4,186 research outputs found
Quarkonium studies in p+p and Pb+Pb collisions with CMS
The collisions of Pb nuclei at the LHC will create strongly interacting matter at unprecedented energy densities, allowing us to probe QCD at extreme temperatures and very low parton momentum fractions. This paper presents the capabilities of the CMS experiment to study the production of quarkonium states in and Pb+Pb collisions. The very good acceptance and excellent dimuon mass resolution will allow us to do with the three states (1S, 2S, 3S) the exciting measurements previously performed with the and states, at the SPS and RHIC
Measurement of photons via conversion pairs in \sqrt{s_{NN}} = 200 GeV Au+Au collisions with the PHENIX experiment at RHIC
Thermal photons can provide information on the temperature of the new state
of matter created at RHIC. In the p_T region of 1--3 GeV/c thermal photons are
expected to be the dominant direct photon source. Therefore, a possible excess
compared to a pure decay photon signal due to a thermal photon contribution
should be seen in the double ratio
(\gamma/\gamma(\pi^{0}))_{Measured}/(\gamma/\gamma(\pi^{0}))_{Simulated}, if
sufficient accuracy can be reached. We present a method to reconstruct direct
photons by measuring e^{+}e^{-}--pairs from external photon conversions.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures. To appear in the proceedings of Hot Quarks 2006:
Workshop for Young Scientists on the Physics of Ultrarelativistic
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, Villasimius, Italy, 15-20 May 200
Direct photons ~basis for characterizing heavy ion collisions~
After years of experimental and theoretical efforts, direct photons become a
strong and reliable tool to establish the basic characteristics of a hot and
dense matter produced in heavy ion collisions. The recent direct photon
measurements are reviewed and a future prospect is given.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Invited plenary talk at Quark Matter 200
Heavy-flavor dynamics in nucleus-nucleus collisions: from RHIC to LHC
The stochastic dynamics of c and b quarks in the fireball created in
nucleus-nucleus collisions at RHIC and LHC is studied employing a relativistic
Langevin equation, based on a picture of multiple uncorrelated random
collisions with the medium. Heavy-quark transport coefficients are evaluated
within a pQCD approach, with a proper HTL resummation of medium effects for
soft scatterings. The Langevin equation is embedded in a multi-step setup
developed to study heavy-flavor observables in pp and AA collisions, starting
from a NLO pQCD calculation of initial heavy-quark yields, complemented in the
nuclear case by shadowing corrections, k_T-broadening and nuclear geometry
effects. Then, only for AA collisions, the Langevin equation is solved
numerically in a background medium described by relativistic hydrodynamics.
Finally, the propagated heavy quarks are made hadronize and decay into
electrons. Results for the nuclear modification factor R_AA of heavy-flavor
hadrons and electrons from their semi-leptonic decays are provided, both for
RHIC and LHC beam energies.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures (3 eps files); submitted for publication in the
proceedings of "Quark Matter 2011", 23-28 May 2011, Annecy (France
Dynamics of fully coupled rotators with unimodal and bimodal frequency distribution
We analyze the synchronization transition of a globally coupled network of N
phase oscillators with inertia (rotators) whose natural frequencies are
unimodally or bimodally distributed. In the unimodal case, the system exhibits
a discontinuous hysteretic transition from an incoherent to a partially
synchronized (PS) state. For sufficiently large inertia, the system reveals the
coexistence of a PS state and of a standing wave (SW) solution. In the bimodal
case, the hysteretic synchronization transition involves several states.
Namely, the system becomes coherent passing through traveling waves (TWs), SWs
and finally arriving to a PS regime. The transition to the PS state from the SW
occurs always at the same coupling, independently of the system size, while its
value increases linearly with the inertia. On the other hand the critical
coupling required to observe TWs and SWs increases with N suggesting that in
the thermodynamic limit the transition from incoherence to PS will occur
without any intermediate states. Finally a linear stability analysis reveals
that the system is hysteretic not only at the level of macroscopic indicators,
but also microscopically as verified by measuring the maximal Lyapunov
exponent.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, contribution for the book: Control of
Self-Organizing Nonlinear Systems, Springer Series in Energetics, eds E.
