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Probing dense matter at extremely high temperature Rudolph C. Hwa University of Oregon Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China April 20, 2009 1 2 Outline 1. High temperature. How high? 1000K? 106? 109? 1012K 2. How do we get there? 3. How do we probe it? 4. What do we know so far? 5. What are new very recently? 6. What can be expected in the future? 3 4 5 6 7 RHIC Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider 100 +100 GeV (Au+Au) LHC Large Hadron Collider 2.75 + 2.75 TeV (Pb+Pb) 8 PHOBOS BRAHMS PHENIX STAR 9 STAR detector 10 QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. 11 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. 12 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. 13 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. 14 lumpy initial conditions and a QGP expansion collision evolution particle detectors expansion and cooling kinetic freeze-out distributions and correlations of produced particles hadronization lumpy initial energy density QGP phase quark and gluon degrees of freedom collision overlap zone ~ 0 fm/c quantum fluctuations 0~1 fm/c ~ 10 fm/c ~ 1015 fm/c 15 15 QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. 16 Collision geometry pT pseudorapidity azimuthal angle transverse momentum ln(cot / 2) pT 17 Collision geometry centrality Au + Au sNN = 200 GeV very peripheral very central c=0-0.05 18 Azimuthal variation in non-central collisions pT z y x Non-central collision N participant atan py px (Npart) 19 How can we probe such a medium? z y x Non-central collision We need a penetrating probe. QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Example: X-ray 20 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. 21 For good resolution we need << L In nuclear collisions the transverse size of collision zone is about 10 fm (10-12cm). L ~ size of biological molecules For << 1 fm, we need p = h/ >> 1 GeV At RHIC cm energy of a nucleon is 100 GeV, but it is the momentum-transfer scale that h measures the small-distance resolution: p : x We can’t shoot a probe through the dense medium, as in X-ray diagnostic. It must come from within. pT 22 low soft intermediate 2 semi-hard relativistic hydrodynamics high 6 no reliable theory Jet production in pp collision pT hard perturbative Quantum Chromo Dynamics (quarks, gluons) -- partons jet parton nucleon nucleon jet 23 What do we see at high pT? Au+Au 0 + anything pT (GeV/c) 24 25 26 N coll 27 Jet quenching In the transverse plane a hard scattering can occur anywhere QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see thi s picture. If the hot medium is sQGP, the partons that traverse it lose energy. So the pT of the detected jet in AA collision is lower than a similar jet in pp collision. That is a suppression effect pp AA p 28 T How do we know that the suppression is due to parton interaction with QGP as the medium? A more revealing way to see its properties is to examine the azimuthal dependence of jet production trigger associated particle Dihadron correlations 29 Dihadron correlations in PRL 91, 072304 Striking final state effects trigger out-of-plane STAR preliminary 20-60% central trigger in-plane 30 If there is severe damping on the away side, then most observed jets are produced near the surface. absorbed undamped to detector 31 Back-to-back jets Hwa-Yang 0812.2205 away near Not measurable: initial parton momenta k, k’ parton momenta at surfaces q, q’ Measurable: trigger momentum pt associated particle (same side) pa associated particle (away side) pb centrality c=0.05 c=0.5 32 Yield per trigger Near Away 33 Suppression factor 1- near ( pt ) e t away ( pt , pb ) e Energy loss (L t ) Much less energy loss on the near side if we fix the length L L-t t More energy loss on the away side 34 The problem is that the path length L cannot be fixed experimentally. It is only possible to fix the centrality c. Some paths are long Some are short Data integrates over all points of interaction. Tangential jets dominate. 35 STAR has recent data on Dijets Au+Au centrality comparison 1 _dN_ Ntrig d( ) T1: pT>5 GeV/c, T2: pT>4 GeV/c, A: pT>1.5 GeV/c 12% Central 40-60% MB 60-80% MB T2A1_T1 associates 2 “jet-axis” trigger (T2) 0 STAR Preliminary -2 -1 0 1 2 3 primary trigger (T1) associates 4 5 projection: no significant centrality dependence • No modification of away-side jet Dominance by tangential jets! 36 Very hard to probe the interior of dense medium --- if the thickness cannot be controlled. That’s the problem with jet-jet correlation. So let’s move on to the medium response to jets. 37 Jet-medium interaction 1. Effect of medium on jets. 2. Effect of jets on medium. trigger direction Δφ Trigger Assoc. Δη A ridge is discovered on the near side. distribution of particles associated with the trigger 38 Dependence of ridge yield on the trigger azimuthal angle Trigger Trigger restrict ||<0.7 What is the direction of the trigger T? irrelevant very relevant 39 Out-ofplane New data presented at QM08 6 5 4 3 2 A. Feng (STAR): Dependence of ridge yield on 1 s T RP in-plane S=0 In-plane out-of-plane S=90o assoc Ridge 3<pTtrig<4, 1.5<pTtrig<2.0 GeV/c STAR Preliminary Jet 40 QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Correlated emission model (CEM) Chiu-Hwa PRC(09) Strong ridge formation when trigger and flow directions match. medium 41 probe What is on the away-side direction? Sound wave Away side jet Heating Trigger jet Shock wave? Do you believe it? This is an active area of current research. 42 At LHC, cm energy is increased over RHIC by factor of 27. Energy density is expected to increase by < 10. Tinitial ………………………………………………………. < 2. It is hard to hold the dense matter together for long to thermalize. Large pT range will increase by > 20. Good ground to test pQCD. There are wide variations in extrapolation to higher energies. Ex. Most people predict p/ < 0.5 for 10<pT<20 GeV/c. We (RH & CBYang) predict 5 < p/ < 20. 43 Most significant advance will be either to confirm conventional wisdom or to validate unconventional ideas. I hope that I can tell you which next time. Thank you! 44