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14 - The Hanbury-Brown-Twiss effect and the polarisation effects in the Lund model

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 September 2009

Bo Andersson
Affiliation:
Lunds Universitet, Sweden
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Summary

Introduction

In this chapter we consider two different observables, which, within the Lund model, have some bearing upon the confinement properties of QCD.

We start with the Hanbury-Brown-Twiss effect (the HBT effect) or, as it is also called, the Bose-Einstein effect. It originated in astronomical investigations, where one uses the interference pattern of the photons to learn about the size of the photon emission region, i.e. the size of the particular star which is emitting the light.

The Goldhabers, found and used in the same way as HBT a correlation pattern among the produced pions when they investigated proton-antiproton annihilation reactions close to the threshold (i.e. when the annihilation occurs at very low relative velocities, so that the total energy is essentially twice the proton rest mass). Photons and pions have in common that they are bosons, which means that they thrive on being in the same state. The HBT effect can be described as an enhancement of the two-particle correlation function that occurs when the two particles are identical bosons and have very similar values of their energy-momentum.

The size of the emission region obtained from these experiments in hadronic physics seems to be essentially the same in almost any kind of interaction. One obtains a radius of the order of 1 fm, which is a very reasonable size.

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Chapter
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The Lund Model , pp. 249 - 268
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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