Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Effects of Heat Transfer Analysis Through Boson Femtoscopy with Fraction Order Differentiation

Version 1 : Received: 19 July 2021 / Approved: 20 July 2021 / Online: 20 July 2021 (11:54:10 CEST)

How to cite: Bary, G.; Ahmed, W.; Sajid, M.; Ahmad, R.; Khan, I. Effects of Heat Transfer Analysis Through Boson Femtoscopy with Fraction Order Differentiation. Preprints 2021, 2021070449. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202107.0449.v1 Bary, G.; Ahmed, W.; Sajid, M.; Ahmad, R.; Khan, I. Effects of Heat Transfer Analysis Through Boson Femtoscopy with Fraction Order Differentiation. Preprints 2021, 2021070449. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202107.0449.v1

Abstract

Higher order femtoscopy measured to examine the heat exchanger characterization of the fluid debris produced in the collisions and investigated a remarkable suppression in the bosons interferences measurement. The analogous suppression can be analyzed to explore the coherence of boson thermal particle production sources at unprecedented energies. We illustrate the particles emissions from radiated sources with statistical coherence which induce the thermal particles interferences to probe the peculiarity of the heated sources as well as the distinctions about the heat exchangers in the collisions at higher temperature. We perspicacious that the bosons seem to the pertinent aspirant of heat exchanger, and the normalized three particles correlators evaluate the existence of such hybrid phases significantly. The key point of this research is that we analyze the three particles correlations with their normalized correlations by difference equations to determine the characteristics of heat exchanger and its applications. With such distinctive and efficient approach, we observe a significant difference in the correlation functions at higher temperature and momenta regimes.

Keywords

Femtoscopy; heat-mass transfer; fluid coherence fraction; radiated source characteristics

Subject

Physical Sciences, Acoustics

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