Nuclear Particle Astrophysics (NPA) Seminar: Jurgen Schukraft, CERN, “Highlights from 30 Years of Ultra-relativistic Heavy Ion Physics”

Event time: 
Thursday, October 11, 2018 - 1:00pm to 2:00pm
Location: 
Wright Lab (WNSL), 216 See map
272 Whitney Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

Some 30 years ago, in the autumn of 1986, the new field of ultra-relativistic heavy ion physics was born with first experiments starting simultaneously at the CERN SPS and Brookhaven AGS accelerators, with the aim to study strongly interacting matter under extreme conditions of high temperature and/or high matter density using collisions of heavy nuclei. QCD predicts that at sufficiently high energy density there will be a transition from ordinary hadronic matter to a plasma of deconfined quarks and gluons - a transition which took place in the early universe a few microseconds after the Big Bang and which might still play a role today in compact stellar objects. Over the short time span of 30 years, experiments evolved from light ion collisions at low energy at fixed target machines (AGS and SPS) over the dedicated heavy ion accelerator, RHIC, to the CERN LHC, which in 2010 opened a new era in ultra-relativistic heavy ion physics with Pb-Pb collisions at energies exceeding the original ones by up to three orders of magnitude. This talk summarizes highlights and insights gained from those 3 decades of investigating hot and dense matter, the Quark Gluon Plasma, as well as some future directions and facilities.