pA Physics Workshop at MIT
from
Friday 17 May 2013 (09:00)
to
Saturday 18 May 2013 (17:00)
Monday 13 May 2013
Tuesday 14 May 2013
Wednesday 15 May 2013
Thursday 16 May 2013
Friday 17 May 2013
09:00
Welcome to MIT
Welcome to MIT
09:00 - 09:10
Room: 32-144
09:10
The proton-proton and hadron-nucleus ridge: quantum interference of glue or flow ?
-
Raju Venugopalan
(
Brookhaven National Laboratory
)
The proton-proton and hadron-nucleus ridge: quantum interference of glue or flow ?
Raju Venugopalan
(
Brookhaven National Laboratory
)
09:10 - 09:50
Room: 32-144
09:50
PHOBOS in the LHC Era
-
Peter Alan Steinberg
(
Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)
)
PHOBOS in the LHC Era
Peter Alan Steinberg
(
Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)
)
09:50 - 10:30
Room: 32-144
10:30
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
10:30 - 11:00
Room: 32-144
11:00
High Multiplicity pp and pA Collisions: Hydrodynamics at its Edge and Explosive Stringy Pomeron
-
Edward Shuryak
(
stony brook university
)
High Multiplicity pp and pA Collisions: Hydrodynamics at its Edge and Explosive Stringy Pomeron
Edward Shuryak
(
stony brook university
)
11:00 - 11:40
Room: 32-144
High Multiplicity pp and pA Collisions are a place where the macroscopic description (thermodynamics and hydrodynamics) meets with the microscopic one (pomerons and QCD strings). First I discuss what happens with the hydrodynamical predictions as the system size gets smaller and smaller. For simplicity, we don't do it numerically, but analytically using Gubser$^\prime$ s flow. We found that the radial flow is expected to increase, while the elliptic flow decreases, and higher harmonics stronger suppressed. Then we approach the problem from the opposite side, using a string-based Pomeron model. We found that as the intrinsic temperature of the string grows, it approaches the Hagedorn regime and produces a high entropy string ball, amusingly dual to a certain black hole. Furthermore, when the string temperature narrows on the Hagedorn temperature or $T/T_H-1={\cal O}(1/N_c)$, the stringy ball becomes a sQGP ball with non-negligible pressure and hydrodynamical flow.
11:40
d+Au Hadron Correlations at PHENIX
-
Anne Sickles
(
Brookhaven
)
d+Au Hadron Correlations at PHENIX
Anne Sickles
(
Brookhaven
)
11:40 - 12:20
Room: 32-144
12:20
Dihadron correlations, flow, and jets: quo vadis?
-
James Dunlop
(
Brookhaven National Laboratory
)
Dihadron correlations, flow, and jets: quo vadis?
James Dunlop
(
Brookhaven National Laboratory
)
12:20 - 13:00
Room: 32-144
13:00
Lunch
Lunch
13:00 - 14:00
Room: 32-144
14:00
Explore the high-density QCD medium via particle correlations in pPb collisions at CMS
-
Wei Li
(
MIT
)
Explore the high-density QCD medium via particle correlations in pPb collisions at CMS
Wei Li
(
MIT
)
14:00 - 14:40
Room: 32-144
The observation of a long-range, near-side two-particle correlation ("ridge") in very high multiplicity proton-proton and proton-lead collisions has opened up the opportunity of studying collective phenomena in these small systems. High luminosity pPb data were collected by the CMS experiment at the LHC in early 2013. New results of identified particle spectra, two- and multi-particle correlations in pPb collisions from CMS will be presented over a wide event multiplicity and transverse momentum range. A direct comparison of pp, pPb and PbPb systems will be provided. Physics implications, especially in the context of color glass condensate and hydrodynamics models will also be discussed.
14:40
Azimuthal anisotropies in lead-lead and proton-lead collisions with the ATLAS detector
-
Barbara Krystyna Wosiek
(
Polish Academy of Sciences (PL)
)
Azimuthal anisotropies in lead-lead and proton-lead collisions with the ATLAS detector
Barbara Krystyna Wosiek
(
Polish Academy of Sciences (PL)
)
14:40 - 15:20
Room: 32-144
The presentation will give an overview of measurements of azimuthal anisotropies performed by the ATLAS collaboration using Pb+Pb collisions at sqrt(s_NN)=2.76 TeV and p+Pb collisions at sqrt(s_NN)=5.02 TeV.
