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Title: Hotter, Denser, Faster, Smaller...and Nearly Perfect: What's the Matter at RHIC? (410th Brookhaven Lecture)

Multimedia ·
OSTI ID:1005210
 [1]
  1. Brookhaven National Lab. (BNL), Upton, NY (United States). Chemistry Dept.

The collisions of two beams of heavy-ion particles, atoms stripped of their electrons, speeding around BNL’s immense Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) have long been expected to create a “quark-gluon plasma” in which the quarks and gluons that make up the protons and neutrons in the ions would move freely in a plasma-like system. But the final particles, detectable in the four experiments placed around the RHIC ring, tend to hide information about the earlier, hotter stage. So it is a challenge to elucidate the nature of the primordial system. What surprised scientists, however, was how strongly the quarks and gluons seemed to interact during the collision. This strong interaction makes the system produced at RHIC behave almost like a perfect fluid, one in which the hot matter formed shows a high degree of collectivity among the particles, rather than a gas, in which individual molecules move about randomly. Evidence from the four RHIC detectors has shown that the system formed at RHIC is potentially the most perfect fluid found in nature, at least since a few microseconds after the Big Bang, a state which RHIC was built to re-create. This result is all the more amazing since the system is so small, the collisions forming over distances 100 times smaller than a proton, and forms so quickly, in times on the order of a millionth of a billionth of a billionth of a second (10-24 seconds). It was even interesting enough to the wider physics community to warrant first place in the American Institute of Physics’ year-end review of top physics stories.

Research Organization:
Brookhaven National Lab. (BNL), Upton, NY (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC)
DOE Contract Number:
AC02-98CH10886
OSTI ID:
1005210
Report Number(s):
BNL-83187-2005-CP; TRN: US1104059
Resource Relation:
Conference: Brookhaven Lecture Series: 1960 - Present, Upton, NY (United States), 21 Dec 2005
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English