User Tools

Site Tools


qgp_extreme_qcd_working_group

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Next revision
Previous revision
qgp_extreme_qcd_working_group [2016/05/03 14:30]
boudjema created
qgp_extreme_qcd_working_group [2018/11/30 18:58] (current)
jean-yves.ollitrault
Line 1: Line 1:
 ====(QGP) Extreme QCD Working Group ==== ====(QGP) Extreme QCD Working Group ====
 +Jean-Yves Ollitrault(Conv.),​ Sourendu Gupta, Rajiv Gavai, Rajeev Bhalerao, Rishi Sharma, Jean-Paul Blaizot, Francois Gelis, Edmond Iancu, Gregory Soyez, Chandrodoy Chattopadhyay,​ Amaresh Jaiswal
 +
 +2018 Progress Report
 +
 +Rajeev Bhalerao from IISER Pune and Jean-Yves Ollitrault from IPhT Saclay
 +have started a new project on non-Gaussian fluctuations in heavy-ion collisions in collaboration with Giuliano Giacalone, a PhD student at IPhT Saclay.  ​
 +The initial motivation was to understand recent experimental data [arXiv:​1604.07663] published by the ALICE collaboration at LHC. 
 +In this article, ALICE presents analyses of a new set of cumulants of 4-particle correlations,​ dubbed "​symmetric cumulants"​. ​
 +Cumulants vanish beyond order 2 for Gaussian fluctuations,​ hence cumulants of order 4 are direct signatures of non-Gaussianity.
 +Non-Gaussian fluctuations are a commonly studied in the context of cosmology.
 +They might be present in the very early Universe ("​primordial"​ non-Gaussianity) and they are also generated through the expansion. ​
 +The discussion can be carried over to heavy-ion collisions, but there is a notable difference. ​
 +In a large system, such as the Universe, one typically expects almost Gaussian fluctuations due to the central limit theorem.
 +By contrast, in a very small system such as a nucleus-nucleus collisions, primordial non-Gaussianities are fairly large (typically at the 10% level) and easy to see.
 +Our study has focused on non-Gaussianities which are not generated by the expansion, but present initially.
 +We have finalized a first article [arXiv:​1811.00837,​ submitted to Physical Review C] where we show how the kurtosis of elliptic flow fluctuations can be measured experimentally.
 +We extract it using preliminary data from the CMS collaboration and show that it is positive, in contrast with the kurtosis of triangular flow fluctuations,​ which was shown to be negative in 2011.
 +We show that both signs are naturally predicted by hydrodynamic calculations. ​
 +We are preparing a second article which is more general.
 +The goal of this ongoing work is twofold.
 +First, we point out that different observables which are typically studied separately have the same physical origin: primordial non-Gaussianities.
 +Second, we express these "​non-Gaussian observables"​ in terms of the statistical properties (n-point functions) of the initial density field, by through a general expansion in powers of the fluctuations.
 +We thus relate experimental observables to the state produced right after the collision which, in turn, can be studied via first-principles calculations (high-density QCD). 
 +
qgp_extreme_qcd_working_group.1462278629.txt.gz ยท Last modified: 2016/05/03 14:30 by boudjema