noviembre 23, 2024

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Nuevos datos sobre la materia más caliente de la Tierra

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upsilones

Los científicos utilizaron el detector STAR en el Relativista Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) para seguir la disociación de las partículas upsilon en el plasma de quarks y gluones. Estos upsilons consisten en un quark bottom y un quark antibottom unidos por gluones con diferentes energías de enlace: un estado fundamental estrechamente unido (izquierda), una variedad intermedia (derecha) y el estado más grande y el límite más débil (centro). Crédito: Laboratorio Nacional de Brookhaven

Los físicos de STAR rastrean el ‘derretimiento’ secuencial de Upsilons

Los hallazgos proporcionan evidencia de ‘desconfinamiento’ y una idea de la temperatura burbujeante de la materia más caliente de la Tierra.

Los científicos que utilizan el colisionador de iones pesados ​​relativistas (RHIC) para estudiar parte de la materia más caliente jamás creada en un laboratorio han publicado sus primeros datos que muestran cómo tres variaciones distintas de partículas llamadas upsilons se ‘derriten’ secuencialmente o se disocian en la sustancia pegajosa caliente. Los resultados, que acaban de publicarse en Cartas de exploración físicaprovienen del detector STAR en RHIC, uno de los dos principales experimentos de seguimiento de partículas en esta instalación de usuarios de la Oficina de Ciencias del Departamento de Energía (DOE) de EE. UU. para la investigación de física nuclear.

Los datos de upsilon agregan más evidencia de que los quarks y gluones que forman la materia caliente, conocida como quark-gluon[{” attribute=””>plasma (QGP)—are “deconfined,” or free from their ordinary existence locked inside other particles such as protons and neutrons. The findings will help scientists learn about the properties of the QGP, including its temperature.

“By measuring the level of upsilon suppression or dissociation we can infer the properties of the QGP,” said Rongrong Ma, a physicist at DOE’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, where RHIC is located, and Physics Analysis Coordinator for the STAR collaboration. “We can’t tell exactly what the average temperature of the QGP is based solely on this measurement, but this measurement is an important piece of a bigger picture. We will put this and other measurements together to get a clearer understanding of this unique form of matter.”

Melting Upsilon

In the presence of quark-gluon plasma (background), free quarks and gluons can get in the way of the interaction between the bottom quark and antibottom quark that make up an upsilon. This screening of the quark-antiquark interaction causes the upsilon to dissociate, or melt. The data show that loosely bound upsilons melt most easily, while the tightly bound ground state melts the least. Credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory

Setting quarks and gluons free

Scientists use RHIC, a 2.4-mile-circumference “atom smasher,” to create and study QGP by accelerating and colliding two beams of gold ions—atomic nuclei stripped of their electrons—at very high energies. These energetic smashups can melt the boundaries of the atoms’ protons and neutrons liberating the quarks and gluons inside.

One way to confirm that collisions have created QGP is to look for evidence that the free quarks and gluons are interacting with other particles. Upsilons, short-lived particles made of a heavy quark-antiquark pair (bottom-antibottom) bound together, turn out to be ideal particles for this task.

Rongrong Ma and Lijuan Ruan

Left: Brookhaven Lab physicist Rongrong Ma adjusts a cable on the muon telescope detector (MTD) while STAR co-spokesperson Lijuan Ruan looks on. Right: Ma and Ruan stand on the catwalk atop STAR where modules of the MTD surround STAR’s house-sized central magnet. Credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory

“The upsilon is a very strongly bounded state; it’s hard to dissociate,” said Zebo Tang, a STAR collaborator from the University of Science and Technology of China. “But when you put it in a QGP, you have so many quarks and gluons surrounding both the quark and antiquark, that all those surrounding interactions compete with the upsilon’s own quark-antiquark interaction.”

These “screening” interactions can break the upsilon apart—effectively melting it and suppressing the number of upsilons the scientists count.

“If the quarks and gluons were still confined within individual protons and neutrons, they wouldn’t be able to participate in the competing interactions that break up the quark-antiquark pairs,” Tang said.

Upsilon advantages

Scientists have observed such suppression of other quark-antiquark particles in QGP—namely J/psi particles (made of a charm-anticharm pair). But upsilons stand apart from J/psi particles, the STAR scientists say, for two main reasons: their inability to reform in the QGP and the fact that they come in three types.

