Map Home
Type / to search with text or keywords
/
keyboard shortcut: Type "/" on your keyboard for a quick search
Search button
Loading...
Loading...
Scroll left
Grants
Citations
H-Index
Patents
News
Books
Scroll right
Collapse sidebar
Data issues & feedback
Adjust height of sidebar
KMap
People
Adjust height of sidebar
KMap
Profile
Johann Rafelski
Professor, Arizona Research Labs | Member of the Graduate Faculty | Professor, Physics
Physics
Full Page
Overview
Research
More
Collaboration
(2)
Fulvio Melia
Mutual work: 2 Publications
Collaboration Details
Andrew Steinmetz
Mutual work: 3 Publications
Collaboration Details
Grants
(4)
Sign in to view all grants
Publications
(398)
Recent
Homage to Harald Fritzsch
2024
particle physics,
quantum mechanics,
theoretical physics,
standard model,
quantum field theory
A Short Survey of Matter-Antimatter Evolution in the Primordial Universe
2023
cosmology,
particle physics,
early universe,
antimatter,
evolution
Born-Infeld Nonlinear Electromagnetism in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
2023
electromagnetism,
relativistic physics,
heavy ion collisions,
nonlinear dynamics,
field theory
Dynamic fermion flavor mixing through transition dipole moments
2023
quantum physics,
particle physics,
quantum dynamics,
quantum fluctuations,
quantum field theory
Electron positron plasma in BBN: Damped-dynamic screening
2023
plasma physics,
big bang nucleosynthesis,
particle physics,
quantum field theory,
astrophysics
Improving Euler-Heisenberg-Schwinger Effective Action with Dressed Photons
2023
quantum field theory,
particle physics,
quantum electrodynamics
Matter-antimatter origin of cosmic magnetism
2023
cosmic origin,
antimatter
Study of QED singular properties for variable gyromagnetic ratio g≃2
2023
quantum electrodynamics,
singularities,
properties
Superheavy elements and ultradense matter
2023
nuclear physics,
material science,
particle physics,
chemistry,
astrophysics
Reactions Governing Strangeness Abundance in Primordial Universe
2022
big bang nucleosynthesis,
particle interactions,
strangeness,
early universe,
nuclear reactions