14–17 Nov 2012
Academic Building, Utrecht University
Europe/Zurich timezone

Bottomonium Suppression in Heavy Ion Collisions

14 Nov 2012, 09:20
30m
Kanunnikenzaal (Academic Building, Utrecht University)

Kanunnikenzaal

Academic Building, Utrecht University

Domplein 29, Utrecht
Quarkonia Quarkonia

Speaker

Dr Michael Strickland (Gettysburg College)

Description

The thermal suppression of heavy quark bound states represents an ideal observable for determining if one has produced a quark gluon plasma in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions. In recent years, however, a paradigm shift has taken place in the theory of quarkonium suppression due to new first principles calculations of the thermal widths of these states. These thermal widths are large, eg O(20-100 MeV) for the Upsilon, and cause in-medium suppression of the states at temperatures below their traditionally defined disassociation temperatures. In order to apply the newly developed understanding to phenomenology, however, one must make detailed space-time models of the plasma including the effects of finite shear viscosity. These effects include not only the modification of the time evolution of the temperature of the system, flow, etc., but also the emergence of potentially large local momentum-space anisotropies which can affect the in-medium properties of the states. I will present comparisons of theory with data from RHIC 200 GeV/nucleon Au-Au collisions and LHC 2.76 TeV/nucleon Pb-Pb collisions as a function of number of participants, rapidity, and transverse momentum.

Primary author

Dr Michael Strickland (Gettysburg College)

Presentation materials