Schoell, S.H.L. Klapp, P. Hoeve
Heterogeneous Delays in Neural Networks
We investigate heterogeneous coupling delays in complex networks of excitable
elements described by the FitzHugh-Nagumo model. The effects of discrete as
well as of uni- and bimodal continuous distributions are studied with a focus
on different topologies, i.e., regular, small-world, and random networks. In
the case of two discrete delay times resonance effects play a major role:
Depending on the ratio of the delay times, various characteristic spiking
scenarios, such as coherent or asynchronous spiking, arise. For continuous
delay distributions different dynamical patterns emerge depending on the width
of the distribution. For small distribution widths, we find highly synchronized
spiking, while for intermediate widths only spiking with low degree of
synchrony persists, which is associated with traveling disruptions, partial
amplitude death, or subnetwork synchronization, depending sensitively on the
network topology. If the inhomogeneity of the coupling delays becomes too
large, global amplitude death is induced
Synchronisation in networks of delay-coupled type-I excitable systems
We use a generic model for type-I excitability (known as the SNIPER or SNIC
model) to describe the local dynamics of nodes within a network in the presence
of non-zero coupling delays. Utilising the method of the Master Stability
Function, we investigate the stability of the zero-lag synchronised dynamics of
the network nodes and its dependence on the two coupling parameters, namely the
coupling strength and delay time. Unlike in the FitzHugh-Nagumo model (a model
for type-II excitability), there are parameter ranges where the stability of
synchronisation depends on the coupling strength and delay time. One important
implication of these results is that there exist complex networks for which the
adding of inhibitory links in a small-world fashion may not only lead to a loss
of stable synchronisation, but may also restabilise synchronisation or
introduce multiple transitions between synchronisation and desynchronisation.
To underline the scope of our results, we show using the Stuart-Landau model
that such multiple transitions do not only occur in excitable systems, but also
in oscillatory ones.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Overview of experimental results in PbPb collisions at sqrt{s_NN} = 2.76 TeV by the CMS Collaboration
The CMS experiment at the LHC is a general-purpose apparatus with a set of
large acceptance and high granularity detectors for hadrons, electrons, photons
and muons, providing unique capabilities for both proton-proton and ion-ion
collisions. The data collected during the November 2010 PbPb run at sqrt{s_NN}
= 2.76 TeV was analyzed and multiple measurements of the properties of the hot
and dense matter were obtained. Global event properties, detailed study of jet
production and jet properties, isolated photons, quarkonia and weak bosons were
measured and compared to pp data and Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, proceedings for Quark Matter 2011, Annecy,
France, May 23-28, 201
Inclusive cross section and double helicity asymmetry for pi^0 production in p+p collisions at sqrt(s) = 62.4 GeV
The PHENIX experiment presents results from the RHIC 2006 run with polarized
proton collisions at sqrt(s) = 62.4 GeV for inclusive pi^0 production at
mid-rapidity. Unpolarized cross section results are measured for transverse
momenta p_T = 0.5 to 7 GeV/c. Next-to-leading order perturbative quantum
chromodynamics calculations are compared with the data, and while the
calculations are consistent with the measurements, next-to-leading logarithmic
corrections improve the agreement. Double helicity asymmetries A_LL are
presented for p_T = 1 to 4 GeV/c and probe the higher range of Bjorken_x of the
gluon (x_g) with better statistical precision than our previous measurements at
sqrt(s)=200 GeV. These measurements are sensitive to the gluon polarization in
the proton for 0.06 < x_g < 0.4.Comment: 387 authors from 63 institutions, 10 pages, 6 figures, 1 table.
Submitted to Physical Review D. Plain text data tables for the points plotted
in figures for this and previous PHENIX publications are (or will be)
publicly available at http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/papers.htm
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