An increasing number of physicists are investigating nuclear collisions at relativistic energies. (See figure 1.) Accelerators completely devoted to the study of these collisions (such as the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory) are under construction. So are hadron colliders (such as the Large Hadron Collider at CERN), which can also be used to accelerate heavy ions. The aim of these projects is to study what happens to nuclear matter at high pressures and temperatures. The expectation is that such experiments will access information that can test important predictions of quantum chromodynamics—for example, a nuclear matter transition from a mixture of quarks and gluons to hadrons, as occurred in the first moments of the universe according to the Big Bang theory.
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March 1994
March 01 1994
Relativistic Heavy‐Ion Physics Without Nuclear Contact Available to Purchase
The large electromagnetic field generated by a fast heavy nucleus allows investigation of new electromagnetic processes not accessible with real photons.
Carlos Bertulani;
Carlos Bertulani
Federal University Janeiro, Brazil
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Gerhard Baur
Gerhard Baur
University of Basel, Switzerland
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Carlos Bertulani
Gerhard Baur
Federal University Janeiro, Brazil
Physics Today 47 (3), 22–27 (1994);
Citation
Carlos Bertulani, Gerhard Baur; Relativistic Heavy‐Ion Physics Without Nuclear Contact. Physics Today 1 March 1994; 47 (3): 22–27. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.881416
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