4,135 research outputs found
The Heavy Ion Physics Program with ATLAS at the LHC
The first Pb+Pb collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at sqrts_NN =
5.52 TeV are imminent. Heavy ion collisions at the LHC provide an extended
energy lever arm to the existing measurements made at RHIC and SPS, especially
in hard (large-Q^2) processes. In this contribution an overview of the ATLAS
detector is given and the current physics focus of Heavy Ion Working Group is
discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, prepared for the 23rd Winter Workshop on Nuclear
Dynamics, Big Sky, MT, Feb 11-18, 200
Elucidating Jet Energy Loss Using Jets: Prospects from ATLAS
Jets at the LHC are expected to provide the testing ground for studying QCD
energy loss. In this contribution, we briefly outline the strategy that will be
used to measure jets in ATLAS and how we will go about studying energy loss. We
describe the utility of measuring the jet , the fragmentation function,
and heavy flavor jets. Utilizing the collision energy provided by the LHC and
the nearly hermetic and highly segmented calorimeter, ATLAS is expected to make
important contributions to the understanding of parton energy loss using fully
reconstructed jets.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures - To appear in the conference proceedings for
Quark Matter 2009, March 30 - April 4, Knoxville, Tennesse
Elucidating Jet Energy Loss in Heavy Ion Collisions
Very soon the LHC will provide beams for heavy ion collisions at 5.52
TeV/nucleon. This center-of-mass energy results in a large cross-section for
producing high- ( 50 GeV) jets that are distinct from the soft,
underlying event. This brings with it the possibility of performing full jet
reconstruction to directly study jet energy loss in the medium produced in
heavy ion collisions. In this note, we present the current state of jet
reconstruction performance studies in heavy ion events using the ATLAS
detector. We also discuss the possibilities of energy loss measurements
available with full jet reconstruction: single jet and di-jet and
-jet correlations.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, write up of poster presented at ICHEP 2008,
Philadelphia, PA, July 29 - Aug. 5, 200
Total Cross-sections and Bloch-Nordsieck Gluon Resummation
The physics underlying the fall and eventual rise in various total
cross-sections at high energies has been investigated over a decade using a
model based on the Bloch-Nordsieck resummation in QCD. Here a brief review of
our latest results is presented and comparison made with experimental data on
, and total cross-sections.Comment: Presented by G. Pancheri at ISMD04, Sonoma State University. Under
publication in Acta Physica Polonica. LaTeX format, 10 *.eps files, 7 page
Total cross sections and soft gluon resummation
We discuss a model for total hadronic and photonic cross-sections which
includes hard parton-parton scattering to drive the rise and soft gluon
resummation to tame it. Unitarity is ensured by embedding the cross-section in
the eikonal formalism. Predictions for LHC and ILC are presented.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, Presented at PLC2005, Kazimierz, September 2005,
requires appolb.cl
Total cross-section at LHC from minijets and soft gluon resummation in the infrared region
A model for total cross-sections incorporating QCD jet cross-sections and
soft gluon resummation is described and compared with present data on and
cross-sections. Predictions for LHC are presented for different
parameter sets. It is shown that they differ according to the small x-behaviour
of available parton density functions.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, uses appolb.cls, LaTeX. Talk presented by G.
Pancheri at the EURIDICE Final Meeting, August 24-27th, 2006, Kazimierz,
Polan
Soft Gluons and the Energy Dependence of Total Cross-Sections
We discuss the high energy behaviour of total cross-sections for protons and
photons, in a QCD based framework with particular emphasis on the role played
by soft gluonsComment: 13 pages, 10 figures, Presented by G. Pancheri at the International
Workshop on QCD, Martina Franca, Italy, June 16-20,2001. To appear in the
proceeding
- …