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New Experimental Results from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider - The Perfect Fluid

This article discusses the new experimental results from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), specifically focusing on the creation of a perfect fluid called the quark-gluon plasma. The article explores the conditions and benchmarks related to the Big Bang, as well as the strategies and techniques used to study the state of matter created in RHIC collisions. The article concludes with the findings related to equilibrium, chemical freeze-out, kinetic freeze-out, and the formation of the quark-gluon plasma.

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New Experimental Results from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider - The Perfect Fluid

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  1. New Experimental Results from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider -The Perfect Fluid Gary D. Westfall Michigan State University Fermilab Colloquium July 19, 2006

  2. RHIC Collisions • RHIC is the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider located at Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, New York • Collisions of heavy nuclei at very high energies offer the possibility of transforming the protons and neutrons in the nuclei into a fluid consisting of quarks and gluons • We will call this state of matter thequark-gluon plasma (QGP) • It is thought that the universe existed as a QGP a few s after the Big Bang

  3. Protons, Neutrons, and Quarks

  4. NSCL-RIA Conditions that prevailed  10 s after the Big Bang Relation to the Big Bang • Benchmarks • Energy density • 1 GeV/fm3 • 1.81015 g/cm3 • Temperature • 170 MeV  • 2.01012 K

  5. Strategy • Look for a novel state of matter created in central Au+Au collisions at top RHIC energies • Compare to situations in which the novel state of matter should not be created • Lower incident energies • Peripheral Au+Au collisions • p+p collisions • d+Au collisions

  6. Elastic scattering and kinetic freeze-out Hadronic interactionand chemical freeze-out QGP and Hydro. expansion initial state Hadronization pre-equilibrium 3000 particles created in a central Au+Au collisions at RHIC Central Au+Au Collision at RHIC • Study state of matter created early in central Au+Au collisions • Equilibrium and bulk properties • Elliptic flow and hydrodynamics • Jet suppression  = 100 14 fm = 1410-15 m t = 10 fm/c = 3.310-23 s

  7. Lattice QCD Tc=170 MeV eC=0.5 GeV/fm3 F. Karsch, Nucl. Phys. A698, 199c (2002). O. Kaczmarel et al., Phys. Rev. D 62, 034021 (2000)

  8. The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider

  9. The White Papers • All four groups concurrently published "white paper" summaries of their work in the journal Nuclear Physics A • These papers describe the RHIC experimental groups’ perspectives on discoveries at RHIC based on the first three years of RHIC running • Quark-gluon plasma and color glass condensate at RHIC? The perspective from the BRAHMS experiment • Nucl. Phys. A757, 1 (2005). • The PHOBOS perspective on discoveries at RHIC • Nucl. Phys. A757, 28 (2005). • Experimental and theoretical challenges in the search for the quark-gluon plasma: The STAR Collaboration’s critical assessment of the evidence from RHIC Collisions • Nucl. Phys. A757, 102 (2005). • Formation of dense partonic matter in relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions at RHIC: Experimental evaluation by the PHENIX Collaboration • Nucl. Phys. A757, 184 (2005).

  10. Equilibrium in RHIC Collisions • All of our ideas about the QGP rest on the idea that the system is in equilibrium • Chemical equilibrium • Represented by the relative yield of particles • Temperature, chemical potential, partition function • Kinetic equilibrium • Represented by pt spectra • Temperature, expansion velocity • “Blast Wave” • Colliding nuclei together at RHIC energies produces very hot, dense, and expanding matter

  11. Chemical Equilibrium at RHIC • Assume thermally (constant T) and chemically (constant density ni) equilibrated system at chemical freeze-out • Assume that the system is composed of non-interacting hadrons and resonances • The assumption of constant ni leads to chemical potentials  • Given T and ’s and the system size, ni’s can be calculated as a grand canonical ensemble

  12. Strangeness enhancement Strangeness suppression Chemical Equilibrium 200 GeV Au+Au 200 GeV p+p Resonance suppression • In p+p, particle ratios are well described • In Au+Au, only stable particle ratios are well described

