2,748 research outputs found
Heavy Ion Physics at the LHC
The first Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC are little more than a year away. This
paper discusses some of the exciting measurements which the experiments will be
able to perform in the very first run, even with modest luminosity, and gives a
very short overview of some of the most interesting ones attainable with more
extended runs. The dedicated Heavy-Ion experiment ALICE, but also ATLAS and
CMS, experiments optimized for p-p collisions, are ready and eager to make best
use of the nuclear beams in the LHC as soon as they will be available. The main
specificities of the three detectors for Heavy-Ion collisions will also be
briefly addressed in this paper. I will try to show that already the first
results obtainable with Heavy-Ion beams at the LHC will qualify it as a
discovery machine, capable to provide fundamental new insight to our knowledge
of high-density QCD matter.Comment: Invited talk at the Hadron Collider Physics Symposium (HCP2008),
Galena, Illinois, USA, May 27-31, 2008; 9 pages, .docx fil
Status of the ALICE Experiment
ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment), the dedicated detector designed to study nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC, is developing rapidly. While the experimental area is being cleared of the last elements of the L3 detector, who stopped datataking at the end of 2000, the ALICE collaboration is at work for the first steps of the installation of the detector, namely the refurbishing work on the L3 magnet and the adaptation of the infrastructure. In the meantime, in the 77 laboratories of the Collaboration, the work of preparation of the detectors is changing gear: the R&D is completed on almost all elements, with some notable advances in innovative technologies, and the major detectors components have entered the production phase. Moreover the TRD, a major new detector designed to expand the ALICE capability to identify electrons, has reached the Technical Design Report stage and is now being discussed by the LHCC. The status of our understanding of the ALICE Physics potential is described in other papers in these proceedings [4, 5, 6], so I will concentrate here on a brief description of the ALICE detectors, with mention of the most recent results achieved
Status and prospects of experiments with ultrarelativistic nuclear beams
Experiments with ultra-relativistic nuclear beams have been carried out since the early eighties, seeking a detailed understanding of Nuclear Matter at extreme temperatures and densities. In such conditions QCD predicts that quarks and gluons are no longer bound in hadrons, and form a so-called Quark-Gluon- Plasma (QGP), a state in which the Universe should have been a few microseconds after the Big Bang. This experimental programme has enjoyed enormous success,
and the number of scientists involved has grown continuously through the years. In the meantime, while the experimental and theoretical tools to collect and understand
the data were constantly improving, so has done the energy of the beams available for experiments. From the 1 GeV per nucleon pair of the Bevalac at Berkeley, accelerators have increased in energy to the AGS at BNL (few GeV) to the SPS at CERN (almost 20 GeV), to the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at BNL (200GeV). Sometime during 2010 the LHC will bring in another major step, going to 5500GeV. During these years an enormous path has been covered, and experimenters have learnt how to deal with events of unprecedented complexity, with first hundreds, then thousands of particles produced. The phase diagram of strongly interacting matter has been populated of measured points, and strategies have been developed to investigate the nature and dynamical evolution of the high-density system generated. Physicists are pursuing a new generation of experiments which will allow a quantum step in our understanding of the QGP but also a more detailed exploration of the phase diagram and in particular of the phase transition. In this paper, I will briefly review our present understanding of the physics with ultrarelativistic nuclear beams, and then outline the perspectives of the experiments for the coming years
The ALICE experiment at LHC: physics prospects and detector design
ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment)is a dedicated detector designed to exploit the unique physics opportunities which will be offered by nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC. At the LHC,it will be possible to explore a radically new regime of matter, stepping up by a large factor in both volume and energy density from the nuclear interactions studied at the SpS and at RHIC. Thanks to the huge number of secondaries produced, it will be possible to measure most of the relevant variables on an event-by-event basis. The LHC energy and luminosity will allow the full spectroscopy of the Y family and of D and B mesons. ALICE is conceived as a genera -purpose detector, in which most of the hadrons, leptons and photons produced in the interaction can be measured and identified. The baseline design consists of a central ( |n| < 0 .9) detector covering the full azimuth and a forward (2 .4 < n < 4) muon arm, complemented by a forward magnetic spectrometer to study vector meson production, a multiplicity detector covering the forward rapidity region (up to |n| = 4.5) and a zero degree calorimeter. The central detector will be embedded in large magnet with a weak field of 0.2T, and will consist of a high-resolution inner tracking system, a cylindrical time projection chamber, particle identification arrays (time of flight and ring imaging cerenkov detectors), a transition radiation detector for electron identification and a single-arm electromagnetic calorimeter
Conference Summary of QNP2018
This report is the summary of the Eighth International Conference on Quarks
and Nuclear Physics (QNP2018). Hadron and nuclear physics is the field to
investigate high-density quantum many-body systems bound by strong
interactions. It is intended to clarify matter generation of universe and
properties of quark-hadron many-body systems. The QNP is an international
conference which covers a wide range of hadron and nuclear physics, including
quark and gluon structure of hadrons, hadron spectroscopy, hadron interactions
and nuclear structure, hot and cold dense matter, and experimental facilities.
