NPA Seminar, Alice Ohlson, Lund University, “Exploring the phase diagram of nuclear matter with heavy-ion collisions”

Event time: 
Thursday, February 2, 2023 - 1:00pm to 2:00pm
Location: 
Wright Lab (), WL-216 (Conference Room) See map
272 Whitney Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

In ultrarelativistic collisions of heavy nuclei, such as those which take place in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), the resulting state is so hot and dense that normal matter melts into its constituent parts, and quarks and gluons are no longer confined into hadrons. Known as the quark-gluon plasma (QGP), this matter occupies the high-temperature and high-density regime of the phase diagram of quantum chromodynamics (QCD). By probing the properties of the QGP, we are able to study QCD and the phase diagram of nuclear matter in its extreme high-temperature limit.
In this talk, a selection of key measurements will be presented which give insight into the space-time evolution of the QGP and its thermodynamical and hadrochemical properties. In particular, I will discuss how the fluctuations of conserved charges - such as electric charge, strangeness, and baryon number - provide insight into the properties of the matter created in heavy-ion collisions and the phase transition from a QGP phase into a hadron gas. These fluctuations can be related to experimental measurements of the higher moments of the multiplicity distributions of identified particles such as pions, kaons, and protons, and lambda baryons. In this talk, the latest state-of-the-art measurements from ALICE at the LHC and STAR at RHIC will be presented, as well as our current understanding of the challenges inherent in making a connection between measurements and theoretical QCD calculations. Finally, I will close with an outlook towards future measurements at RHIC and the LHC.
Host: Nikhil Padmanabhan (nikhil.padmanabhan@yale.edu)

Open to: 
undergraduate