  13. Chemical Freeze-out @ 200 GeV 200 GeV Au+Au Close to net-baryon free p,K,p Close to chemical equilibrium ! p,K,p,L,X

  14. Blast Wave Blast-wave model: E.Schnedermann et al, PRC48 (1993) 2462. , K, p  T= 90MeV, b=0.6 X,   T=160MeV, b=0.45

  15. Kinetic Freeze-out @ 200 GeV Kinetic FO temperature • Sudden Single Freeze-out ?* Radial flow velocity • p,K,p: Tkindecreases with centrality • X: Tkin = const • , X and W flow

  16. Temperature and Energy Density • Very high temperatures are created in RHIC collisions • Very high energy densities are created in RHIC collisions

  17. The QGP Shines • The QGP can be thought of as a blackbody radiating photons • However, there is a huge background of photons from the decay of particles like the 0 • With some work, PHENIX has extracted a spectrum of direct photons from central Au+Au collisions at 200 GeV • To get a feeling for what we are seeing, let’s go to the Wien Displacement Law

  18. Equilibrium Conclusions • We reach temperatures and densities consistent with QGP formation • We see chemical equilibration with some exceptions • Multi-strange baryons seem to freeze-out a a different time • We see strong, bulk flow characterized by a kinetic temperature and flow velocity • Even multi-strange baryons flow • Suggestive of hydrodynamic-like behavior

  19. Hydrodynamic Flow • Now we will try to quantify the hydrodynamic behavior suggested by the observed blast wave • We will study hydrodynamic behavior using elliptic flow, also called the azimuthal anisotropy • We start by defining a reaction plane and an impact parameter

  20. Reaction Plane and Impact Parameter Impact Parameter Reaction Plane

  21. y z x y py px x Elliptic Flow • Look at non-central collisions • Overlap region is not symmetric in coordinate space • Almond shaped overlap region • Larger pressure gradient in x-z plane than in y direction • Spatial anisotropy -> momentum anistropy • Process quenches itself -> sensitive to early time in the evolution of the system • Sensitive to the equation of state • Perform a Fourier decomposition of the momentum space particle distributions in the x-y plane • vn is the nth harmonic Fourier coefficient of the distribution of particles with respect to the reaction plane • v1: directed flow • v2: elliptic flow

  22. Hydrodynamic Expansion • In this hydrodynamic calculation, the initial coordinate space is transformed into momentum space anisotropy (arrows) • Because the hydro calculations have no viscosity, the resulting azimuthal anisotopy is as large as it can be y (fm) x (fm)

  23. Elliptic Flow Note agreement of hydro model absolute value scaling with mass of particle

  24. The Perfect Liquid • The hydro model reproduces v2 for the bulk of the produced particles • Hydro overpredicts v2 at lower incident energies • The hydro model incorporates zero viscosity • Zero mean free path • Evidence for the production of a perfect liquid in RHIC collisions

  25. How Perfect? • Calculations of viscosity of hadron gas and quark gluon plasma compared with water Csernai, Kapusta, McLerran, nucl-th/0604032 Hadron Gas QGP

  26. Hydro Over-Predicts v2 at Lower Energies Pb+Pb 17 GeV • is the eccentricity of the overlap region S is the area of the overlap region (based on mean-free path arguments) Colorpercolationpoint NA49, Phys. Rev. C68, 034903 (2003)

  27. Quark Coalescence in Flow Evidence that v2 arises at the quark/gluon level

  28. Elliptic Flow From M. Gyulassy

  29. Conclusions from Elliptic Flow • We see hydrodynamic flow for low pt particles • Agreement with hydrodynamics with no viscosity implies we see a perfect fluid at RHIC • At RHIC energies, hydrodynamics predicts the magnitude of elliptic flow • At intermediate pt, we seem to see quark coalescence in elliptic flow • Evidence for partonic origin of flow • Hydrodynamic behavior not observed at high pt and away from mid-rapidity • New calculations are coming out using color glass condensate to predict initial conditions for elliptic flow • Initial eccentricity is higher • May need some viscosity to reproduce experimental results • Stay tuned….

