Heavy-ion collisions at very high colliding energies are expected to produce a quark-gluon plasma(QGP) at the highest temperature obtainable in a laboratory setting. Experimental studies of these reactions can provide...Heavy-ion collisions at very high colliding energies are expected to produce a quark-gluon plasma(QGP) at the highest temperature obtainable in a laboratory setting. Experimental studies of these reactions can provide an unprecedented range of information on properties of the QGP at high temperatures. We report theoretical investigations of the physics perspectives of heavy-ion collisions at a future high-energy collider. These include initial parton production, collective expansion of the dense medium, jet quenching,heavy-quark transport, dissociation and regeneration of quarkonia, photon and dilepton production. We illustrate the potential of future experimental studies of the initial particle production and formation of QGP at the highest temperature to provide constraints on properties of strongly interaction matter.展开更多
基金the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant Nos.11175071,11221504,11305089,11322546,11375072,11435001 and 11435004)China MOST(Grant Nos.2014DFG02050 and2015CB856900)+5 种基金the Major State Basic Research Development Program in China(Grant Nos.2014CB845404 and 2014CB845403)the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canadathe US National Science Foundation(Grant No.PHY-1306359)the Director,Office of Energy Research,Office of High Energy and Nuclear Physics,Division of Nuclear Physics,of the U.S.Department of Energy under Contract Nos.DE-AC02-05CH11231,DE-SC0012704within the framework of the JET CollaborationBJS is also supported by a DOE Office of Science Early Career Award
文摘Heavy-ion collisions at very high colliding energies are expected to produce a quark-gluon plasma(QGP) at the highest temperature obtainable in a laboratory setting. Experimental studies of these reactions can provide an unprecedented range of information on properties of the QGP at high temperatures. We report theoretical investigations of the physics perspectives of heavy-ion collisions at a future high-energy collider. These include initial parton production, collective expansion of the dense medium, jet quenching,heavy-quark transport, dissociation and regeneration of quarkonia, photon and dilepton production. We illustrate the potential of future experimental studies of the initial particle production and formation of QGP at the highest temperature to provide constraints on properties of strongly interaction matter.