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E-raamat: Extreme States of Matter in Strong Interaction Physics: An Introduction

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Lecture Notes in Physics 841
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Mar-2012
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783642239083
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Lecture Notes in Physics 841
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Mar-2012
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783642239083

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The thermodynamics of strongly interacting matter has become a profound and challenging area of modern physics, both in theory and in experiment. Statistical quantum chromodynamics, through analytical as well as numerical studies, provides the main theoretical tool, while in experiment, high-energy nuclear collisions are the key for extensive laboratory investigations. The field therefore straddles statistical, particle and nuclear physics, both conceptually and in the methods of investigation used.

This course-tested primer addresses above all the many young scientists starting their scientific research in this field, providing them with a general, self-contained introduction that emphasizes in particular the basic concepts and ideas, with the aim of explaining why we do what we do.

To achieve this goal, the present text concentrates mainly on equilibrium thermodynamics: first, the fundamental ideas of strong interaction thermodynamics are introduced and then the main concepts and methods used in the study of the physics of complex systems are summarized. Subsequently, simplified phenomenological pictures, leading to critical behavior in hadronic matter and to hadron-quark phase transitions are introduced, followed by elements of finite-temperature lattice QCD leading to the important results obtained in computer simulation studies of the lattice approach. Next, the relation of the resulting critical behavior to symmetry breaking/restoration in QCD is clarified before the text turns to the study of the QCD phase diagram. The presentation of bulk equilibrium thermodynamics is completed by studying the properties of the quark-gluon plasma as new state of strongly interacting matter. The final chapters of the book are devoted to more specific topics which arise when nuclear collisions are considered as a tool for the experimental study of QCD thermodynamics.

Arvustused

From the reviews:

The book describes the physics of nuclear matter that is heated or compressed to extremes of temperature and density. After reading it, a young researcher will be equipped with the concepts and basic tools necessary to begin working in the field. provides an insightful and succinct introduction into what has become an active area of research. I highly recommend it. (Dmitri Kharzeev, Physics Today, April, 2013)

Satz has done a wonderful service to the community of people working on QCD thermodynamics. The book presents a range of concepts, from statistical physics to particle and nuclear physics, covering critical behaviour and phase transitions, lattice QCD at nonzero temperatures or large baryon densities, deconfinement and chiral symmetry restoration, etc. In conclusion, this is a remarkable book, which I highly recommend to whomever wants to study `QCD matter and related topics. (Carlos Lourenço, CERN Courier, November, 2012)

1 The Analysis of Dense Matter
1(12)
References
11(2)
2 The Physics of Complex Systems
13(16)
2.1 Critical Behavior in Thermodynamics
13(7)
2.2 Cluster Formation and Percolation
20(6)
2.3 Conclusions
26(3)
References
26(3)
3 The Limits of Hadron Physics
29(16)
3.1 Introduction
29(1)
3.2 The Hadronic Size
30(1)
3.3 The Hadronic Resonance Spectrum
31(5)
3.3.1 Partitioning Integers
32(2)
3.3.2 The Statistical Bootstrap Model
34(1)
3.3.3 The Dual Resonance Model
35(1)
3.4 The Ideal Resonance Gas
36(4)
3.5 The Speed of Sound in a Resonance Gas
40(1)
3.6 Conclusions
41(4)
Appendix The Critical Structure of the Hagedorn Gas
42(1)
References
42(3)
4 From Hadrons to Quarks
45(20)
4.1 Cluster Formation in Strongly Interacting Matter
45(2)
4.2 Ideal Quark-Gluon Plasma and Ideal Hadron Gas
47(5)
4.3 Confinement and Bag Pressure
52(4)
4.4 Nucleon Repulsion and Excluded Volume
56(3)
4.5 Strings and Flip-Flop
59(2)
4.6 Conclusions
61(4)
Appendix Bose and Fermi Gas Partition Functions
62(1)
References
63(2)
5 Statistical QCD
65(24)
5.1 The Gauge Field Theory of Strong Interactions
65(3)
5.2 Lattice QCD at Finite Temperature
68(6)
5.3 Lattice QCD at Finite Baryon Number Density
74(1)
5.4 The Computer Simulation of Gauge Field Thermodynamics
75(4)
5.5 The Deconfinement of Quarks and Gluons
79(8)
5.5.1 SU(3) Gauge Theory
79(4)
5.5.2 Full QCD
83(4)
5.6 Conclusions
87(2)
References
87(2)
6 Broken Symmetries
89(22)
6.1 Symmetry Breaking and Critical Behavior
89(2)
6.2 The Deconfinement Transition
91(3)
6.3 Chiral Symmetry Restoration
94(6)
6.4 Quark Mass and Transition Structure
100(2)
6.5 Deconfinement and Chiral Symmetry Restoration
102(4)
6.6 Does Chiral Symmetry Restoration Drive Deconfinement?
106(2)
6.7 Percolation and Rapid Cross-over
108(1)
6.8 Conclusions
109(2)
References
110(1)
7 The QCD Phase Diagram
111(26)
7.1 States of Matter in QCD: A Second Look
111(2)
7.2 Interaction Regimes of Hadronic Matter
113(4)
7.3 Constituent Quarks and Constituent Quark Plasma
117(7)
7.4 The Nambu-Jona-Lasinio Model
124(5)
7.5 QCD at Finite Baryon Density
129(4)
7.6 Conclusions
133(4)
References
134(3)
8 The Quark-Gluon Plasma
137(20)
8.1 Introduction
137(1)
8.2 Color Charge Screening and String Breaking
138(5)
8.3 Interaction Regimes of the Plasma
143(3)
8.4 Weak Coupling Approaches
146(3)
8.5 Bag Pressure and Gluon Condensate
149(1)
8.6 The Quasi-particle Approach
150(4)
8.7 The Speed of Sound in the QGP
154(3)
References
155(2)
9 The Little Bang
157(14)
9.1 Applying Strong Interaction Thermody namics
157(1)
9.2 High Energy Collisions and the Vapor Trail
158(3)
9.3 Parton Interactions and Thermalization
161(5)
9.4 Parton Percolation and Saturation
166(1)
9.5 Color Glass Condensate and Glasma
167(4)
References
169(2)
10 Probing the Quark-Gluon Plasma
171(24)
10.1 Tools to Probe
171(2)
10.2 Hadronic Radiation and Source Size
173(2)
10.3 Electromagnetic Radiation
175(2)
10.4 Quarkonium Dissociation
177(9)
10.5 Jet Quenching
186(5)
10.6 The Corona Effect
191(4)
References
192(3)
11 The Fireball Paradigm
195(20)
11.1 Statistical Multihadron Production
195(4)
11.2 The Abundance of the Species
199(5)
11.3 The Hadronic Resonance Gas and Its Limits
204(1)
11.4 Dynamical Effects
205(3)
11.5 Conclusions
208(7)
Appendix 11.A Scattering Matrix and Phase Space
208(2)
Appendix 11.B Exact Charge Conservation
210(2)
References
212(3)
12 The Event Horizon of Confinement
215(18)
12.1 Black Holes and Event Horizons
215(2)
12.2 Accelerated Frames and Unruh Radiation
217(3)
12.3 Pair Production in e + e - Annihilation
220(7)
12.4 Hadronic Collisions
227(1)
12.5 Strange Particle Production
228(1)
12.6 Stochastic Thermalization
229(1)
12.7 Conclusions
230(3)
References
231(2)
13 Outlook
233(4)
Index 237