4,267 research outputs found
Charm and beauty at the LHC
The Large Hadron Collider at CERN will open a new energy domain for heavy-ion
physics. Besides ALICE, the dedicated heavy-ion experiment, also ATLAS and CMS
are preparing rich physics programs with nucleus-nucleus collisions. Here we
focus on open heavy-flavour and quarkonia studies, among the fields that will
most benefit from the high centre-of-mass energy at the LHC. We discuss a few
examples of physics issues that can be addressed and we present a selection and
comparison (where possible) of results on the expected capability of the three
experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, Plenary talk at "Hard Probes 2006", Asilomar, CA,
9-16 June 200
Introduction to Low x Physics and Saturation
The idea of saturation of parton densities in small x physics is briefly
introduced. Some aspects of saturation are described, mainly focusing on the
status of our knowledge on the non-linear equations describing the high parton
density regime. Implications of saturation ideas on the description of nuclear
collisions at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider are discussed.Comment: 8 pages in LaTeX using enclosed appolb.cls, 3 eps figures included
using epsfig; minireview at the XXXIIIrd International Symposium on
Multiparticle Dynamics (Kracow, Poland, September 5th-11th 2003
Predictions for the heavy-ion programme at the Large Hadron Collider
I review the main predictions for the heavy-ion programme at the Large Hadron
Collider (LHC) at CERN, as available in early April 2009. I begin by
remembering the standard claims made in view of the experimental data measured
at the Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) at CERN and at the Relativistic Heavy Ion
Collider (RHIC) at the BNL. These claims will be used for later discussion of
the new opportunities at the LHC. Next I review the generic, qualitative
expectations for the LHC. Then I turn to quantitative predictions: First I
analyze observables which characterize directly the medium produced in the
collisions - bulk observables or soft probes -: multiplicities, collective
flow, hadrochemistry at low transverse momentum, correlations and fluctuations.
Second, I move to calibrated probes of the medium i.e. typically those whose
expectation in the absence of any medium can be described in Quantum
Chromodynamics (QCD) using perturbative techniques (pQCD), usually called hard
probes. I discuss particle production at large transverse momentum and jets,
heavy-quark and quarkonium production, and photons and dileptons. Finally,
after a brief review of pA collisions, I end with a summary and a discussion
about the potentiality of the measurements at the LHC - particularly those made
during the first run - to further substantiate or, on the contrary, disproof
the picture of the medium that has arisen from the confrontation between the
SPS and RHIC data, and theoretical models.Comment: 64 pages, 40 figures, 7 tables; invited review for "Quark-Gluon
Plasma 4"; v2: small changes, some predictions and references added, final
versio
Nuclear Structure Functions at Small x in Multiple Scattering Approaches
A simple model for nuclear structure functions in the region of small and
small and moderate , is presented. It is a parameter-free extension, in
the Glauber-Gribov approach to nuclear collisions, of a saturation model for
the nucleon. A reasonable agreement with experimental data on ratios of nuclear
structure functions is obtained. The unintegrated gluon distribution and the
behavior of the saturation scale which result from this model are discussed.Comment: LaTeX2e, uses enclosed moriond.sty, 4 pages, 2 eps figures included
using epsfig, contribution to the XXXVIIIth Rencontres de Moriond: QCD and
Hadronic Interactions, Les Arcs, France, March 22nd-29th 200
A simple model for nuclear structure functions at small in the dipole picture
A simple model for nuclear structure functions in the region of small x and
small and moderate , is presented. It is a parameter-free extension, in
the Glauber-Gribov approach to nuclear collisions, of a saturation model for
the nucleon. A reasonable agreement with experimental data on ratios of nuclear
structure functions is obtained. Nuclear effects in the
longitudinal-to-transverse cross section ratios are found to be small.
Predictions of the model for values of smaller than those available to
present experiments are given. The unintegrated gluon distribution and the
behaviour of the saturation scale which result from this model are shown and
discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 27 pages, 9 postscript figures included using epsfig; final
version: discussion on geometrical scaling clarified, comparison of gluon
densities with other approaches added, Fig. 8 redone, references added and
updated, some misprints corrected, results and conclusions unchange
Jet quenching
Jet quenching studies play a prominent role in our current understanding of
ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions. In this review I first present the
available formalism to compute medium-induced gluon radiation. Then I discuss
its effect on single particle spectra, with dedicated attention to the case of
the radiating parton being a massive quark. Next I examine more differential
observables like jet shapes and multiplicities, and the consequences of flow on
radiative energy loss. I conclude with some remarks.Comment: LaTeX, 8 pages, 7 eps figures, uses enclosed cjpsuppl.cls; invited
talk at Physics at LHC, Vienna, Austria, July 13th-17th 200
Heavy-to-light ratios as a test of medium-induced energy loss at RHIC and the LHC
The ratio of nuclear modification factors of high- heavy-flavored mesons
tolight-flavored hadrons (heavy-to-light ratio) is shown to be a sensitive tool
to test medium-induced energy loss at RHIC and LHC energies. Heavy-to-light
ratios of mesons at RHIC in the region GeV, and of and
mesons at the LHC in the region GeV, are proposed for such a test.
Finally, the different contributions to the nuclear modification factor for
electrons at RHIC are analyzed. Preliminary PHENIX and STAR data are compatible
with radiative energy loss provided the contribution of electrons from beauty
decays is small compared to that from charm.Comment: 5 pages, latex, 4 eps figs included using graphicx; to appear in the
proceedings of 18th International Conference on Ultrarelativistic
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions: Quark Matter 2005 (QM 2005), Budapest, Hungary,
4-9 Aug 200
Monte Carlo for Jet Showers in the Medium
The most commonly employed formalisms of radiative energy loss have been
derived in the high- energy approximation. In its present form, it is reliable
only for the medium modifications of inclusive particle spectra. Modifications
to this formalism are expected to be important for less inclusive measurements.
This is especially relevant for reconstructed jets in heavy-ion collisions,
which are becoming available only recently. We present some ideas to overcome
this limitation. Specifically, we show an implementation of radiative energy
loss within a jet parton shower. This implementation has been done within the
PYTHIA Monte Carlo event generator. We present the publicly available routine
Q-PYTHIA and discuss some of the obtained physics results.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figures - To appear in the conference proceedings for
Quark Matter 2009, March 30 - April 4, Knoxville, Tennessee. Final version
with minor typos correcte
Study of D-mesons using hadronic decay channels with the ALICE detector
At LHC energy, heavy quarks will be abundantly produced and the design of the
ALICE Experiment will allow us to study their production using several
channels. We investigate the feasibility of the study of D mesons reconstructed
in their exclusive hadronic decay channel. After reviewing the ALICE potential
for such studies, we will present some results for the two more promising decay
channels i.e D0->KPi and D+ -> K-Pi+Pi+ obtained with 7 TeV pp data and 5.5 A
TeV Pb-Pb Monte Carlo data .Comment: 4 Pages, 5 Figures. Conference Proceeding to be published in Nuclear
Physics
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