3,175 research outputs found
A feasibility study of a hypersonic real-gas facility
A four month feasibility study of a hypersonic real-gas free flight test facility for NASA Langley Research Center (LARC) was performed. The feasibility of using a high-energy electromagnetic launcher (EML) to accelerate complex models (lifting and nonlifting) in the hypersonic, real-gas facility was examined. Issues addressed include: design and performance of the accelerator; design and performance of the power supply; design and operation of the sabot and payload during acceleration and separation; effects of high current, magnetic fields, temperature, and stress on the sabot and payload; and survivability of payload instrumentation during acceleration, flight, and soft catch
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Priorities Survey Report: The Medical System and the Uninsured
Presents results of a survey on the healthcare system, priorities for reform, and views on the uninsured, a public insurance plan, and individual mandates, compared with other surveys. Analyzes how the way reform elements are described affects responses
Quasiparticle picture of quarks near chiral transition at finite temperature
We investigate, using a chiral effective model, the quark spectrum in the
critical region of the chiral transition focusing on the effect of the possible
mesonic excitations in the quark-gluon plasma phase. We find that there appears
a novel three-peak structure in the quark spectra. We elucidate the mechanism
of the appearance of the multi-peak structure with the help of a Yukawa model
with an elementary boson.Comment: 4 pages, 5 eps figures, to appear in the proceedings of International
Conference on Strong & Electroweak Matter 2006, Brookhaven National
Laboratory, USA, May 10-13, 200
Behavior of logarithmic branch cuts in the self-energy of gluons at finite temperature
We give a simple argument for the cancellation of the log(-k^2) terms (k is
the gluon momentum) between the zero-temperature and the temperature-dependent
parts of the thermal self-energy.Comment: 4 page
Thermal Pions ns Isospin Chemical Potential Effects
The density corrections, in terms of the isospin chemical potential ,
to the mass of the pions are investigated in the framework of the SU(2) low
energy effective chiral invariant lagrangian. As a function of temperature and
, the mass remains quite stable, starting to grow for very high
values of , confirming previous results. However, the dependence for a
non-vanishing chemical potential turns out to be much more dramatic. In
particular, there are interesting corrections to the mass when both effects
(temperature and chemical potential) are simultaneously present. At zero
temperature the should condensate when .
This is not longer valid anymore at finite . The mass of the
acquires also a non trivial dependence on at finite .Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the International
High-Energy Physics Conference on Quantum Chromodynamics QCD02, Montpellier,
2-9 July (2002
Low-momentum Pion Enhancement Induced by Chiral Symmetry Restoration
The thermal and nonthermal pion production by sigma decay and its relation
with chiral symmetry restoration in a hot and dense matter are investigated.
The nonthermal decay into pions of sigma mesons which are popularly produced in
chiral symmetric phase leads to a low-momentum pion enhancement as a possible
signature of chiral phase transition at finite temperature and density.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure
On the Role of Chaos in the AdS/CFT Connection
The question of how infalling matter in a pure state forms a Schwarzschild
black hole that appears to be at non-zero temperature is discussed in the
context of the AdS/CFT connection. It is argued that the phenomenon of
self-thermalization in non-linear (chaotic) systems can be invoked to explain
how the boundary theory, initially at zero temperature self thermalizes and
acquires a finite temperature. Yang-Mills theory is known to be chaotic
(classically) and the imaginary part of the gluon self-energy (damping rate of
the gluon plasma) is expected to give the Lyapunov exponent. We explain how the
imaginary part would arise in the corresponding supergravity calculation due to
absorption at the horizon of the black hole.Comment: 18 pages. Latex file. Minor changes. Final version to appear in
Modern Physics Letters
Soft Photon Production Rate in Resummed Perturbation Theory of High Temperature QCD
We calculate the production rate of soft real photons from a hot quark --
gluon plasma using Braaten -- Pisarski's perturbative resummation method. To
leading order in the QCD coupling constant we find a logarithmically
divergent result for photon energies of order , where is the plasma
temperature. This divergent behaviour is due to unscreened mass singularities
in the effective hard thermal loop vertices in the case of a massless external
photon.Comment: 13 pages (2 figures not included), PLAINTEX, LPTHE-Orsay 93/46, BI-TP
93/5
Thermal Field Theory and Generalized Light Front Coordinates
The dependence of thermal field theory on the surface of quantization and on
the velocity of the heat bath is investigated by working in general coordinates
that are arbitrary linear combinations of the Minkowski coordinates. In the
general coordinates the metric tensor is non-diagonal. The
Kubo, Martin, Schwinger condition requires periodicity in thermal correlation
functions when the temporal variable changes by an amount
. Light front quantization fails since
, however various related quantizations are possible.Comment: 10 page
Fermion and Anti-Fermion Effective Masses in High Temperature Gauge Theories in -Asymmetric Background
We calculate the splitting between fermion and anti-fermion effective masses
in high temperature gauge theories in the presence of a non-vanishing chemical
potential due to the -asymmetric fermionic background. In particular we
consider the case of left-handed leptons in the theory when
the temperature is above GeV and the gauge symmetry is restored.Comment: 13 pages, TIPAC-93001
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