332 research outputs found

    Hard Probe of Soft Matter Geometry and Fluctuations from RHIC to LHC

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    We report results on event-by-event hard probe of soft matter geometry and fluctuations in heavy ion collisions. Geometric data (v2v_2 of high ptp_t hadrons) from RHIC plus LHC clearly favors jet "monography" model with strong near-Tc enhancement of jet-medium interaction strength which also implies a less opaque medium at LHC. We also quantify the jet responses to all harmonic anisotropy vnv_n(n=1,2,3,4,5,6n=1,2,3,4,5,6) and their manifestation in hard-soft azimuthal correlations.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, contribution to CIPANP2012 Proceeding

    Anomalous transport effects and possible environmental symmetry "violation" in heavy ion collisions

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    The heavy ion collision provides a unique many-body environment where local domains of strongly interacting chiral medium may occur and in a sense allow environmental symmetry "violation" phenomena. For example certain anomalous transport processes, forbidden in usual medium, become possible in such domains. We briefly review recent progress in both the theoretical understanding and experimental search of various anomalous transport effects (such as the Chiral Magnetic Effect, Chiral Separation Effect, Chiral Electric Separation Effect, Chiral Electric/Magnetic Waves, etc) in the hot QCD fluid created by such collisions.Comment: final version with minor updates; 24 pages, 5 figures; invited review for Pramana - Journal of Physic

    Hydrodynamics with chiral anomaly and charge separation in relativistic heavy ion collisions

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    Matter with chiral fermions is microscopically described by theory with quantum anomaly and macroscopically described (at low energy) by anomalous hydrodynamics. For such systems in the presence of external magnetic field and chirality imbalance, a charge current is generated along the magnetic field direction --- a phenomenon known as the Chiral Magnetic Effect (CME). The quark-gluon plasma created in relativistic heavy ion collisions provides an (approximate) example, for which the CME predicts a charge separation perpendicular to the collisional reaction plane. Charge correlation measurements designed for the search of such signal have been done at RHIC and the LHC for which the interpretations, however, remain unclear due to contamination by background effects that are collective flow driven, theoretically poorly constrained, and experimentally hard to separate. Using anomalous (and viscous) hydrodynamic simulations, we make a first attempt at quantifying contributions to observed charge correlations from both CME and background effects in one and same framework. The implications for the search of CME are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Published version in Phys. Lett.
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