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Featured researches published by Janus Weil.


Physics Reports | 2012

Transport-theoretical Description of Nuclear Reactions

O. Buss; T. Gaitanos; K. Gallmeister; H. van Hees; M. Kaskulov; O. Lalakulich; A. B. Larionov; T. Leitner; Janus Weil; U. Mosel

In this review we first outline the basics of transport theory and its recent generalization to o shell transport. We then present in some detail the main ingredients of any transport method using in particular the Giessen Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck (GiBUU) implementation of this theory as an example. We discuss the potentials used, the ground state initialization and the collision term, including the in-medium modifications of the latter. The central part of this review covers applications of GiBUU to a wide class of reactions, starting from pion-induced reactions over proton and antiproton reactions on nuclei to heavy-ion collisions (up to about 30 AGeV). A major part concerns also the description of photon-, electron- and neutrino-induced reactions (in the energy range from a few 100 MeV to a few 100 GeV). For this wide class of reactions GiBUU gives an excellent description with the same physics input and the same code being used. We argue that GiBUU is an indispensable tool for any investigation of nuclear reactions in which final-state interactions play a role. Studies of pion-nucleus interactions, nuclear fragmentation, heavy-ion reactions, hypernucleus formation, hadronization, color transparency, electronnucleus collisions and neutrino-nucleus interactions are all possible applications of GiBUU and are discussed in this article.


European Physical Journal A | 2012

Dilepton production in proton-induced reactions at SIS energies with the GiBUU transport model

Janus Weil; H. van Hees; U. Mosel

We present dilepton spectra from p + p , d + p and


Physical Review C | 2016

Understanding transport simulations of heavy-ion collisions at 100A and 400A MeV: Comparison of heavy-ion transport codes under controlled conditions

Jun Xu; Lie Wen Chen; M. B. Tsang; H.H. Wolter; Ying Xun Zhang; Joerg Aichelin; Maria Colonna; Dan Cozma; P. Danielewicz; Zhao Qing Feng; Arnaud Le Fèvre; Theodoros Gaitanos; Christoph Hartnack; Kyungil Kim; Y. K. Kim; Che Ming Ko; Bao-An Li; Qing Feng Li; Zhu Xia Li; P. Napolitani; Akira Ono; M. Papa; Taesoo Song; Jun Su; Jun Long Tian; Ning Wang; Yong Jia Wang; Janus Weil; Wen Jie Xie; Feng-Shou Zhang

Transport simulations are very valuable for extracting physics information from heavy-ion-collision experiments. With the emergence of many different transport codes in recent years, it becomes important to estimate their robustness in extracting physics information from experiments. We report on the results of a transport-code-comparison project. Eighteen commonly used transport codes were included in this comparison: nine Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck-type codes and nine quantum-molecular-dynamics-type codes. These codes have been asked to simulate Au + Au collisions using the same physics input for mean fields and for in-medium nucleon-nucleon cross sections, as well as the same impact parameter, the similar initialization setup, and other calculational parameters at 100 A and 400 A MeV incident energy. Among the codes we compare one-body observables such as rapidity and transverse flow distributions. We also monitor nonobservables such as the initialization of the internal states of colliding nuclei and their stability, the collision rates, and the Pauli blocking. We find that not completely identical initializations may have contributed partly to different evolutions. Different strategies to determine the collision probabilities and to enforce the Pauli blocking also produce considerably different results. There is a substantial spread in the predictions for the observables, which is much smaller at the higher incident energy. We quantify the uncertainties in the collective flow resulting from the simulation alone as about 30% at 100 A MeV and 13% at 400 A MeV, respectively. We propose further steps within the code comparison project to test the different aspects of transport simulations in a box calculation of infinite nuclear matter. This should, in particular, improve the robustness of transport model predictions at lower incident energies, where abundant amounts of data are available.


Physical Review C | 2016

Neutrino-Induced Reactions on Nuclei

K. Gallmeister; U. Mosel; Janus Weil

Methods: The Giessen-Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck (GiBUU) implementation of quantum-kinetic transport theory is used, with improvements in its treatment of the nuclear ground state and of 2p2h interactions. For the latter an empirical structure function from electron scattering data is used as a basis. Results: Results for electron-induced inclusive cross sections are given as a necessary check for the overall quality of this approach. The calculated neutrino-induced inclusive double-differential cross sections show good agreement data from neutrino- and antineutrino reactions for different neutrino flavors at MiniBooNE and T2K. Inclusive double-differential cross sections for MicroBooNE, NOvA, MINERvA and LBNF/DUNE are given. Conclusions: Based on the GiBUU model of lepton-nucleus interactions a good theoretical description of inclusive electron-, neutrino- and antineutrino-nucleus data over a wide range of energies, different neutrino flavors and different experiments is now possible. Since no tuning is involved this theory and code should be reliable also for new energy regimes and target masses.


Physical Review C | 2015

Dilepton production and reaction dynamics in heavy-ion collisions at SIS energies from coarse-grained transport simulations

Stephan Endres; Hendrik van Hees; Janus Weil; Marcus Bleicher

Dilepton invariant-mass spectra for heavy-ion collisions at SIS 18 and BEVALAC energies are calculated using a coarse-grained time evolution from the Ultra-relativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics (UrQMD) model. The coarse-graining of the microscopic simulations enables to calculate thermal dilepton emission rates by application of in-medium spectral functions from equilibrium quantum-field theoretical calculations. The results show that extremely high baryon chemical potentials dominate the evolution of the created hot and dense fireball. Consequently, a significant modification of the


Physical Review C | 2016

Particle production and equilibrium properties within a new hadron transport approach for heavy-ion collisions

Janus Weil; A. Goldschmidt; Jussi Auvinen; T. Kehrenberg; J. Mohs; V. Steinberg; Hannah Petersen; Dmytro Oliinychenko; Jan Staudenmaier; Long-Gang Pang; M. Kretz; B. Bäuchle; M. Attems

\rho


Physical Review C | 2015

Coarse-graining approach for dilepton production at energies available at the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron

Stephan Endres; Hendrik van Hees; Janus Weil; Marcus Bleicher

spectral shape becomes visible in the dilepton invariant-mass spectrum, resulting in an enhancement in the low-mass region


Physical Review D | 2016

Role of the pion electromagnetic form factor in the

G. Ramalho; M. T. Peña; Janus Weil; H. van Hees; U. Mosel

M_{ee} = 200


Physical Review C | 2018

\Delta(1232) \to \gamma^\ast N

Yingxun Zhang; Yongjia Wang; Maria Colonna; P. Danielewicz; Akira Ono; M. B. Tsang; H.H. Wolter; Jun Xu; Lie-Wen Chen; Dan Cozma; Zhao-Qing Feng; Subal Das Gupta; Natsumi Ikeno; Che Ming Ko; Bao-An Li; Qingfeng Li; Zhuxia Li; S. Mallik; Yasushi Nara; Tatsuhiko Ogawa; Akira Ohnishi; Dmytro Oliinychenko; M. Papa; Hannah Petersen; Jun Su; Taesoo Song; Janus Weil; Ning Wang; Feng-Shou Zhang; Zhen Zhang

to 600 MeV/


arXiv: Nuclear Theory | 2013

timelike transition

Janus Weil; U. Mosel

c^{2}

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Stephan Endres

Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies

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Marcus Bleicher

Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies

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U. Mosel

University of Giessen

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Hendrik van Hees

Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies

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Hannah Petersen

Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies

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H. van Hees

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Jan Staudenmaier

Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies

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Dmytro Oliinychenko

Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies

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K. Gallmeister

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Taesoo Song

Goethe University Frankfurt

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