits an extremal configuration corresponding to the minimal holographic screen and having both mass and radius equalling the Planck units. We identify this object as the spacetime fundamental building block, whose interior is physically unaccessible and cannot be probed even during the Hawking evaporation terminal phase. In agreement with the holographic principle, relevant processes take place on the screen surface. The area quantization leads to a discrete mass spectrum. An analysis of the entropy shows that the minimal holographic screen can store only one byte of information, while in the thermodynamic limit the area law is corrected by a logarithmic term.
The Generalized Uncertainty Principle (GUP) arises from Quantum Gravity thought experiments and contains a minimal lenght. In this thesis I calculate Schwarzschild Black Holes that are modified by the GUP. These Black Holes have the property, that their temperature does not diverge for small masses, although they still posses a curvature singularity. I calculate analytically that in more than 3+1 dimensions the temperature diverges again.
In this thesis, Planck size black holes are discussed. Specifically, new families of black holes are presented. Such black holes exhibit an improved short scale behaviour and can be used to implement gravity self-complete paradigm. Such geometries are also studied within the ADD large extra dimensional scenario. This allows black hole remnant masses to reach the TeV scale. It is shown that the evaporation endpoint for this class of black holes is a cold stable remnant. One family of black holes considered in this thesis features a regular de Sitter core that counters gravitational collapse with a quantum outward pressure. The other family of black holes turns out to nicely fit into the holographic information bound on black holes, and lead to black hole area quantization and applications in the gravitational entropic force. As a result, gravity can be derived as emergent phenomenon from thermodynamics.
The thesis contains an overview about recent quantum gravity black hole approaches and concludes with the derivation of nonlocal operators that modify the Einstein equations to ultraviolet complete field equations.
The radiative capture cross section of 238U is very important for the developing of new reactor technologies and the safety of existing ones. Here the preliminary results of the 238U(n,γ) cross section measurement performed at n_TOF with C6D6 scintillation detectors are presented, paying particular attention to data reduction and background subtraction.
Electromagnetic calorimeter (ECAL) is being developed to complement dilepton spectrometer HADES. ECAL will enable the HADES@FAIR experiment to measure data on neutral meson production in heavy ion collisions at the energy range of 2-10 AGeV on the beam of future accelerator SIS100@FAIR. We will report results of the last beam test with quasi-monoenergetic photons carried out in MAMI facility at Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz.
The quark gluon plasma produced in heavy ion collisions behaves like an almost ideal fluid described by viscous hydrodynamics with a number of transport coefficients. The second order coefficient κ is related to a Euclidean correlator of the energy-momentum tensor at vanishing frequency and low momentum. This allows for a lattice determination without maximum entropy methods or modelling, but the required lattice sizes represent a formidable challenge. We calculate κ in leading order lattice perturbation theory and simulations on 1203 × 6, 8 lattices with a < 0.1 fm. In the temperature range 2Tc − 10Tc we find κ = 0.36(15)T2. The error covers both a suitably rescaled AdS/CFT prediction as well as, remarkably, the result of leading order perturbation theory. This suggests that appropriate noise reduction methods on the lattice and NLO perturbative calculations could provide an accurate QCD prediction in the near future.
Ultrafast protein dynamics are of great interest for understanding the molecular basis of biochemical function. One method to study structural changes with highest time-resolution starting in the femtosecond regime is 2D-IR spectroscopy. However its application to investigate protein dynamics both with high temporal and spatial resolution is currently limited to few biological systems with intrinsic chromophores. Spectral congestion, the contribution of many similar oscillators to the same signals, makes it difficult to draw conclusions about local structural dynamics in most other proteins.
The aim of this thesis is to extend the application of 2D-IR spectroscopy to a wider range of proteins by introducing unnatural amino acids (UAAs) with azide or nitrile groups as site-specific vibrational probes, which absorb in the free spectral window between 1800 to 3000 cm-1 by using methods from chemical biology.
In a comparative experimental study using FTIR and 2D-IR spectroscopy of single amino acids azidohomoalanine (Aha), a methionine analogue, was identified as preferred label. To demonstrate the application potential of UAAs as site-specific probes, Aha was then incorporated into different positions in a small globular protein. By using both FTIR and ultrafast 2D-IR it was shown, that indeed the local microenvironment as well as conformational fluctuations on picosecond timescale could be monitored with high spatial information. The azide moiety shows a shift of its absorption frequency depending on the polarity of its surrounding. Using this approach, different subensembles for the protein conformations with more polar and less polar environment around the vibrational probe can be distinguished.
A second major application of site-specific labels is the study of vibrational energy transfer processes (VET), predicted to be relevant for allosteric communication in protein domains such as the PDZ domain. VET can be tracked with high spatial resolution using time-resolved IR spectroscopy by exciting a localized vibrational mode and probing separate modes in a two-colour 2D-IR experiment. To extend this kind of experiment to proteins, a specific donor-acceptor pair of two UAAs was introduced. It uses an azulene moiety as donor that can be excited in the visible range but deposits the excess energy by internal conversion into the vibrational modes of the ground state. In small peptides this VET pair was applied successfully, showing a distance-dependent energy transfer induced signal for VET through covalent bonds. These findings bare great promise for the direct observation of vibrational energy flow in proteins in real-time.
Overall this thesis is the basis for extending the usability of 2D-IR spectroscopy to study structural dynamics in a wide range of proteins systems both with high temporal and spatial resolution.
The measurement of dielectrons (electron-positron pairs) allows to investigate the properties of strongly interacting matter, in particular the Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP), which is created in relativistic heavy-ion collisions at the LHC. The evolution of the collision can be probed via dielectrons since electrons do not interact strongly and are created during all stages of the collision. One of the interests in dielectron measurements is motivated by possible modifications of the electromagnetic emission spectrum in the QGP, where pp collisions are used as a medium-free reference. The dielectron spectrum consists of contributions from various processes. In order to estimate contributions of known dielectron sources, simulations of the so-called dielectron cocktail are performed. In this thesis, dielectron cocktails in minimum bias pp collisions at p s = 7 TeV, p–Pb collisions at p sNN = 5.02 TeV and in central (0-10%) and semi-central (20-50%) Pb–Pb collisions at p sNN = 2.76 TeV at the LHC are presented.