This is a aiagram of a proton-lead collision
in the Large Hadron Collider that produced a drop of quark-gluon plasma
about one-tenth the size of those produced in previous experiments.
Credit: Large Hadron Collider/CMS
How small can a droplet shrink and remain a liquid?
This existential question has been raised by a series of experiments
conducted recently at the Large Hadron Collider and the Relativistic
Heavy Ion Collider that smash various atomic particles together at
nearly the speed of light in order to create tiny drops of primordial
soup: the quark-gluon plasma (QGP) that cosmologists are convinced
dominated the universe microseconds after the Big Bang before the
universe cooled down enough for atoms to form. In fact, the flow
characteristic of these droplets is a major topic at a scientific
conference, Quark Matter 2015, taking place this week in Kobe, Japan.
As part of the Large Hadron Collider's CMS detector team, Professor
of Physics Julia Velkovska, post-doctoral fellow Shenguan Tuo and
assistant research professor Shengli Huang at Vanderbilt University have
been at the middle of these discoveries.
In 2010, the LHC successfully created sub-atomic blobs of QGP by
colliding lead ions together. Smashing these two massive ions -- each
containing hundreds of protons and neutrons -- had generated the
tremendous temperatures, more than 250,000 times hotter than the core of
the sun, that are required for the primordial state of matter to form.
(Unfortunately, the physicists don't have a direct way to measure the
number of particles in the quark-gluon plasma, so they use the number
of subatomic particles that are created when the plasma evaporates as a
measure of their size.)
"Lead ions are very large, each containing hundreds of protons and
neutrons. When you smash them together at very high speed, they generate
blobs of plasma that produce thousands of particles when they cool
down," said Velkovska. "But when the LHC switched to proton-lead ion
collisions, we didn't think the collisions would contain enough energy
to produce the plasma."
However, Tuo, as part of his doctoral thesis, made detailed
measurements of the behavior of the particles produced by these smaller
proton-lead collisions and discovered that they were in fact producing
liquid droplets that were about one tenth the size of those produced in
the lead-lead collisions.
"Everyone was surprised when we began finding evidence for liquid behavior," said Tuo. "It caused some very intense debates."
One of the key properties of a liquid is the ability to flow. Looked
at from the point of view of the individual particles in a liquid, the
ability to flow means that each particle is exerting an attractive force
on its neighbors that is strong enough to effect their movement but not
strong enough to lock them together like they are in a solid. So their
movements are coordinated and, when released from a container, they
retain information about the container's shape. Tuo's measurements
showed that small numbers of particles produced in the proton-lead
collisions originated on the ellipsoidal surfaces of small QGP droplets.
Because of the computational difficulty involved, physicists normally
look for these correlations between pairs of particles, but Velkovska,
Tuo and their CMS collaborators took it several steps further. They
searched for correlations between groups of four, six and eight
particles. In some cases, they went to the extraordinary length of
computing the correlations between all the particles in a given
collision.
"These measurements confirmed that we were seeing this coherent
behavior even in droplets producing as few as 100 to 200 particles," Tuo
said. The results were published in Physical Review Letters in June. But that wasn't the end of the story.
The recreation of the quark gluon plasma (QGP) dates back to 2005.
Velkovska and her Vanderbilt colleagues -- physics professors Victoria
Greene and Charlie Maguire -- were members of the PHENIX science team at
RHIC, located at Brookhaven National Laboratory, when they announced
that they had created this new state of matter by colliding gold ions
together at relativistic velocities. The big surprise was that this
primordial material behaved like a liquid, rather than a gas.
To see what happened at even higher energies, the Vanderbilt group
joined the CMS science team at the LHC located at the European
Laboratory for Nuclear and Particle Physics in Geneva. The more powerful
particle collider succeeded in duplicating the RHIC results, first as
expected, by smashing lead ions together and then, unexpectedly, in the
proton-lead collisions.
The proton-lead results prompted the scientists in the PHENIX team to
re-analyze data that had been collected at RHIC in 2000, when the
collider had smashed deuterium ions (proton-neutron pairs) and gold ions
together at much lower energies than those in the LHC. The re-analysis,
led by Shengli Huang, found that the proton-neutron pairs formed two
hot spots in the gold ion when they collided which then merged into an
elongated drop of QGP.
The RHIC researchers decided to test this further by adding a new run
that collided helium ions (two protons and a neutron) with gold ions,
and found that the same thing happened, except that three hot spots
formed and merged into the QGP droplet. The results were just published
in Physical Review Letters.
"Although the LHC collisions release 25 times more energy than the
RHIC collisions, we don't see much difference in the droplet-formation
process: Once you have reached the threshold, adding more energy doesn't
seem to have much effect," said Velkovska. "I guess you can't get more
perfect than perfect!"
Not only have the physicists found that the quark-gluon plasma is a
liquid, the physicists have also established that it is nearly a perfect
liquid: That is a liquid with zero viscosity that flows without any
resistance. If you swish a perfect liquid in a glass and set the glass
down, then the liquid will continue to swirl around as long as it is not
disrupted.
Curiously, the phenomenon that most closely resembles the properties
of the hottest known liquid is one of the coldest known liquids: lithium
atoms that have been cooled to temperatures one-billionth of a degree
above absolute zero using a device called a laser trap. When released
from the trap these ultra-cold atoms also behave as a perfect liquid
with near-zero viscosity.
"These are both strongly coupled systems. This appears to be an emergent property of such systems," Velkovska has concluded.
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The above post is reprinted from
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