  30. A jet from a p+p collision at 200 GeV in STAR Jets in p+p Collisions • In p+p collisions, hard quark/gluon scattering can produce back-to-back jets

  31. Jets in Au+Au Collisions • In Au+Au collisions, hard scattering can also produce jets • These jets become an internal probe for the newly created state of matter • The produced particles must now traverse the matter produced in the collision to be observed • In case the presence of the gold nucleus causes strong effects, we will compare with d+Au

  32. Jet Suppression - Nuclear Modification Factor • We can study jet suppression using leading hadrons • We define a nuclear modification factor, RAA, in terms of the ratio of the pt spectra in nucleus-nucleus collisions divided by the pt spectra in p+p collisions • We also define a nuclear modification factor, RCP, in terms of the ratio of the pt spectra in central nucleus-nucleus collisions divided by the pt spectra in peripheral nucleus-nucleus collisions • If naïve binary scaling applies, we should get 1 for these factors as a function of pt

  33. Suppression of Leading Hadrons • The combined data from Runs 1-3 at RHIC on p+p, Au+Au and d+Au collisions establish that a new effect (a new state of matter?) is produced in central Au-Au collisions Au + Au Experiment d + Au Control Experiment Final Data Preliminary Data

  34. Detecting charm/beauty via semileptonic D/B decays • Hadronic decay channels:D0Kp, D*D0p, D+/-Kpp • Non-photonic electrons: • Semileptonic channels: • c  e+ + anything (B.R.: 9.6%) • D0  e+ + anything(B.R.: 6.87%) • D e + anything(B.R.: 17.2%) • b  e+ + anything (B.R.: 10.9%) • B e + anything(B.R.: 10.2%) • Drell-Yan (small contribution for pT < 10 GeV/c) • Photonic electron background: • g conversions (p0 gg; g  e+e-) • p0, h, h’ Dalitz decays • r, f… decays (small) • Ke3 decays (small)

  35. Charm: Electron suppression STAR, H. Zhang @ SQM06 • Suppression is approximately the same as for hadrons! • Indicates necessity of collisional energy loss mechanism? STAR, Phys Rev Lett 91 (2003) 072304 Charged Hadrons Electrons

  36. Jet Suppression - Azimuthal Correlations • We can study jet suppression using azimuthal correlations • We start with a high pt trigger particle • We look at the azimuthal correlations of particles in coincidence with the trigger particles • Jets will show up as correlated particles at an azimuthal angle of 180 from the trigger particle • “back-to-back” • The jets particles on the away-side must travel through the produced matter • Can provide information about the produced matter

  37. Suppression of Away-Side Jets

  38. Azimuthal Dependence of Jet Suppression in-plane out-of-plane

  39. 8 < pT(trig) < 15 GeV/c Emergence of Dijets with Increasing pT(assoc) •  correlations (not background subtracted) pT(assoc) > 2 GeV/c pT(assoc) > 3 GeV/c pT(assoc) > 4 GeV/c pT(assoc) > 5 GeV/c pT(assoc) > 6 GeV/c pT(assoc) > 7 GeV/c pT(assoc) > 8 GeV/c • Narrow peak emerges cleanly above vanishing background

  40. Hadron-triggered fragmentation functions • Away-side D(zT) suppressed, but shape unchanged Scaling factors ~0.54 ~0.25 8 < pT(trig) < 15 GeV/c

  41. Conclusions • The four RHIC experiments have produced strong, consistent results, when combined with theoretical understanding, provide overwhelming evidence new state of matter based on • Equilibrium • Hydrodynamic behavior • Jet suppression • This new state of matter is clearly not what we expected when we started our journey, a weakly interacting QGP • This new state of matter seems to be a strongly interacting, nearly-perfect fluid, a strongly interacting quark gluon plasma, something qualitatively new, totally unexpected • The study of this new state may lead us in new and unexpected directions such string theory applications to RHIC collisions

  42. Links for Further Information • Today’s Colloquium • http://www.nscl.msu.edu/~westfall/Westfall_FNAL.pdf • RHIC • http://www.bnl.gov/rhic • STAR • http://www.star.bnl.gov • PHENIX • http://www.phenix.bnl.gov • PHOBOS • http://www.phobos.bnl.gov • BRAHMS • http://www4.rcf.bnl.gov/brahms/WWW/ • Quark Matter 2005 • http://qm2005.kfki.hu/ • My home page • http://www.nscl.msu.edu/~westfall

  43. Extra Slides

  44. RCP at Lower Energies Suppression much less at lower energies

  45. RAA Direct Photons

  46. Elliptic Flow vs Pseudorapidity and Energy Au+Au 0-40% central PHOBOS nucl-ex/0406021(PRL in press) v2 h

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