416 research outputs found
Analysis of Boltzmann-Langevin Dynamics in Nuclear Matter
The Boltzmann-Langevin dynamics of harmonic modes in nuclear matter is
analyzed within linear-response theory, both with an elementary treatment and
by using the frequency-dependent response function. It is shown how the source
terms agitating the modes can be obtained from the basic BL correlation kernel
by a simple projection onto the associated dual basis states, which are
proportional to the RPA amplitudes and can be expressed explicitly. The source
terms for the correlated agitation of any two such modes can then be extracted
directly, without consideration of the other modes. This facilitates the
analysis of collective modes in unstable matter and makes it possible to asses
the accuracy of an approximate projection technique employed previously.Comment: 13 latex pages, 4 PS figure
Inhomogeneous isospin distribution in the reactions of 28Si + 112Sn and 124Sn at 30 and 50 MeV/nucleon
We have created quasiprojectiles of varying isospin via peripheral reactions
of 28Si + 112Sn and 124Sn at 30 and 50 MeV/nucleon. The quasiprojectiles have
been reconstructed from completely isotopically identified fragments. The
difference in N/Z of the reconstructed quasiprojectiles allows the
investigation of the disassembly as a function of the isospin of the
fragmenting system. The isobaric yield ratio 3H/3He depends strongly on N/Z
ratio of quasiprojectiles. The dependences of mean fragment multiplicity and
mean N/Z ratio of the fragments on N/Z ratio of the quasiprojectile are
different for light charged particles and intermediate mass fragments.
Observation of a different N/Z ratio of light charged particles and
intermediate mass fragments is consistent with an inhomogeneous distribution of
isospin in the fragmenting system.Comment: 5 pages, 4 Postscript figures, RevTe
Effect of nucleon exchange on projectile multifragmentation in the reactions of 28Si + 112Sn and 124Sn at 30 and 50 MeV/nucleon
Multifragmentation of quasiprojectiles was studied in reactions of 28Si beam
with 112Sn and 124Sn targets at projectile energies 30 and 50 MeV/nucleon. The
quasiprojectile observables were reconstructed using isotopically identified
charged particles with Z_f <= 5 detected at forward angles. The nucleon
exchange between projectile and target was investigated using isospin and
excitation energy of reconstructed quasiprojectile. For events with total
reconstructed charge equal to the charge of the beam (Z_tot = 14) the influence
of beam energy and target isospin on neutron transfer was studied in detail.
Simulations employing subsequently model of deep inelastic transfer,
statistical model of multifragmentation and software replica of FAUST detector
array were carried out. A concept of deep inelastic transfer provides good
description of production of highly excited quasiprojectiles. The isospin and
excitation energy of quasiprojectile were described with good overall
agreement. The fragment multiplicity, charge and isospin were reproduced
satisfactorily. The range of contributing impact parameters was determined
using backtracing procedure.Comment: 11 pages, 8 Postscript figures, LaTeX, to appear in Phys. Rev. C (
Dec 2000
Effect of friction on disoriented chiral condensate formation
We have investigated the effect of friction on the DCC domain formation. We
solve the Newton equation of motion for the O(4) fields, with quenched initial
condition. The initial fields are randomly distributed in a Gaussian form. In
one dimensional expansion, on the average, large DCC domains can not be formed.
However, in some particular orbits, large instabilities may occur. This
possibility also greatly diminishes with the introduction of friction. But, if
the friction is large, the system may be overdamped and then, there is a
possibility of large DCC domain formation in some events.Comment: 9 pages, including figure
The Chiral Phase Transition in Dissipative Dynamics
Numerical simulations of the chiral phase transition in the (3+1)dimensional
O(4)-model are presented. The evolutions of the chiral field follow purely
dissipative dynamics, starting from random chirally symmetric initial
configurations down to the true vacuum with spontaneously broken symmetry. The
model stabilizes topological textures which are formed together with domains of
disoriented chiral condensate (DCC) during the roll-down phase. The classically
evolving field acts as source for the emission of pions and mesons.
The exponents of power laws for the growth of angular correlations and for
emission rates are extracted. Fluctuations in the abundance ratios for neutral
and charged pions are compared with those for uncorrelated sources as potential
signature for the chiral phase transition after heavy-ion collisions. It is
found that the presence of stabilizing textures (baryons and antibaryons)
prevents sufficiently rapid growth of DCC-domain size, so observability of
anomalous tails in the abundance ratios is unlikely. However, the transient
formation of growing DCC domains causes sizable broadening of the distributions
as compared to the statistical widths of generic sources.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figure
Deciphering Deconfinement in Correlations of Conserved Charges
Diagonal and off-diagonal flavor and conserved charge susceptibilities reveal
the prevalent degrees of freedom of heated strongly interacting matter. Results
obtained from lattice simulations are compared with various model estimates in
an effort to weed down various possible pictures of a quark gluon plasma. We
argue that the vanishing of the off-diagonal quark flavor susceptibilities and
its derivatives with respect to chemical potential, at temperatures above
1.5Tc, can only be understood in a picture of a gas or liquid composed of
quasi-particles which carry the same quantum numbers as quarks and antiquarks.
