26–30 Mar 2012
University of Bonn
Europe/Berlin timezone

The STAR Experiment: The second decade and beyond.

28 Mar 2012, 10:55
40m
Seminar room, Bethe Centre for Theoretical Physics (University of Bonn)

Seminar room, Bethe Centre for Theoretical Physics

University of Bonn

Future of DIS Future of DIS

Speaker

Dr Matthew Lamont (BNL)

Description

The STAR experiment is one of the flagship experiments at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider at Brookhaven Lab. Since starting to take data at the turn of the century, STAR’s large acceptance and measurement capabilities have proved to be vital in terms of characterising the QGP soup produced in heavy-ion collisions and heading towards a measurement of the proton spin in polarised p+p collisions. This has only been achieved through the constant upgrade and enhancement of detectors and components every year, one of many examples being the recordable DAQ rate increasing by a factor of 10^3 since the first year. Although many measurements have been performed in the last decade, much remains to be done. In this presentation I will outline the proposed measurements and corresponding detector upgrades over the next decade in p+p, p+A and A+A physics as well as STAR’s role in the transition of RHIC to an eRHIC accelerator complex.

Primary author

Presentation materials