Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 1 Christina Markert The ‘Little Bang...
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 1 Christina Markert The ‘Little Bang in the Laboratory’ – Accelorator Physics. • Big Bang • Quarks and Strong Interaction • Heavy Ion Collisions ‘Little Bang’ • Our Heavy Ion Group at UT Austin • Conclusions
Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 1 Christina Markert The ‘Little Bang in the Laboratory’ – Accelorator Physics. Big Bang Quarks
Text of Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 1 Christina Markert The ‘Little Bang...
Slide 1
Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 1
Christina Markert The Little Bang in the Laboratory Accelorator
Physics. Big Bang Quarks and Strong Interaction Heavy Ion
Collisions Little Bang Our Heavy Ion Group at UT Austin
Conclusions
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 2
Our basic Questions are: What is matter made of ? How does matter
organize itself & stay together? How does matter behave?
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 3
Space Time Diagram of the Early Universe The Cosmic Timeline proton
atom molecule crystal quarks nuclei Expansion: Temperature decrease
Density decreases Volume expands It takes time More structure
Universe is 13*10 9 Years old
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What do we know about the smallest building blocks?
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 5
Quarks in a Neutron or Proton = Mass Theory: Quantum Chromo
Dynamics Quarks are the smallest building blocks of massive
matter
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 6
Strong color field Force grows with separation !!! Analogies and
differences between QED and QCD to study structure of an atom white
proton separate constituents nucleus electron quark quark-antiquark
pair created from vacuum white proton (baryon) (confined quarks)
white 0 (meson) (confined quarks) Confinement: fundamental &
crucial (but not understood!) feature of strong force - colored
objects (quarks) have energy in normal vacuum neutral atom quarks
u,d, (s,c,t,b) QED Quantum Electro Dynamics QCD Quantum Chromo
Dymanics
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 7
Generating a deconfined state Nuclear Matter (confined) Hadronic
Matter (confined) Quark Gluon Plasma deconfined ! Present
understanding of Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) heating compression
deconfined matter !
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Going back in time
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006 9
Phase Transitions ICE WATER Add heat Quark Gluon Plasma is another
phase of matter!
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
10 Phase Diagram Pressure We heat up the system
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
11 Create Quark Gluon Plasma q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q
Compress and Add heat Hadrons Quark Gluon Plasma T =
1,000,000,000,000 K
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
12 Phase Diagram of Nuclear Matter SPS AGS RHIC Temperature ~150
MeV LHC Center of mass energies: for different accelerators AGS: s
~ 5 GeV SPS : s ~ 17 GeV RHIC: s ~ 200 GeV LHC: s ~ 5500 GeV q q q
q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q hadrons quarks and gluons
hadrons Pressure
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
13 Phase transition of nuclear matter predicted Gross, Politzer,
Wilczek win 2004 Nobel Prize in physics for the theory of
asymptotic freedom in strong interaction. The Relativistic Heavy
Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) was
built to measure the phase transition of nuclear matter to an
asymptotically free partonic state (deconfined) under the condition
of maximum particle and energy density. (after Big Bang ?)
Wilczek
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
14 What can we do in the laboratory ? a.) Re-create the conditions
as close as possible to the Big Bang, i.e. a condition of maximum
density and minimum volume in an expanding macroscopic system. b.)
Measure a phase transition, characterize the new phase, measure the
de-excitation of the new phase into ordinary matter do we come out
the way we went in ? c.) Learn about hadronization how matter is
formed (mechanism how quarks from hadrons protons, neutrons,
etc)
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
15 How do we do heavy ion collisions in laboratory ? We take an
atom (Au) We take away the electrons ion We accelerate the ion We
collide the ions and hopefully create the predicted quark gluon
plasma in our little bang (Au+Au)
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
16 RHIC BRAHMS PHOBOS PHENIX STAR AGS TANDEMS Relativistic Heavy
Ion Collider (RHIC) 1 mile v = 0.99995 c Au+Au @ s NN =200 GeV
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
17 STAR experiment at RHIC collider
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
18 Study all phases of a heavy ion collision If the Quark Gluon
Plasma was formed, it will only live for 10 -23 s !!!! Nuclei are
so thin because of velocity = nearly speed of light
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
19 Space Time Diagram of the Early Universe The Cosmic Timeline
proton atom molecule crystal quarks nuclei Expansion: Temperature
decrease Density decreases Volume expands More structure Takes time
atoms 6*10 5 years
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
20 Heat and Compress Nuclear Matter We produce new quark-antiquark
pairs: Producing new matter out of Energy Producing new quarks
s,c,t,b which dont exist in ground state nuclear matter
(neutrons+protons) System expands new particles are produced:
Protons (uud), anti-protons (antimatter) Lambdas (uds)
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
21 STAR Experiment at the RHIC Collider
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
22 Particle Tracks in the Detector Head-on Au+Au collision ~1500
charged hadrons (protons,) and leptons (electrons,..)
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
23 a.) Which particles are produced ? b.) How many are produced ?
c.) How are they arranged (angle) d.) What does the theory tell us?
What can we measure ?
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
24 Resonance Reconstruction in STAR TPC Energy loss in TPC dE/dx
momentum [GeV/c] Energy loss dE/dx p K e -- p (1520) K-p End view
STAR TPC Identify decay candidates (p, dedx, E) Calculate invariant
mass
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
25 Time of Flight Detector Our Group at UT Austin
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
26 Conclusion Data show evidence that we created a Quark Gluon
Plasma We have a phase transition proton -> quarks Quark-gluon
plasma lasts less than 0.00000000000000000000001 seconds It is very
dense and very hot It behaves like a liquid not like a plasma New
experiment at larger Collider LHC at CERN to investigate properties
of the Quark Soup Data show evidence that we created a Quark Gluon
Plasma We have a phase transition proton -> quarks Quark-gluon
plasma lasts less than 0.00000000000000000000001 seconds It is very
dense and very hot It behaves like a liquid not like a plasma New
experiment at larger Collider LHC at CERN to investigate properties
of the Quark Soup
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
27 The world takes notice !
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Christina Markert Physics Workshop UT Austin November 11 2006
28 Questions 1.Can we produce anti matter here on earth ? Yes 2.Can
we create matter out of energy ? Yes 3.Is the proton the smallest
building block of nuclear matter ? No (quark) 4.Can we accelerate
particles up to nearly the speed of light ? Yes 5.Can we observe a
single quark ? No