1,273 research outputs found
Neutrons from multiplicity-selected Au-Au collisions at 150, 250, 400, and 650 AMeV
We measured neutron triple-differential cross sections from
multiplicity-selected Au-Au collisions at 150, 250, 400, and 650 \AMeV. The
reaction plane for each collision was estimated from the summed transverse
velocity vector of the charged fragments emitted in the collision. We examined
the azimuthal distribution of the triple-differential cross sections as a
function of the polar angle and the neutron rapidity. We extracted the average
in--plane transverse momentum and the normalized
observable , where is the neutron
transverse momentum, as a function of the neutron center-of-mass rapidity, and
we examined the dependence of these observables on beam energy. These
collective flow observables for neutrons, which are consistent with those of
protons plus bound nucleons from the Plastic Ball Group, agree with the
Boltzmann--Uehling--Uhlenbeck (BUU) calculations with a momentum--dependent
interaction. Also, we calculated the polar-angle-integrated maximum azimuthal
anisotropy ratio R from the value of .Comment: 20 LaTeX pages. 11 figures to be faxed on request, send email to
sender's addres
Jets and produced particles in pp collisions from SPS to RHIC energies for nuclear applications
Higher-order pQCD corrections play an important role in the reproduction of
data at high transverse momenta in the energy range 20 GeV GeV. Recent calculations of photon and pion production in collisions
yield detailed information on the next-to-leading order contributions. However,
the application of these results in proton-nucleus and nucleus-nucleus
collisions is not straightforward. The study of nuclear effects requires a
simplified understanding of the output of these computations. Here we summarize
our analysis of recent calculations, aimed at handling the NLO results by
introducing process and energy-dependent factors.Comment: 4 pages with 5 eps figures include
Endurance of SN 2005ip after a decade: X-rays, radio, and H-alpha like SN 1988Z require long-lived pre-supernova mass loss
SN2005ip was a TypeIIn event notable for its sustained strong interaction
with circumstellar material (CSM), coronal emission lines, and IR excess,
interpreted as shock interaction with the very dense and clumpy wind of an
extreme red supergiant. We present a series of late-time spectra of SN2005ip
and a first radio detection of this SN, plus late-time X-rays, all of which
indicate that its CSM interaction is still strong a decade post-explosion. We
also present and discuss new spectra of geriatric SNe with continued CSM
interaction: SN1988Z, SN1993J, and SN1998S. From 3-10 yr post-explosion,
SN2005ip's H-alpha luminosity and other observed characteristics were nearly
identical to those of the radio-luminous SN1988Z, and much more luminous than
SNe1993J and 1998S. At 10 yr after explosion, SN2005ip showed a drop in
H luminosity, followed by a quick resurgence over several months. We
interpret this variability as ejecta crashing into a dense shell located at
around 0.05 pc from the star, which may be the same shell that caused the IR
echo at earlier epochs. The extreme H-alpha luminosities in SN2005ip and
SN1988Z are still dominated by the forward shock at 10 yr post-explosion,
whereas SN1993J and SN1998S are dominated by the reverse shock at a similar
age. Continuous strong CSM interaction in SNe~2005ip and 1988Z is indicative of
enhanced mass loss for about 1e3 yr before core collapse, longer than Ne, O, or
Si burning phases. Instead, the episodic mass loss must extend back through C
burning and perhaps even part of He burning.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figs. accepted in MNRA
Collapse of Flux Tubes
The dynamics of an idealized, infinite, MIT-type flux tube is followed in
time as the interior evolves from a pure gluon field to a
plasma. We work in color U(1). pair formation is evaluated
according to the Schwinger mechanism using the results of Brink and Pavel. The
motion of the quarks toward the tube endcaps is calculated by a Boltzmann
equation including collisions. The tube undergoes damped radial oscillations
until the electric field settles down to zero. The electric field stabilizes
the tube against pinch instabilities; when the field vanishes, the tube
disintegrates into mesons. There is only one free parameter in the problem,
namely the initial flux tube radius, to which the results are very sensitive.
Among various quantities calculated is the mean energy of the emitted pions.Comment: 16 pages plus 12 figures. RevTex3. DOE/ER/40427-160N9
A new and unusual LBV-like outburst from a Wolf–Rayet star in the outskirts of M33
MCA-1B (also called UIT003) is a luminous hot star in the western outskirts of M33, classified over 20 yr ago with a spectral type of Ofpe/WN9 and identified then as a candidate luminous blue variable (LBV). Palomar Transient Factory data reveal that this star brightened in 2010, with a light curve resembling that of the classic LBV star AF And in M31. Other Ofpe/WN9 stars have erupted as LBVs, but MCA-1B was unusual because it remained hot. It showed a WN-type spectrum throughout its eruption, whereas LBVs usually get much cooler. MCA-1B showed an almost four-fold increase in bolometric luminosity and a doubling of its radius, but its temperature stayed ≳29 kK. As it faded, it shifted to even hotter temperatures, exhibiting a WN7/WN8-type spectrum, and doubling its wind speed. MCA-1B is reminiscent of some supernova impostors, and its location resembles the isolated environment of SN 2009ip. It is most similar to HD 5980 (in the Small Magellanic Cloud) and GR 290 (also in M33). Whereas these two LBVs exhibited B-type spectra in eruption, MCA-1B is the first clear case where a Wolf–Rayet (WR) spectrum persisted at all times. Together, MCA-1B, HD 5980, and GR 290 constitute a class of WN-type LBVs, distinct from S Doradus LBVs. They are most interesting in the context of LBVs at low metallicity, a possible post-LBV/WR transition in binaries, and as likely Type Ibn supernova progenitors
On the volume functional of compact manifolds with boundary with constant scalar curvature
We study the volume functional on the space of constant scalar curvature
metrics with a prescribed boundary metric. We derive a sufficient and necessary
condition for a metric to be a critical point, and show that the only domains
in space forms, on which the standard metrics are critical points, are geodesic
balls. In the zero scalar curvature case, assuming the boundary can be
isometrically embedded in the Euclidean space as a compact strictly convex
hypersurface, we show that the volume of a critical point is always no less
than the Euclidean volume bounded by the isometric embedding of the boundary,
and the two volumes are equal if and only if the critical point is isometric to
a standard Euclidean ball. We also derive a second variation formula and apply
it to show that, on Euclidean balls and ''small'' hyperbolic and spherical
balls in dimensions 3 to 5, the standard space form metrics are indeed saddle
points for the volume functional
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