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Heavy Ion Physics at the CERN SPS: Roots 1974-1984 and Key Results
<!--HTML-->Abstract Two communities, Nuclear and Particle Physics, had to come together to open up a new field at the CERN SPS in the early eighties, bringing CERN to the forefront worldwide until the start of RHIC in 2000. I will discuss the period before that, including the basic new ideas o...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
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2014
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Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1754339 |
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author | SPECHT, Hans |
author_facet | SPECHT, Hans |
author_sort | SPECHT, Hans |
collection | CERN |
description | <!--HTML-->Abstract
Two communities, Nuclear and Particle Physics, had to come together to open up a new field at the CERN SPS in the early eighties, bringing CERN to the forefront worldwide until the start of RHIC in 2000. I will discuss the period before that, including the basic new ideas on parton deconfinement, key workshops, alternative accelerator options in the LBL-GSI-CERN triangle, and the final convergence of the three labs on the SPS, sacrificing any home future in this field for the first two. In 1984, 5 major experiments were approved for initially O16 and S32 beams at the SPS, with an unprecedented reuse of existing experimental equipment. Subsequent evolution followed thanks to intense learning processes, leading to a second generation of much improved or completely new experiments together with Pb beams starting in 1994.
I will summarise the key results and their (then still cautious) interpretation as of 2000. They were used as an input to a Press Conference at CERN, announcing the detection of a 'new state of matter' just before the start-up of RHIC. Fortunately, a new experiment a few years later unambiguously confirmed that the Quark Gluon Plasma had indeed been formed already at SPS energies.
Biography
Born 1936 in Germany. Studied Physics at TU Muenchen and ETH Zuerich. PhD 1964 at TU Munich (H.Meier-Leibnitz). NRC Fellow and Postdoc 1965-1968 at AECL in Chalk River, Canada. Habilitation and Associate Professor 1969-1973 at LMU Muenchen. Full Professor since 1973 at Universität Heidelberg. Since 1983 main research at CERN.
Member of R807/808 for the last year of ISR running. Member of the Heavy Ion Experiments NA34/2 (Spokesperson), NA45 (Spokesperson) and NA60. Scientific Director of GSI Darmstadt 1992-1999. Publications in Atomic, Nuclear, High-Energy Physics and Brain Research. Since 2000 Member of the Heidelberg Academy of Science. Since 2004 Emeritus.
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id | cern-1754339 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2014 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-17543392022-11-02T22:16:14Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1754339engSPECHT, HansHeavy Ion Physics at the CERN SPS: Roots 1974-1984 and Key ResultsDeep Inelastic Lepton-Nucleon Scattering and Heavy Ion Experiments at the CERN SPSPublic Events<!--HTML-->Abstract Two communities, Nuclear and Particle Physics, had to come together to open up a new field at the CERN SPS in the early eighties, bringing CERN to the forefront worldwide until the start of RHIC in 2000. I will discuss the period before that, including the basic new ideas on parton deconfinement, key workshops, alternative accelerator options in the LBL-GSI-CERN triangle, and the final convergence of the three labs on the SPS, sacrificing any home future in this field for the first two. In 1984, 5 major experiments were approved for initially O16 and S32 beams at the SPS, with an unprecedented reuse of existing experimental equipment. Subsequent evolution followed thanks to intense learning processes, leading to a second generation of much improved or completely new experiments together with Pb beams starting in 1994. I will summarise the key results and their (then still cautious) interpretation as of 2000. They were used as an input to a Press Conference at CERN, announcing the detection of a 'new state of matter' just before the start-up of RHIC. Fortunately, a new experiment a few years later unambiguously confirmed that the Quark Gluon Plasma had indeed been formed already at SPS energies. Biography Born 1936 in Germany. Studied Physics at TU Muenchen and ETH Zuerich. PhD 1964 at TU Munich (H.Meier-Leibnitz). NRC Fellow and Postdoc 1965-1968 at AECL in Chalk River, Canada. Habilitation and Associate Professor 1969-1973 at LMU Muenchen. Full Professor since 1973 at Universität Heidelberg. Since 1983 main research at CERN. Member of R807/808 for the last year of ISR running. Member of the Heavy Ion Experiments NA34/2 (Spokesperson), NA45 (Spokesperson) and NA60. Scientific Director of GSI Darmstadt 1992-1999. Publications in Atomic, Nuclear, High-Energy Physics and Brain Research. Since 2000 Member of the Heidelberg Academy of Science. Since 2004 Emeritus. oai:cds.cern.ch:17543392014 |
spellingShingle | Public Events SPECHT, Hans Heavy Ion Physics at the CERN SPS: Roots 1974-1984 and Key Results |
title | Heavy Ion Physics at the CERN SPS: Roots 1974-1984 and Key Results |
title_full | Heavy Ion Physics at the CERN SPS: Roots 1974-1984 and Key Results |
title_fullStr | Heavy Ion Physics at the CERN SPS: Roots 1974-1984 and Key Results |
title_full_unstemmed | Heavy Ion Physics at the CERN SPS: Roots 1974-1984 and Key Results |
title_short | Heavy Ion Physics at the CERN SPS: Roots 1974-1984 and Key Results |
title_sort | heavy ion physics at the cern sps: roots 1974-1984 and key results |
topic | Public Events |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1754339 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT spechthans heavyionphysicsatthecernspsroots19741984andkeyresults AT spechthans deepinelasticleptonnucleonscatteringandheavyionexperimentsatthecernsps |