Before we get to reforming, let’s talk about how these particles form. Charm and bottom quarks and antiquarks are created very early in the collisions—even before the QGP. At the instant of impact, when the kinetic energy of the colliding gold ions is deposited in a tiny space, it triggers the creation of many particles of matter and antimatter as energy transforms into mass through Einstein’s famous equation, E=mc2. The quarks and antiquarks partner up to form upsilons and J/psi particles, which can then interact with the newly formed QGP.

Relative Abundance and Change in Upsilon Yields

This graph depicts the relative abundance and change in upsilon yields for each of the three varieties—ground state (1s) and two different excited states (2s and 3s)—in the absence of quark-gluon plasma (yellow bars) and in the plasma (orange bars with QGP in background). The absence of an upsilon yield for the 3s state in QGP implies that all the 3s upsilons may have dissociated. Credit: Brookhaven National Laboratory

But because it takes more energy to make heavier particles, there are many more lighter charm and anticharm quarks than heavier bottom and antibottom quarks in the particle soup. That means that even after some J/psi particles dissociate, or “melt,” in the QGP, others can continue to form as charm and anticharm quarks find one another in the plasma. This reformation happens only very rarely with upsilons because of the relative scarcity of heavy bottom and antibottom quarks. So, once an upsilon dissociates, it’s gone.

“There just aren’t enough bottom-antibottom quarks in the QGP to partner up,” said Shuai Yang, a STAR collaborator from South China Normal University. “This makes upsilon counts very clean because their suppression isn’t muddied by reformation the way J/psi counts can be.”

The other advantage of upsilons is that, unlike J/psi particles, they come in three varieties: a tightly bound ground state and two different excited states where the quark-antiquark pairs are more loosely bound. The most tightly bound version should be hardest to pull apart and melt at a higher temperature.

“If we observe the suppression levels for the three varieties are different, maybe we can establish a range for the QGP temperature,” Yang said.

First time measurement

These results mark the first time RHIC scientists have been able to measure the suppression for each of the three upsilon varieties.

They found the expected pattern: The least suppression/melting for the most tightly bound ground state; higher suppression for the intermediately bound state; and essentially no upsilons of the most loosely bound state—meaning all the upsilons in this last group may have been melted. (The scientists note that the level of uncertainty in the measurement of that most excited, loosely bound state was large.)

“We don’t measure the upsilon directly; it decays almost instantly,” Yang explained. “Instead, we measure the decay ‘daughters.’”

The team looked at two decay “channels.” One decay path leads to electron-positron pairs, picked up by STAR’s electromagnetic calorimeter. The other decay path, to positive and negative muons, was tracked by STAR’s muon telescope detector.

In both cases, reconstructing the momentum and mass of the decay daughters establishes if the pair came from an upsilon. And since the different types of upsilons have different masses, the scientists could tell the three types apart.

“This is the most anticipated result coming out of the muon telescope detector,” said Brookhaven Lab physicist Lijuan Ruan, a STAR co-spokesperson and manager of the muon telescope detector project. That component was specifically proposed and built for the purpose of tracking upsilons, with planning back as far as 2005, construction beginning in 2010, and full installation in time for the RHIC run of 2014—the source of data, along with 2016, for this analysis.

“It was a very challenging measurement,” Ma said. “This paper is essentially declaring the success of the STAR muon telescope detector program. We will continue to use this detector component for the next few years to collect more data to reduce our uncertainties about these results.”

Collecting more data over the next few years of running STAR, along with RHIC’s brand new detector, sPHENIX, should provide a clearer picture of the QGP. sPHENIX was built to track upsilons and other particles made of heavy quarks as one of its major goals.

“We’re looking forward to how new data to be collected in the next few years will fill out our picture of the QGP,” said Ma.
Reference: “Measurement of Sequential Υ Suppression in Au+Au Collisions at √sNN=200 GeV with the STAR Experiment” by B. E. Aboona et al. (STAR Collaboration), 14 March 2023, Physical Review Letters.
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.112301

Additional scientists from the following institutions made significant contributions to this paper: National Cheng Kung University, Rice University, Shandong University, Tsinghua University, University of Illinois at Chicago. The research was funded by the DOE Office of Science (NP), the U.S. National Science Foundation, and a range of international organizations and agencies listed in the scientific paper. The STAR team used computing resources at the Scientific Data and Computing Center at Brookhaven Lab, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) at DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and the Open Science Grid consortium.

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