Séminaires LAPP
Heavy Ion Physics with CMS at LHC
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Europe/Paris
Auditorium (LAPP-Annecy)
Auditorium
LAPP-Annecy
LAPP - 9 Chemin de Bellevue -
BP 110 F-74941 Annecy-le-Vieux CEDEX - FRANCE
--Tel : (33) (0) 4 50 09 16 00
-- Fax : (33) (0) 4 50 27 94 95
Description
"Heavy Ion Physics with CMS at LHC"
The Large Hadron Collider at CERN will collide protons at sqrt{S}=14 TeV and lead ions
at sqrt{S_{NN}}=5.5 TeV. The physics program of the Compact Muon
Solenoid (CMS) includes the study of heavy ion collisions. The high energies
available at the LHC will allow high statistics studies of the dense partonic
system with hard probes: heavy quarks and quarkonia with an emphasis on the
b and Upsilon, high p_T jets, photons, as well as Z0 bosons.
The CMS detector consists of a 13~m long, 6~m wide superconducting solenoid
providing a uniform 4~T magnetic field. Charged particles will be measured
with a large acceptance, high resolution silicon tracker consisting
of pixel and strip detector layers. The tracker is
surrounded by electromagnetic and hadronic calorimeters located inside the
magnet while the muon detector is outside. The central detector will be
complemented by CASTOR, a proposed forward calorimeter, and a ZDC.
The tracking system and the muon detector provide
hermetic coverage for particles with |eta|>=2.4.
The high granularity, high resolution calorimeters will provide hermetic
coverage for |eta|>=7. The CMS data acquisition system, with its reliance
on a multipurpose, high-level trigger system, is uniquely qualified for
efficient triggering in high-multiplicity heavy ion events.
The CMS detectors will allow a wide range of unique measurements in
nuclear collisions. The excellent calorimeters combined with tracking will
allow detailed studies of jets, particularly medium effects on the jet
fragmentation function and the energy and p_T redistribution of particles within
the jet. The large
CMS acceptance will allow detailed studies of jet structure in rare
jet-gamma and jet-Z0 events. The high resolution tracker will
tag b quark jets.
The muon chambers combined with tracking will study production of
the Z0, J\psi and the Upsilon family
in the central rapidity region of the collision.
In addition to the detailed studies of hard probes, CMS will
measure charged multiplicity, energy flow and azimuthal asymmetry event-by-event.
The forward detector suite, including hadron calorimeter, CASTOR, the ZDC and
TOTEM will study forward energy flow and charged multiplicity
in the fragmentation region as well as the relative charged and neutral energy
fluctuations. The combination of the forward hadron calorimeter and the ZDC will
determine the collision centrality. Detailed studies of the CMS
capabilities using the full detector simulation and reconstruction will be presented.