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Heavy Ions: Results from the Large Hadron Collider

arXiv:1201.4264 · doi:10.1007/s12043-012-0373-7

Abstract

On November 8, 2010 the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN collided first stable beams of heavy ions (Pb on Pb) at center-of-mass energy of 2.76 TeV/nucleon. The LHC worked exceedingly well during its one month of operation with heavy ions, delivering about 10 microbarn-inverse of data, with peak luminosity reaching to $L_{0} = 2 \times 10^{25}{\rm cm}^{-2}{\rm s}^{-1}$ towards the end of the run. Three experiments, ALICE, ATLAS and CMS, recorded their first heavy ion data, which were analyzed in a record time. The results of the multiplicity, flow, fluctuations, and Bose-Einstein correlations indicate that the fireball formed in nuclear collisions at the LHC is hotter, lives longer, and expands to a larger size at freeze-out as compared to lower energies. We give an overview of these as well as new results on quarkonia and heavy flavour suppression, and jet energy loss.

Proceedings of Lepton-Photon 2011 Conference, to be published in Pramana, Journal of Physics. 15 pages