scholarly journals Thermal Masses and Equilibrium Rates in the Quark Gluon Phase

1997 ◽  
Vol 12 (28) ◽  
pp. 5151-5160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan-E Alam ◽  
Pradip Roy ◽  
Sourav Sarkar ◽  
Sibaji Raha ◽  
Bikash Sinha

We apply the momentum integrated Boltzmann transport equation to study the time evolution of various quark flavors in the central region of ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions. The effects of thermal masses for quarks and gluons are incorporated to take into account the in-medium properties of these ingredients of the putative quark gluon plasma. We find that even under very optimistic conditions, complete chemical equilibration in the quark gluon plasma appears unlikely.

1991 ◽  
Vol 06 (04) ◽  
pp. 517-558 ◽  
Author(s):  
SIBAJI RAHA ◽  
BIKASH SINHA

We review the production of dilepton pairs, direct photons and diphoton pairs in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions, with special attention to the applicability of these particles as the signal for a new state of matter—the quark-gluon plasma.


2019 ◽  
Vol 222 ◽  
pp. 01003
Author(s):  
Dmitri Peresunko

The ALICE experiment is designed to study the properties the hot and dense medium, the Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP), produced in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions at the LHC. Measuring production of hadrons with large Q2 transfer in these collisions provides the possibility to explore one of the most spectacular effects — the in-medium parton energy loss. By varying the observables among light and heavy flavored hadrons and fully reconstructed jets and by changing the colliding systems from pp to p–Pb and Pb–Pb, one can explore the transport properties of hot matter in great details. Here an overview of recent ALICE results on high-pT hadron and jet production in pp, p-A and A-A collisions at LHC energies is presented.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
You Zhou

Anisotropic flow phenomena are a key probe of the existence of Quark-Gluon Plasma. Several new observables associated with correlations between anisotropic flow harmonics are developed, which are expected to be sensitive to the initial fluctuations and transport properties of the created matter in heavy-ion collisions. I review recent developments of correlations of anisotropic flow harmonics. The experimental measurements, together with the comparisons to theoretical model calculations, open up new opportunities of exploring novel QCD dynamics in heavy-ion collisions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaojun Yao ◽  
Weiyao Ke ◽  
Yingru Xu ◽  
Steffen A. Bass ◽  
Berndt Müller

Abstract We develop a framework of coupled transport equations for open heavy flavor and quarkonium states, in order to describe their transport inside the quark-gluon plasma. Our framework is capable of studying simultaneously both open and hidden heavy flavor observables in heavy-ion collision experiments and can account for both, uncorrelated and correlated recombination. Our recombination implementation depends on real-time open heavy quark and antiquark distributions. We carry out consistency tests to show how the interplay among open heavy flavor transport, quarkonium dissociation and recombination drives the system to equilibrium. We then apply our framework to study bottomonium production in heavy-ion collisions. We include ϒ(1S), ϒ(2S), ϒ(3S), χb(1P) and χb(2P) in the framework and take feed-down contributions during the hadronic gas stage into account. Cold nuclear matter effects are included by using nuclear parton distribution functions for the initial primordial heavy flavor production. A calibrated 2 + 1 dimensional viscous hydrodynamics is used to describe the bulk QCD medium. We calculate both the nuclear modification factor RAA of all bottomonia states and the azimuthal angular anisotropy coefficient v2 of the ϒ(1S) state and find that our results agree reasonably with experimental measurements. Our calculations indicate that correlated cross-talk recombination is an important production mechanism of bottomonium in current heavy-ion experiments. The importance of correlated recombination can be tested experimentally by measuring the ratio of RAA(χb(1P)) and RAA(ϒ(2S)).


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