Seminars/Colloquia

MLL-Kolloquium: Dr. Torsten Dahms (Universe Cluster and Physik Department TUM): Low-mass dileptons: A thermometer for the hottest stuff in the universe

Europe/Berlin
Lecture Hall (ground floor west) (LMU building, Am Coulombwall 1, Garching)

Lecture Hall (ground floor west)

LMU building, Am Coulombwall 1, Garching

Description
The goal of ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions at RHIC and the LHC is to study the properties of the quark-gluon plasma (QGP), a high-temperature phase of deconfined quarks and gluons. Electromagnetic radiation, in form of photons or lepton pairs, is a penetrating probe that allows the investigation of the full time evolution and dynamics of the produced matter, as it does not undergo strong final-state interactions. The dilepton spectrum is extremely rich in physics sources: Thermal black-body radiation is of particular interest as it carries information about the QGP temperature. Medium modifications of the spectral function of short-lived vector mesons are linked to the potential restoration of chiral symmetry at high temperatures. Correlated lepton pairs from semi-leptonic charm and beauty decays provide additional information about the heavy-quark energy loss. In this colloquium, dilepton results from the SPS, RHIC and the LHC will be reviewed and the prospects for future low-mass dilepton measurements.
Abstract