A potential new observable, blind to neutral and non-strange particles, is
introduced and related via isospin symmetry to the ratio of susceptibilities of
baryonic strangeness to strangeness generated in the excited matter created at
RHIC.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, LATEX, To appear in the proceedings of the
International Conference on Strangeness in Quark Matter, Los Angeles, CA, Mar
26-31, 200
DCC Dynamics in (2+1)D-O(3) model
The dynamics of symmetry-breaking after a quench is numerically simulated on
a lattice for the (2+1)-dimensional O(3) model. In addition to the standard
sigma-model with temperature-dependent Phi^4-potential the energy functional
includes a four-derivative current-current coupling to stabilize the size of
the emerging extended topological textures. The total winding number can be
conserved by constraint. As a model for the chiral phase transition during the
cooling phase after a hadronic collision this allows to investigate the
interference of 'baryon-antibaryon' production with the developing disoriented
aligned domains. The growth of angular correlations, condensate, average
orientation is studied in dependence of texture size, quench rate, symmetry
breaking. The classical dissipative dynamics determines the rate of energy
emitted from the relaxing source for each component of the 3-vector field which
provides a possible signature for domains of Disoriented Chiral Condensate. We
find that the 'pions' are emitted in two distinct pulses; for sufficiently
small lattice size the second one carries the DCC signal, but it is strongly
suppressed as compared to simultaneous 'sigma'-meson emission. We compare the
resulting anomalies in the distributions of DCC pions with probabilities
derived within the commonly used coherent state formalism.Comment: 27 pages, 17 figures; several minor insertions in the text; two
references adde
Near-threshold Production in Heavy-ion Collisions
Within a hadronic transport model we study in detail contributions to kaon
yields and momentum spectra from various baryon (resonance)-baryon (resonance)
and interactions in heavy-ion collisions at beam energies near the
free-space kaon production threshold. It is found that the finite lifetime of
baryon resonances affects significantly the shape of kaon spectra, and the high
energy parts of the kaon spectra are dominated by kaons from processes. resonances are found to contribute
about 10\% to the kaon yield. Effects of boosting the Fermi momentum
distributions of the two colliding nuclei into their center of mass frame,
centrality of the reaction as well as the nuclear equation of state on kaon
yields and spectra are also discussed. Model calculations on ,
and spectra for the reaction of Au+Au at GeV are
compared with the experimental data from the KaoS collaboration.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures available upon request. TAMU preprint #940403
Microcanonical studies concerning the recent experimental evaluations of the nuclear caloric curve
The microcanonical multifragmentation model from [Al. H. Raduta and Ad. R.
Raduta, Phys. Rev. C 55, 1344 (1997); 56, 2059 (1997); 59, 323 (1999)] is
refined and improved by taking into account the experimental discrete levels
for fragments with and by including the stage of sequential decay of
the primary excited fragments. The caloric curve is reevaluated and the heat
capacity at constant volume curve is represented as a function of excitation
energy and temperature. The sequence of equilibrated sources formed in the
reactions studied by the ALADIN group (Au+Au at 600, 800 and
1000 MeV/nucleon bombarding energy) is deduced by fitting simultaneously the
model predicted mean multiplicity of intermediate mass fragments ()
and charge asymmetry of the two largest fragments () versus bound
charge () on the corresponding experimental data. Calculated HeLi
isotopic temperature curves as a function of the bound charge are compared with
the experimentally deduced ones.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
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Practitioners’ perspectives on quality of life in aphasia rehabilitation in Denmark
Objective: This study reports on Danish speech and language therapists’ knowledge and understanding of quality of life (QOL) in aphasia, including therapists’ views on education and training in relation to preparedness for working on QOL, use of measures, and barriers to applying QOL in practice.
Methods: 14 Danish clinicians completed a 48-item online questionnaire regarding their views, perspectives and practices that included multiple-choice questions, rating scales, and boxes permitting free text responses. Descriptive statistics were used to characterize the numerical data, and content analysis was applied to text responses.
Results: The clinicians interpreted QOL as subjective wellbeing and participation, and explored it with most clients and relatives using informal methods, primarily conversation, for the purposes of identifying relevant goals to direct treatment. Clinicians perceived a need for greater theoretical, practical and experiential knowledge regarding QOL. They also identified a need for translated QOL instruments and training in these measures in practice.
Conclusion: Despite a reported lack of knowledge about and tools for measuring QOL, Danish clinicians are applying QOL issues in their practice and perceive these issues as valuable and important in assessment and therapy. The findings have clear implications for tool development, and workforce education
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