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Temperature measurement of Quark-Gluon plasma at different stages
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- STAR Collaboration (Author)
- Finch, Evan (Contributor)
Title
Temperature measurement of Quark-Gluon plasma at different stages
Abstract
In a Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP), the fundamental building blocks of matter, quarks and gluons, are under extreme conditions of temperature and density. A QGP could exist in the early stages of the Universe, and in various objects and events in the cosmos. The thermodynamic and hydrodynamic properties of the QGP are described by Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) and can be studied in heavy-ion collisions. Despite being a key thermodynamic parameter, the QGP temperature is still poorly known. Thermal lepton pairs (e+e− and μ+μ−) are ideal penetrating probes of the true temperature of the emitting source, since their invariant-mass spectra suffer neither from strong final-state interactions nor from blue-shift effects due to rapid expansion. Here we measure the QGP temperature using thermal e+e− production at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). The average temperature from the low-mass region (in-medium ρ0 vector-meson dominant) is (2.01 ± 0.23) × 1012 K, consistent with the chemical freeze-out temperature from statistical models and the phase transition temperature from Lattice QCD. The average temperature from the intermediate mass region (above the ρ0 mass, QGP dominant) is significantly higher at (3.25 ± 0.60) × 1012 K. This work provides essential experimental thermodynamic measurements to map out the QCD phase diagram and understand the properties of matter under extreme conditions. © The Author(s) 2025.
Publication
Nature Communications
Publisher
Nature Research
Date
2025
Volume
16
Issue
1
Journal Abbr
Nat. Commun.
Citation Key
starcollaborationTemperatureMeasurementQuarkGluon2025
ISSN
2041-1723
Language
English
Library Catalog
Scopus
Citation
STAR Collaboration. (2025). Temperature measurement of Quark-Gluon plasma at different stages. Nature Communications, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-63216-5
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