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Quark Gluon Plasma: the Hottest Matter on Earth John Chin-Hao Chen (陳勁豪) RIKEN Brookhaven Research Center Brookhaven National Laboratory 03/21/2012 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 1 Once upon a time… • • • • • 20120321 The universe startsfrom a big bang As time goes by, big fireball starts to cool off 13 billion years later, it is where we are now What is the very beginning of the universe looks like? Quark Soup? John Chin-Hao Chen 2 Outline • What is quark gluon plasma (QGP)? • Some properties of QGP 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 3 Part I: What is QGP 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 4 Quarks are confined • Quarks are confined in protons and neutrons • The further quarks apart, the stronger the force; the closer the quarks, the weaker the interaction • What will happen if we increase the energy “high enough”? 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 5 The Idea of Quark-Gluon Plasma • Typical nucleon energy density (energy inside the nucleon) is about 0.13 GeV/fm3. • Higher temperature → higher energy density → create more new particles (by E = mc2) • When the energy density exceeds 1GeV/fm3, many new particles are made → packed close together • matter will exist not as hadrons (protons, neutrons…), but as independent quarks and gluons. • In this medium, the quarks and gluons are deconfined. • It is called “Quark–Gluon Plasma ” 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 6 How do we melt the nucleon? But how hot do we need? 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 7 Energy density / T4 How hot do we need? Hadrons 20120321 • At critical temperature, TC, the energy density increases rapidly due to Gas the increase of degrees of freedom. (dp -> dQGP) Plasma • TC ~ 175MeV. The energy density e~1GeV/fm3. • TC ~ Trillion (1012) K • Temperature of the core of Sun: T~107 K Temperature Phase transition John Chin-Hao Chen 8 Where in the universe can we achieve the extreme condition? • T~1012 K: 1 micro second after the big bang? • Super high pressure: maybe inside the neutron star? • Where else? 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 9 The Hottest Matter is on Long Island! Collides p+p, Au+Au and other species at various energies!! Maximum energy: Au+Au at s = 200 GeV per nucleon pair 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 10 What happens in heavy ion collisions • The beams travel at 99.995% the speed of light. • The two ions look flat as a pancake due to Relativity. (g~106 at full energy collision @ RHIC). • The two ions collide and smash through each other for 10-23 s • The collision “melts” protons and neutrons, and liberates the quark and gluons. • Thousands of particles are created and fly out from the collision area; plasma cools off. 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 11 Two General Purpose Detectors STAR specialty: large acceptance measurement of hadrons 20120321 PHENIX specialty: rare probes, leptons, and photons John Chin-Hao Chen 12 Events viewed by detectors 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 13 PHENIX: Pioneering High Energy Nuclear Interaction eXperiment 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 14 A even hotter matter at LHC • The Large Heavy Ion Collider • Three experiments: ATLAS, CMS, ALICE (dedicated HI experiment) • Collides Pb+Pb @ √sNN = 2.76/5.5 TeV, and p+p at √s = 2.76 TeV for reference 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 15 Part II: Some properties of QGP 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 16 Some properties of QGP will be discussed • Is it hot enough? – Temperature • How does the bulk behave? – Collective flow • How do we probe the QGP – Hard probes 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 17 How do we understand the properties of QGP? • We collide heavy ions (Au/Pb) which creates QGP • We have most simple system p+p as a baseline measurement • We compare what we see in pp (no QGP) and AuAu (with QGP), see what happened 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 18 Some useful terminology • Central collision: the two nuclei collide “head on” (0-10% centrality) • Peripheral collision: the two nuclei touch by edge (70-92% centrality) • Npart: Number of nucleons participating the collision • Ncoll : Number of binary collisions • pT : transverse momentum 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 19 Number of photons How do we measure the temperature of QGP? 