Net proton and negative hadron spectra for central Pb 1 Pb collisions at 158 GeV per nucleon at the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron were measured and compared to spectra from lighter systems. Net baryon distributions were derived from those of net protons. Stopping (rapidity shift with respect to the beam) and mean transverse momentum ͗ p T ͘ of net baryons increase with system size. The rapidity density of negative hadrons scales with the number of participant nucleons for nuclear collisions, whereas their ͗ p T ͘ is independent of system size. The ͗ p T ͘ dependence upon particle mass and system size is consistent with larger transverse flow velocity at midrapidity for Pb 1 Pb compared to S 1 S central collisions. Lattice QCD predicts that strongly interacting matter at an energy density greater than 1 2 GeV͞fm 3 attains a deconfined and approximately chirally restored state known as the quark-gluon plasma (for an overview, see [1]). This state of matter existed in the early Universe, and it may influence the dynamics of rotating neutron stars [2]. The collision of nuclei at ultrarelativistic energies offers the possibility in the laboratory of creating strongly interacting matter at sufficiently high energy density to form a quark-gluon plasma [3]. Hadronic spectra from these reactions reflect the dynamics of the hot and dense zone formed in the collision. The baryon density, established 0031-9007͞99͞82(12)͞2471(5)$15.00
Designing new technologies with and for individuals with dementia is a growing topic of interest within HCI. Yet, predominant societal views contribute to the positioning of individuals with dementia as deficient and declining, and treat technology as filling a gap left by impairment. We present the perspective of critical dementia as a way of reflecting on these views in the context of recent epistemological shifts in HCI. In addition to articulating how HCI can leverage the perspective of critical dementia, we present a case analysis of technology design in art therapy involving people with dementia aimed at challenging conventional narratives. This paper calls attention to and helps solidify an agenda for how the CHI community approaches dementia, design, and technology.
We present first data on event-by-event fluctuations in the average transverse momentum of charged particles produced in Pb+Pb collisions at the CERN SPS. This measurement provides previously unavailable information allowing sensitive tests of microscopic and thermodynamic collision models and to search for fluctuations expected to occur in the vicinity of the predicted QCD phase transition. We find that the observed variance of the event-by-event average transverse momentum is consistent with independent particle production modified by the known two-particle correlations due to quantum statistics and final state interactions and folded with the resolution of the NA49 apparatus. For two specific models of non-statistical fluctuations in transverse momentum limits are derived in terms of fluctuation amplitude. We show that a significant part of the parameter space for a model of isospin fluctuations predicted as a consequence of chiral symmetry restoration in a non-equilibrium scenario is excluded by our measurement.
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