2,716 research outputs found
Azimuthally-sensitive pion HBT at RHIC
The STAR Collaboration has measured two-pion correlation functions versus
emission angle with respect to the event plane in non-central Au+Au collisions
at \sqrt{s_{NN}}=130, 200 GeV. In the context of a parameterized freezeout
scenario, the data suggest an out-of-plane freezeout geometry, and a rapid
system evolution to freezeout.Comment: presented at XXXII International Symposium on Multiparticle Dynamics
(ISMD2002), Alushta, Ukraine; to appear in the proceeding
Femtoscopy and energy-momentum conservation effects in proton-proton collisions at 900 GeV in ALICE
Two particle correlations are used to extract information about the
characteristic size of the system for proton-proton collisions at 900 GeV
measured by the ALICE (A Large Ion Collider experiment) detector at CERN. The
correlation functions obtained show the expected Bose-Einstein effect for
identical particles, but there are also long range correlations present that
shift the baseline from the expected flat behavior. A possible source of these
correlations is the conservation of energy and momentum, especially for small
systems, where the energy available for particle production is limited. A new
technique, first introduced by the STAR collaboration, of quantifying these
long range correlations using energy-momentum conservation considerations is
presented here. It is shown that the baseline of the two particle correlation
function can be described using this technique.Comment: Hot Quarks 2010 conference proceedings, to appear in Journal of
Physics: Conference Series (JPCS
Searching for the Kaluza-Klein Graviton in Bulk RS Models
The best-studied version of the RS1 model has all the Standard Model
particles confined to the TeV brane. However, recent variants have the Standard
Model fermions and gauge bosons located in the bulk five-dimensional spacetime.
We study the potential reach of the LHC in searching for the lightest KK
partner of the graviton in the most promising such models in which the
right-handed top is localized very near the TeV brane and the light fermions
are localized near the Planck brane. We consider both detection and the
establishment of the spin-2 nature of the resonance should it be found.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures - JHEP published version, figures added,
branching ratio correcte
LISA Pathfinder: OPD loop characterisation
The optical metrology system (OMS) of the LISA Pathfinder mission is measuring the distance between two free-floating test masses with unprecedented precision. One of the four OMS heterodyne interferometers reads out the phase difference between the reference and the measurement laser beam. This phase from the reference interferometer is common to all other longitudinal interferometer read outs and therefore subtracted. In addition, the phase is fed back via the digital optical pathlength difference (OPD) control loop to keep it close to zero. Here, we analyse the loop parameters and compare them to on-ground measurement results.DLRFederal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energ
Transitions in Family-dependent Models
We analyze flavor-changing-neutral-current (FCNC) effects in the
transitions that are induced by family non-universal gauge symmetries.
After systematically developing the necessary formalism, we present a
correlated analysis for the processes. We adopt a
model-independent approach in which we only require family-universal charges
for the first and second generations and small fermion mixing angles. We
analyze the constraints on the resulting parameter space from
mixing and the time-dependent CP asymmetries of the penguin-dominated decays. Our results indicate that the
currently observed discrepancies in some of these modes with respect to the
Standard Model predictions can be consistently accommodated within this general
class of models.Comment: 36 pages, 11 figure
Hydrodynamic emission of strange and non-strange particles at RHIC and LHC
The hydrodynamic model is used to describe the single-particle spectra and
elliptic flow of hadrons at RHIC and to predict the emission angle dependence
of HBT correlations at RHIC and LHC energies.Comment: 6 pages LaTeX, 3 postscript figures. Proceedings for the conference
"Strange Quark Matter 2003", Atlantic Beach, NC, March 12-17, 2003, to appear
in J. Phys.
LISA Pathfinder: Optical Metrology System monitoring during operations
The LISA Pathfinder (LPF) mission has demonstrated excellent performance. In addition to having surpassed the main mission goals, data has been collected from the various subsystems throughout the duration of the mission. This data is a valuable resource, both for a more complete understanding of the LPF satellite and the differential acceleration measurements, as well as for the design of the future Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) mission. Initial analysis of the Optical Metrology System (OMS) data was performed as part of daily system monitoring, and more in-depth analyses are ongoing. This contribution presents an overview of these activities along with an introduction to the OMS. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.ESA/22331/09/NL/HBESA/16238/10/NL/HBDLRBundesministerium für Wirtschaft und EnergieDFG/EXC/QUES
HBT: A (mostly) experimental overview
I will present a review of the field of Hanbury Brown-Twiss interferometry in
relativistic heavy-ion collisions. The "HBT puzzle" is explored in detail,
emphasizing recent theoretical attempts to understand the persisting puzzle. I
also present recent experimental results on azimuthally sensitive HBT, HBT of
direct photons, and some surprises in the comparison of HBT results from p+p
and Au+Au collisions at RHIC.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Proceedings of the Quark Matter 2004 conference
(Oalkland, CA, USA, January 2004
Bulk properties and flow
In this report, I summarize the experimental results on {\bf bulk properties
and flow} presented at Quark Matter 2004. It is organized in four sections: 1)
Initial condition and stopping; 2) Particle spectra and freeze-outs; 3)
Anisotropic flow; 4) Outlook for future measurements.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, "Rapporteur-Conference Highlights", Quark Matter
2004, Oakland, January 11-1
A New Approach to Searching for Dark Matter Signals in Fermi-LAT Gamma Rays
Several cosmic ray experiments have measured excesses in electrons and
positrons, relative to standard backgrounds, for energies from ~ 10 GeV - 1
TeV. These excesses could be due to new astrophysical sources, but an
explanation in which the electrons and positrons are dark matter annihilation
or decay products is also consistent. Fortunately, the Fermi-LAT diffuse gamma
ray measurements can further test these models, since the electrons and
positrons produce gamma rays in their interactions in the interstellar medium.
Although the dark matter gamma ray signal consistent with the local electron
and positron measurements should be quite large, as we review, there are
substantial uncertainties in the modeling of diffuse backgrounds and,
additionally, experimental uncertainties that make it difficult to claim a dark
matter discovery. In this paper, we introduce an alternative method for
understanding the diffuse gamma ray spectrum in which we take the intensity
ratio in each energy bin of two different regions of the sky, thereby canceling
common systematic uncertainties. For many spectra, this ratio fits well to a
power law with a single break in energy. The two measured exponent indices are
a robust discriminant between candidate models, and we demonstrate that dark
matter annihilation scenarios can predict index values that require "extreme"
parameters for background-only explanations.Comment: v1: 11 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, revtex4; v2: 13 pages, 8 figures, 1
table, revtex4, Figure 4 added, minor additions made to text, references
added, conclusions unchanged, published versio
- …