20120321 • We measured the direct photons from pp and AuAu collisions • We see enhancement of photon yield in AuAu enhancement AuAu pp – Similar to black body radiation from QGP!! – T ~ 220 MeV – Tc ~175MeV – Or 4 trillion degrees Celsius – Or 250000 times hotter than the center of the Sun John Chin-Hao Chen 20 Low pT Direct Photon vs different system rg = (# of direct g) / (# of inclusive g) • Low pT direct photon ratio in various collision systems are measured in PHENIX • large enhancement above pQCD calculations (lines) in AA 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 21 What is the initial temperature? Tc ~170 MeV • Various theory calculations to describe the data • Tini ~ 300-600 MeV (initial state dependent) • All above Tc (~170 MeV from lattice QCD) 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 22 How do the particles move? • Collision area has “almond” shape due to overlap geometry of the nuclei. • Almond shape leads to ununiform momentum distribution. • Pressure gradient pushes the “almond” harder in the short direction. • This is a “hydrodynamic” effect. 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 23 We can also measure the shape fluctuations • The nuclear is not perfect in shape • Nucleon distribution is not smooth • Azimuthal symmetry of the colliding area no longer available • dN/df 1+S(2vncos n(f-Fn)) • vodd is possible, which is due to shape fluctuations 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 24 vn(Fn) vs pT • All vn increases with pT • v3 is independent from centrality 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 25 What is viscosity • Viscosity is the resistivity of the fluid • Low viscosity: milk • High viscosity: honey • Low viscosity means the energy can transfer through the fluid very fast • no viscosity = “ideal fluid” 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 26 New Tool to Calculate the QGP Properties: String Theory QGP AdS/CFT space 20120321 • Through Ads/CFT correspondence, some strongly coupled 4 dimension quantum field theory situation can be transformed in to a black hole in 5 dimensions • By solving the relatively “easy” black hole properties in 5-dim space, we can calculate many properties for strongly coupled system, such as QGP John Chin-Hao Chen 27 v2 and Viscosity • String theory predicts there is a universal minimum on viscosity for strongly coupled system (h/s = 1/4p ~0.08) • QGP: tiny viscosity per particle (h/s ~0.08 in hydrodynamics and under Glauber initial state conditions) • The most perfect fluid in the world!! Phys. Rev. Lett 99, 172301 (2007) 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 28 vn vs theory • All theory predicts v2 well • v3 adds in additional discrimination power • Data favors Glauber + h/s = 1/4p 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 29 Other perfect fluid? • Cold atomic gas • T ~ 10-9 K 20120321 • Electrons in graphene (2010 Nobel Physics) • T ~ room temperature John Chin-Hao Chen 30 How do the particle flow? • In higher pT, the v2 is saturated • v2 is particle type dependent • The matter is strongly coupled! 20120321 • v2,M(pT)~2v2,q(pT/2) v2,B(pT)~3v2,q(pT/3) • The quarks have collective motion. John Chin-Hao Chen 31 Beam energy dependence of vn • Various beam energy: 39, 62, 200 GeV • vn does not have significant beam energy dependence • Hydro dynamical behavior down to 39 GeV 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 32 Hard probes on QGP • Hard probes – – – – – Jets, Heavy flavor (c, b) Quarkoniums (J/y, U) direct photons, Z/W (LHC) • Usually produced at the beginning to the collision • Probes live through out the whole formation stages 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 33 What is jet? • When 2 quarks collide, back-to-back jets are produced • Jet is a narrow cone of hadrons and other particles resulting from a fast quark or gluon • In heavy ion collision, the colliding area has high energy and particle density, which will modify the jet passing through this hot and dense medium. • Also called Jet Tomography 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 34 Jet tomography in daily life– P. E. T. • PET - Position Emission Tomography • Physiologic images based on the detection of radiation from the emission of positronelectron annihilation. PET scan of human brain. Picture from Wikipedia. 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 35 Jets in the plasma p+p @ 200 GeV STAR Au+Au @ 200 GeV p-p di-jet Event What happened to the jets in the medium ? Where is the jet? 