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Hard probes of the quark gluon plasma in heavy ion collisions.

Authors :
Salgado, Carlos A.
Source :
AIP Conference Proceedings; 4/19/2012, Vol. 1441 Issue 1, p87-94, 8p, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The medium-modifications of processes characterized by the presence of a hard scale provide the most diverse tools to characterize the properties of the matter created in high-energy nuclear collisions. Indeed, jet quenching, the suppression of particles produced at high transverse momentum, has been established at RHIC almost a decade ago as one of the main tools in heavy-ion collisions. The melting of quarkonia is expected to provide also information about the temperature and the properties of the produced medium. The beginning of the LHC era for hot QCD studies starts with the first nuclear beams in 2010. The amount of information produced by this first run is overwhelming: The three experiments with nuclear program (ALICE, ATLAS and CMS) have provide new results in basically all subjects considered in previous experiments and have also shown the potential to make nuclear collisions at the TeV scale for the first time. I will review what the results from both RHIC and LHC imply for our understanding of hot and dense QCD matter from a theorists' perspective and how these new results change some of the concepts we developed in the last years. Particular attention is devoted to the case of jets, as the first data recently published from the LHC and the limitations of previous approaches call for a new theory of jets in a medium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0094243X
Volume :
1441
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
AIP Conference Proceedings
Publication Type :
Conference
Accession number :
74464989
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3700485