Particle Physics Seminars at BNL

Probing QCD matters using heavy flavor quarks at the LHC

by Yousen Zhang (Rice University)

US/Eastern
Description

Quark gluon plasma created in relativistic heavy ion collisions is a novel state in which partons are deconfined from normal matter in the universe. It is characterized by the shocking collectivity of QGP and energy loss of high energy particles traversing through QGP. Recent measurements show that the collectivity can also emerge in high-multiplicity proton-proton and proton-nucleus collisions, which was originally believed to only exist in large ion collisions. However, the origin of these collective motions is still a puzzle in theoretical studies mainly debating on contributions from initial correlations and in-medium effects. Heavy flavor quarks are sensitive to both the initial stage conditions and the later-on in-medium effects of collisions, thus can provide important information for understanding the inner workings of QGP in large ion collisions and the origin of the collectivity in small systems. In this talk, I will present the recent progress of heavy flavor collectivity at the LHC from large to small colliding systems, and discuss the future opportunities with the high-luminosity LHC together with the CMS detector upgrades.


REMOTE ONLY SEMINAR

Zoom link: https://cern.zoom.us/j/67409513711?pwd=eG5VSncyZGVuRnQ1OXFacElwWDNjUT09

Meeting ID: 674 0951 3711

Passcode: 314159

Organised by

Angelo Di Canto

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