Date
December 10 (Tue) at 15:30 - 17:00, 2024 (JST)
Speaker
Language
English
Host
Tomoya Naito

A collision of relativistically accelerated large nuclei creates the hottest matter on Earth — quark-gluon plasma (QGP). The properties of QGP have been studied through comparisons of final-state particle distributions between theoretical models and experimental data.

To quantitatively constrain QGP properties, it is necessary to build Monte Carlo models that simulate the space-time evolution of the system throughout the entire collision process. This includes the initial matter production from the accelerated nuclei, the evolution of QGP, hadronisation, and the evolution of hadron gas. In this talk, I will first explain how theoretical models, based on relativistic hydrodynamics and hadronic transport, are conventionally built and how they successfully extract QGP properties.

Next, I will discuss a hot topic: the possibility of finding QGP in proton-proton collisions, based on results from a state-of-the-art model that includes both equilibrated and non-equilibrated systems. Also, I will introduce a novel Monte Carlo initial state model based on perturbative QCD minijet production supplemented with a saturation picture. This Monte-Carlo EKRT model is one of the first initial state models for hydrodynamics to describe initial particle production from small to large momentum within a single framework, where total energy-momentum and charge conservations are imposed.

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