15:20
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
15:20 - 15:50
Room: 32-144
15:50
Recent pPb results from ALICE (part I)
-
Constantinos Loizides
(
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US)
)
Recent pPb results from ALICE (part I)
Constantinos Loizides
(
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US)
)
15:50 - 16:30
Room: 32-144
16:30
Reminiscences of Wit Busza and 41 Years of p+A Physics
-
Michael Tannenbaum
(
Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)
)
Reminiscences of Wit Busza and 41 Years of p+A Physics
Michael Tannenbaum
(
Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)
)
16:30 - 17:10
Room: 32-144
18:30
Dinner at MIT Faculty Club
Dinner at MIT Faculty Club
18:30 - 20:30
Room: 32-144
Saturday 18 May 2013
09:00
Hadron-Nucleus Interactions: What we have learned.
-
Larry McLerran
(
BNL
)
Hadron-Nucleus Interactions: What we have learned.
Larry McLerran
(
BNL
)
09:00 - 09:40
Room: 32-144
I will describe the early development of ideas and experiments on hadron-nucleus interactions that have led to modern theories of high energy hadronic interactions. These developments proved crucial for basic understanding of ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions, but perhaps more importantly, radically changed our preconceptions, and led to modern QCD based descriptions of high energy interactions. I will also discuss how recent developments at RHIC and LHC can further test or falsify modern ideas.
09:40
Recent pPb results from ALICE (part II)
-
John William Harris
(
Yale University (US)
)
Recent pPb results from ALICE (part II)
John William Harris
(
Yale University (US)
)
09:40 - 10:20
Room: 32-144
10:20
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
10:20 - 10:50
Room: 32-144
10:50
The Revenge of Wit : Will the Biblical Pillars of AA 2003 be left Standing after the pA of 2013?
-
Miklos Gyulassy
(
Columbia University
)
The Revenge of Wit : Will the Biblical Pillars of AA 2003 be left Standing after the pA of 2013?
Miklos Gyulassy
(
Columbia University
)
10:50 - 11:30
Room: 32-144
Looking for the Ag lining in the rubble of p+Pb at LHC and D+Au at RHIC.
11:30
Stopping, of various kinds
-
Brian Cole
(
Columbia University (US)
)
Stopping, of various kinds
Brian Cole
(
Columbia University (US)
)
11:30 - 12:10
Room: 32-144
12:10
Study of dijet momentum balance and pseudorapidity in pPb collisions
-
Yen-Jie Lee
(
CERN
)
Study of dijet momentum balance and pseudorapidity in pPb collisions
Yen-Jie Lee
(
CERN
)
12:10 - 12:50
Room: 32-144
Studies of dijet production in pPb collisions at a nucleon-nucleon center-of-mass energy of 5.02 TeV using the CMS detector are presented. Jets are reconstructed with the anti-kT algorithm with R=0.3, using combined information from tracking and calorimetry. The dijet momentum balance, azimuthal angle correlations and pseudorapidity distributions are studied and compared to results from PYTHIA reference calculations representing pp collisions.
12:50
Lunch
Lunch
12:50 - 13:50
Room: 32-144
13:50
Elementary pseudoscalars, scalars and pA (AA) collisions.
-
Witold Krasny
(
Univ. P. et Marie Curie (Paris VI) (FR)
)
Elementary pseudoscalars, scalars and pA (AA) collisions.
Witold Krasny
(
Univ. P. et Marie Curie (Paris VI) (FR)
)
13:50 - 14:30
Room: 32-144
14:30
pA Physics -- from Fermi Lab Bubble Chamber Data to Future STAR Upgrade at RHIC
-
huan huang
(
UCLA
)
pA Physics -- from Fermi Lab Bubble Chamber Data to Future STAR Upgrade at RHIC
huan huang
(
UCLA
)
14:30 - 15:10
Room: 32-144
15:10
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
15:10 - 15:40
Room: 32-144
15:40
d+Au at PHENIX: Insights on the Cronin Effect, Shadowing and Saturation
-
Barbara Jacak
(
Stony Brook University
)
d+Au at PHENIX: Insights on the Cronin Effect, Shadowing and Saturation
Barbara Jacak
(
Stony Brook University
)
15:40 - 16:20
Room: 32-144
16:20
Let's All Be Wit-ty: Learning from p(d)+A Collisions
-
Berndt Mueller
(
Duke University
)
Let's All Be Wit-ty: Learning from p(d)+A Collisions
Berndt Mueller
(
Duke University
)
16:20 - 17:00
Room: 32-144