First, I introduce the current status of the hadron and nuclear physics field
related to this conference. Next, the organization of the conference is
explained, and a brief overview of major recent developments is discussed by
selecting topics from discussions at the plenary sessions. They include
rapidly-developing field of gravitational waves and nuclear physics, hadron
interactions and nuclear structure with strangeness, lattice QCD, hadron
spectroscopy, nucleon structure, heavy-ion physics, hadrons in nuclear medium,
and experimental facilities of EIC, GSI-FAIR, JLab, J-PARC, Super-KEKB, and
others. Nuclear physics is at a fortunate time to push various projects at
these facilities. However, we should note that the projects need to be
developed together with related studies in other fields such as gravitational
physics, astrophysics, condensed-matter physics, particle physics, and
fundamental quantum physics.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, 1 style file, 3 figure files, Proceedings of Eighth
International Conference on Quarks and Nuclear Physics (QNP2018), November
13-17, 2018, Tsukuba, Japa
Beam test results of the irradiated Silicon Drift Detector for ALICE
The Silicon Drift Detectors will equip two of the six cylindrical layers of
high precision position sensitive detectors in the ITS of the ALICE experiment
at LHC. In this paper we report the beam test results of a SDD irradiated with
1 GeV electrons. The aim of this test was to verify the radiation tolerance of
the device under an electron fluence equivalent to twice particle fluence
expected during 10 years of ALICE operation.Comment: 6 pages,6 figures, to appear in the proceedings of International
Workshop In high Multiplicity Environments (TIME'05), 3-7 October 2005,
Zurich,Switzerlan
Characterisation of silicon strip detectors with a binary readout chip for X-ray imaging
In this paper we describe the development of a multichannel readout system for X-ray measurements using silicon strip detectors. The developed system is based on a binary readout architecture and optimised for detection of X-rays of energies in the range 6}30 keV. The critical component of the system is the 32-channel front-end chip, RX32N, which has been optimised for low noise performance, small channel to channel variation and high counting rate operation. The performance of the chip is demonstrated by measurements of complex X-ray spectra using silicon strip and pad detectors. The obtained results allow to use the system at room temperature with the detection threshold in the range from 500 to 10 000 electrons, which is enough in many crystallographic and medical imaging applications. ( 2000 Elsevier Scienc
Characteristics of the ALICE Silicon Drift Detector
A Silicon Drift Detector (SDD) with an active area of 7.0 x 7.5 cm2 has been designed, produced and tested for the ALICE Inner Tracking System. The development of the SDD has been focussed on the capability of the detector to work without an external support to the integrated high voltage divider. Severalfeatures have been implemented in the design in order to increase the robustness and the long-term electrical stability of the detector. One of the prototypes has been tested in a pion beam at the CERN SPS. Preliminary results on the position resolution are given
A new measurement of J/psi suppression in Pb-Pb collisions at 158 GeV per nucleon
We present a new measurement of J/psi production in Pb-Pb collisions at 158
GeV/nucleon, from the data sample collected in year 2000 by the NA50
Collaboration, under improved experimental conditions with respect to previous
years. With the target system placed in vacuum, the setup was better adapted to
study, in particular, the most peripheral nuclear collisions with unprecedented
accuracy. The analysis of this data sample shows that the (J/psi)/Drell-Yan
cross-sections ratio measured in the most peripheral Pb-Pb interactions is in
good agreement with the nuclear absorption pattern extrapolated from the
studies of proton-nucleus collisions. Furthermore, this new measurement
confirms our previous observation that the (J/psi)/Drell-Yan cross-sections
ratio departs from the normal nuclear absorption pattern for semi-central Pb-Pb
collisions and that this ratio persistently decreases up to the most central
collisions.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to Eur. Phys. J.
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