28–29 Oct 2016
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
US/Eastern timezone
In the 2015 US Nuclear Physics Long Range Plan, the Hot QCD community outlined an experimental and theoretical program to study the nature and microscopic structure of the Quark-Gluon Plasma using multiscale probes such as jets and quarkonia. The goal of this workshop is to review lessons from recent data and theoretical progress, and to discuss implications on how to best exploit new experimental capabilities at RHIC and LHC in the 2020's. This will be part of a continuing effort to evolve and sharpen the science case for sPHENIX and the LHC Run 3/4 upgrades.

Conference information

Date/Time

Starts

Ends

All times are in US/Eastern

Location

Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Kolker Room (Bldg. 26-414)
77 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02139-4307 617-253-2391

Extra information

Please consider reserving accommodation in the Boston area at your earliest convenience