4,141 research outputs found
Higher-order ratios of baryon number cumulants
The relevance of higher order cumulants of net baryon number fluctuations for
the analysis of freeze-out and critical conditions in heavy-ion collisions at
LHC and RHIC is addressed. The sign structure of the higher order cumulants in
the vicinity of the chiral crossover temperature might be a sensitive probe and
may allow to elucidate their relation to the QCD phase transition. We calculate
ratios of generalized quark-number susceptibilities to high orders in three
flavor QCD-like models and investigate their sign structure close to the chiral
crossover line.Comment: presented at the International Conference "Critical Point and Onset
of Deconfinement - CPOD 2011", Wuhan, November 7-11, 2011; version to appear
in Cent. Eur. J. Phy
Anomalous Multiplicity Fluctuations from Phase Transitions in Heavy Ion Collisions
Event-by-event fluctuations and correlations between particles produced in
relativistic nuclear collisions are studied. The fluctuations in positive,
negative, total and net charge are closely related through correlations. In the
event of a phase transitions to a quark-gluon plasma, fluctuations in total and
net charge can be enhanced and reduced respectively which, however, is very
sensitive to the acceptance and centrality. If the colliding system experiences
strong density fluctuations due, e.g., to droplet formation in a first-order
phase transition, all fluctuations can be enhanced substantially. The
importance of fluctuations and correlations is exemplified by event-by-event
measurement of the multiplicities of 's and charged particles since
these observables should anti-correlate in the presence of co-mover or
anomalous absorption.Comment: revised version to appear in Phys. Rev. C, 5 page
The OmegaWhite Survey for Short-Period Variable Stars IV: Discovery of the warm DQ white dwarf OW J175358.85-310728.9
We present the discovery and follow-up observations of the second known
variable warm DQ white dwarf OW J175358.85-310728.9 (OW J1753-3107). OW
J1753-3107 is the brightest of any of the currently known warm or hot DQ and
was discovered in the OmegaWhite Survey as exhibiting optical variations on a
period of 35.5452 (2) mins, with no evidence for other periods in its light
curves. This period has remained constant over the last two years and a
single-period sinusoidal model provides a good fit for all follow-up light
curves. The spectrum consists of a very blue continuum with strong absorption
lines of neutral and ionised carbon, a broad He I 4471 A line, and possibly
weaker hydrogen lines. The C I lines are Zeeman split, and indicate the
presence of a strong magnetic field. Using spectral Paschen-Back model
descriptions, we determine that OW J1753-3107 exhibits the following physical
parameters: T_eff = 15430 K, log(g) = 9.0, log(N(C)/N(He)) = -1.2, and the mean
magnetic field strength is B_z =2.1 MG. This relatively low temperature and
carbon abundance (compared to the expected properties of hot DQs) is similar to
that seen in the other warm DQ SDSS J1036+6522. Although OW J1753-3107 appears
to be a twin of SDSS J1036+6522, it exhibits a modulation on a period slightly
longer than the dominant period in SDSS J1036+6522 and has a higher carbon
abundance. The source of variations is uncertain, but they are believed to
originate from the rotation of the magnetic white dwarf.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication by MNRA
Searching for unknown open clusters in the Tycho-2 catalog
We present 11 new open cluster candidates found in a systematic search for
unknown star clusters using the astrometric and photometric data included in
the Tycho2 catalog. The possible existence of these stellar aggregates is
supported by the analysis of proper motions, color-magnitude diagrams, stellar
density distributions, and by the visual inspection of the Digitized Sky Survey
(DSS) plates. With these tools we were able to determine mean absolute proper
motions as well as preliminary reddenings, distances and ages for the majority
of the candidates. We found that most of them are possibly nearby (closer than
about 600 pc) open clusters never studied before.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures. Accepted by A&
Hydrodynamical description of a hadron-quark first-order phase transition
Solutions of hydrodynamical equations are presented for the equation of state
of the Var der Waals type allowing for the first order phase transition.
Attention is focused on description of the hadron-quark phase transition in
heavy ion collisions. It is shown that fluctuations dissolve and grow as if the
fluid is effectively very viscous. Even in spinodal region germs are growing
slowly due to viscosity and critical slowing down. This prevents enhancement of
fluctuations in the near-critical region, which is frequently considered as a
signal of the critical point in heavy ion collisions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Heuristic Models of Two-Fermion Relativistic Systems with Field-Type Interaction
We use the chain of simple heuristic expedients to obtain perturbative and
exactly solvable relativistic spectra for a family of two-fermionic bound
systems with Coulomb-like interaction. In the case of electromagnetic
interaction the spectrum coincides up to the second order in a coupling
constant with that following from the quantum electrodynamics. Discrepancy
occurs only for S-states which is the well-known difficulty in the bound-state
problem. The confinement interaction is considered too.
PACS number(s): 03.65.Pm, 03.65.Ge, 12.39.PnComment: 16 pages, LaTeX 2.0
Ising-like dynamical signatures and the end-point of the QCD transition line
An increase in the size of coherent domains in the one component
field theory under the influence of a uniformly changing external magnetic
field near the critical end-point was proposed
recently as an estimate also for the variation of the chiral correlation length
of QCD near its respective hypothetical end point in the
plane. The present detailed numerical investigation of the effective model
suggests that passing by the critical QCD end point with realistic rate of
temperature change will trigger large amplitude oscillations in the temporal
variation of the chiral correlation length. A simple mechanism for producing
this phenomenon is suggested.Comment: 10 pages, RevTeX, 5 figures. Version accepted for publication in PR
Anchors for the Cosmic Distance Scale: the Cepheid QZ Normae in the Open Cluster NGC 6067
Cepheids are key to establishing the cosmic distance scale. Therefore it's
important to assess the viability of QZ Nor, V340 Nor, and GU Nor as
calibrators for Leavitt's law via their purported membership in the open
cluster NGC 6067. The following suite of evidence confirms that QZ Nor and V340
Nor are members of NGC 6067, whereas GU Nor likely lies in the foreground: (i)
existing radial velocities for QZ Nor and V340 Nor agree with that established
for the cluster (-39.4+-1.2 km/s) to within 1 km/s, whereas GU Nor exhibits a
markedly smaller value; (ii) a steep velocity-distance gradient characterizes
the sight-line toward NGC 6067, thus implying that objects sharing common
velocities are nearly equidistant; (iii) a radial profile constructed for NGC
6067 indicates that QZ Nor is within the cluster bounds, despite being 20' from
the cluster center; (iv) new BVJH photometry for NGC 6067 confirms the cluster
lies d=1.75+-0.10 kpc distant, a result that matches Wesenheit distances
computed for QZ Nor/V340 Nor using the Benedict et al. (2007, HST parallaxes)
calibration. QZ Nor is a cluster Cepheid that should be employed as a
calibrator for the cosmic distance scale.Comment: To appear in ApS
Transverse Spin at PHENIX: Results and Prospects
The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), as the world's first and only
polarized proton collider, offers a unique environment in which to study the
spin structure of the proton. In order to study the proton's transverse spin
structure, the PHENIX experiment at RHIC took data with transversely polarized
beams in 2001-02 and 2005, and it has plans for further running with transverse
polarization in 2006 and beyond. Results from early running as well as
prospective measurements for the future will be discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, presented at Transversity 2005, Como, Ital
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