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Institution

Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies

FacilityFrankfurt am Main, Germany
About: Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies is a facility organization based out in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Baryon & Quark–gluon plasma. The organization has 798 authors who have published 2733 publications receiving 82799 citations. The organization is also known as: FIAS.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Simulating Many Accelerated Strongly interacting Hadrons (SMASH) as mentioned in this paper was introduced and applied to study the production of nonstrange particles in heavy-ion reactions at 0.4A-2A$ GeV.
Abstract: The microscopic description of heavy-ion reactions at low beam energies is achieved within hadronic transport approaches. In this article a new approach called ``Simulating Many Accelerated Strongly interacting Hadrons'' (SMASH) is introduced and applied to study the production of nonstrange particles in heavy-ion reactions at ${E}_{\mathrm{kin}}=0.4A--2A$ GeV. First, the model is described including details about the collision criterion, the initial conditions and the resonance formation and decays. To validate the approach, equilibrium properties such as detailed balance are presented and the results are compared to experimental data for elementary cross sections. Finally results for pion and proton production in $\text{C}+\text{C}$ and $\text{Au}+\text{Au}$ collisions is confronted with data from the high-acceptance dielectron spectrometer (HADES) and FOPI. Predictions for particle production in $\ensuremath{\pi}+A$ collisions are made.

205 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used very long baseline interferometry images of Sagittarius A* carried out by the Event Horizon Telescope collaboration (EHTC) to determine whether they correspond to a Kerr black hole as predicted by Einstein's theory of general relativity or to a black hole in alternative theories of gravity.
Abstract: Our Galactic Centre, Sagittarius A*, is believed to harbour a supermassive black hole, as suggested by observations tracking individual orbiting stars1,2. Upcoming submillimetre very-long baseline interferometry images of Sagittarius A* carried out by the Event Horizon Telescope collaboration (EHTC)3,4 are expected to provide critical evidence for the existence of this supermassive black hole5,6. We assess our present ability to use EHTC images to determine whether they correspond to a Kerr black hole as predicted by Einstein’s theory of general relativity or to a black hole in alternative theories of gravity. To this end, we perform general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamical simulations and use general-relativistic radiative-transfer calculations to generate synthetic shadow images of a magnetized accretion flow onto a Kerr black hole. In addition, we perform these simulations and calculations for a dilaton black hole, which we take as a representative solution of an alternative theory of gravity. Adopting the very-long baseline interferometry configuration from the 2017 EHTC campaign, we find that it could be extremely difficult to distinguish between black holes from different theories of gravity, thus highlighting that great caution is needed when interpreting black hole images as tests of general relativity.

205 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a parametric framework was proposed to describe the spacetime of axisymmetric black holes in generic metric theories of gravity, where the metric components are functions of both the radial and the polar angular coordinates, forcing a double expansion to obtain a generic axismmetric metric expression.
Abstract: Following previous work of ours in spherical symmetry, we here propose a new parametric framework to describe the spacetime of axisymmetric black holes in generic metric theories of gravity. In this case, the metric components are functions of both the radial and the polar angular coordinates, forcing a double expansion to obtain a generic axisymmetric metric expression. In particular, we use a continued-fraction expansion in terms of a compactified radial coordinate to express the radial dependence, while we exploit a Taylor expansion in terms of the cosine of the polar angle for the polar dependence. These choices lead to a superior convergence in the radial direction and to an exact limit on the equatorial plane. As a validation of our approach, we build parametrized representations of Kerr, rotating dilaton, and Einstein-dilaton-Gauss-Bonnet black holes. The match is already very good at lowest order in the expansion and improves as new orders are added. We expect a similar behavior for any stationary and axisymmetric black-hole metric.

202 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the recent progress in understanding what could be considered Einstein's richest laboratory, highlighting in particular the numerous significant advances of the last decade, and a review is also offered on initial data and advanced simulations with approximate treatments of gravity.
Abstract: The merger of binary neutron-stars systems combines in a single process: extreme gravity, copious emission of gravitational waves, complex microphysics, and electromagnetic processes that can lead to astrophysical signatures observable at the largest redshifts. We review here the recent progress in understanding what could be considered Einstein's richest laboratory, highlighting in particular the numerous significant advances of the last decade. Although special attention is paid to the status of models, techniques, and results for fully general-relativistic dynamical simulations, a review is also offered on initial data and advanced simulations with approximate treatments of gravity. Finally, we review the considerable amount of work carried out on the post-merger phase, including: black-hole formation, torus accretion onto the merged compact object, connection with gamma-ray burst engines, ejected material, and its nucleosynthesis.

198 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work rederive the equations of motion of dissipative relativistic fluid dynamics from kinetic theory using the second moment of the Boltzmann equation, and shows that, for the one-dimensional scaling expansion, the method is in better agreement with the solution obtained from the BoltZmann equation.
Abstract: We rederive the equations of motion of dissipative relativistic fluid dynamics from kinetic theory. In contrast with the derivation of Israel and Stewart, which considered the second moment of the Boltzmann equation to obtain equations of motion for the dissipative currents, we directly use the latter's definition. Although the equations of motion obtained via the two approaches are formally identical, the coefficients are different. We show that, for the one-dimensional scaling expansion, our method is in better agreement with the solution obtained from the Boltzmann equation.

195 citations


Authors

Showing all 809 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Wolf Singer12458072591
Peter Braun-Munzinger10052734108
R. Stock9642934877
G. Kozlov9033936161
Luciano Rezzolla9039426159
Walter Greiner84128251857
Igor Pshenichnov8336222699
Xiaofeng Zhu80106228158
Mikolaj Krzewicki7728418908
Ivan Kisel7538918330
David Edmund Johannes Linden7436118787
David Michael Rohr7121715111
Sergey Gorbunov7125815638
M. Bach7112314661
Miklos Gyulassy6935819140
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202312
202224
2021172
2020155
2019172
2018219