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 36 How do we study jets? • Best way: – Direct jet measurement (difficult at RHIC) – g-jet (also difficult) • We can also study – High pT single particles (coming from jet fragmentations) – Two particle correlations (leading high pT particles from jet fragmentations, correlated with another lower pT particle) 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 37 p0 spectra in Au+Au vs. p+p • in central Au+Au collision, less p0 is produced than expected yield from scaled p+p • The yield in Au+Au is suppressed central Ncoll = 975 94 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 38 High pT hadrons are suppressed! R AA Yield AuAu N binary AuAu Yield pp •RAA : nuclear modification factor •If no “effects”: •RAA = 1 at high-pT where hard scattering dominates • Suppression: •RAA < 1 at high-pT Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 072301 (2003) 20120321 The matter is DENSE. John Chin-Hao Chen 39 Summary of particle suppression @ RHIC • Hadrons (made of quarks) lose energy in the medium • Photons don’t feel strong interactions, so loss no energy in the plasma 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 40 arXiv:1202.2554 RAA @ LHC • Similar suppression trend till 20 GeV/c • RAA increases with pT when pT > 20 GeV/c • No suppression in photon, Z 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 41 Awayside jet is suppressed in HI collision! same away Same side, no modification away side, jet is absorbed in the medium Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 072304 (2003) 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 42 Jet suppression @ LHC Pb+Pb @ √sNN = 2.76 TeV • Jets are “visible” • Di-jet suppression! • Consistent with RHIC 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 43 Dijet energy imbalance • AJ=(pT1-pT2)/(pT1+pT2) AJ = 0 means no suppression • Significant suppression in central Pb+Pb collisions 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 44 g-jet (g-hadron correlation) Low zT High zT zT = pTa/pTt zT ~ -ln(zT) • Use direct photon to tag jet energy to study the energy loss • Jet energy is lost in AA collisions! 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 45 The shape of the Correlation • Jet shape depends on particle energy • Jet shape is modified by the plasma Phys. Rev. C 78 014901 (2008) 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 46 Do we see the Mach cone in QGP? D • The far side peak moved to ~ 1200 in central collisions! • “Mach Cone” like shape • Sound wave propagate through QGP? • If so, it can be used to estimate the speed of sound in QGP Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 232302 (2007) 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 47 Two particle Dh-Df correlations Peripheral Au+Au Dh Central Au+Au Df rad Dh Both near and away side are modified! 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen Df shoulder ridge 48 v3, reason for ridge and shoulder? • Ridge sits at Df ~ 0, shoulder sits at Df~2p/3, 4p/3 – A 3-peak structure! • v3 (Fourier Coefficient of the cos3Df term) gives a natural 3-peak structure • Is v3 the explanation? 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 49 Jet shape with higher vn modulated background subtraction 200GeV Au+Au 0-20%, inc. g-had. • When v3 modulation is included in the background subtraction, the double peak structure in away-side disappears. 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 50 Some properties of QGP will be discussed • Temperature: it is hot! • Collective flow: it flows like a perfect fluid! • Jet quenching: it is dense, and opaque to fast quarks 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 51 Why QGP is so interesting? • highest energy density frontier • It was last seen when the universe is 0.000001 second old • A test ground for string theory • It is a hottest perfect fluid, what about the coldest end, the atomic gas? In solids? • A lot more… 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 52 Connection with other area of physics Nuclear physics Particle physics Cosmology QGP String theory Theoretical physics Condensed matter Atomic physics QGP is highly active!! 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 53 Summary • A hot dense matter, quark gluon plasma, is created in heavy ion collisions • It has the lowest h/s ~ 1/4p, which is the most perfect fluid in the world • Partons lose energy in the medium • A highly active field, many questions need to be answered! (and to be found!) 20120321 John Chin-Hao Chen 54