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Heavy Ion Physics at the LHC

The first Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC are little more than a year away. This paper discusses some of the exciting measurements which the experiments will be able to perform in the very first run, even with modest luminosity, and gives a very short overview of some of the most interesting ones attain...

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Autor principal: Giubellino, P.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1125148
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author Giubellino, P.
author_facet Giubellino, P.
author_sort Giubellino, P.
collection CERN
description The first Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC are little more than a year away. This paper discusses some of the exciting measurements which the experiments will be able to perform in the very first run, even with modest luminosity, and gives a very short overview of some of the most interesting ones attainable with more extended runs. The dedicated Heavy-Ion experiment ALICE, but also ATLAS and CMS, experiments optimized for p-p collisions, are ready and eager to make best use of the nuclear beams in the LHC as soon as they will be available. The main specificities of the three detectors for Heavy-Ion collisions will also be briefly addressed in this paper. I will try to show that already the first results obtainable with Heavy-Ion beams at the LHC will qualify it as a discovery machine, capable to provide fundamental new insight to our knowledge of high-density QCD matter.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2008
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spelling cern-11251482019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1125148engGiubellino, P.Heavy Ion Physics at the LHCNuclear PhysicsThe first Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC are little more than a year away. This paper discusses some of the exciting measurements which the experiments will be able to perform in the very first run, even with modest luminosity, and gives a very short overview of some of the most interesting ones attainable with more extended runs. The dedicated Heavy-Ion experiment ALICE, but also ATLAS and CMS, experiments optimized for p-p collisions, are ready and eager to make best use of the nuclear beams in the LHC as soon as they will be available. The main specificities of the three detectors for Heavy-Ion collisions will also be briefly addressed in this paper. I will try to show that already the first results obtainable with Heavy-Ion beams at the LHC will qualify it as a discovery machine, capable to provide fundamental new insight to our knowledge of high-density QCD matter.The first Pb-Pb collisions at the LHC are little more than a year away. This paper discusses some of the exciting measurements which the experiments will be able to perform in the very first run, even with modest luminosity, and gives a very short overview of some of the most interesting ones attainable with more extended runs. The dedicated Heavy-Ion experiment ALICE, but also ATLAS and CMS, experiments optimized for p-p collisions, are ready and eager to make best use of the nuclear beams in the LHC as soon as they will be available. The main specificities of the three detectors for Heavy-Ion collisions will also be briefly addressed in this paper. I will try to show that already the first results obtainable with Heavy-Ion beams at the LHC will qualify it as a discovery machine, capable to provide fundamental new insight to our knowledge of high-density QCD matter.arXiv:0809.1062oai:cds.cern.ch:11251482008-09-08
spellingShingle Nuclear Physics
Giubellino, P.
Heavy Ion Physics at the LHC
title Heavy Ion Physics at the LHC
title_full Heavy Ion Physics at the LHC
title_fullStr Heavy Ion Physics at the LHC
title_full_unstemmed Heavy Ion Physics at the LHC
title_short Heavy Ion Physics at the LHC
title_sort heavy ion physics at the lhc
topic Nuclear Physics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1125148
work_keys_str_mv AT giubellinop heavyionphysicsatthelhc