TY - JOUR
T1 - Probing dense baryon-rich matter with virtual photons
AU - The HADES Collaboration
AU - Adamczewski-Musch, J.
AU - Arnold, O.
AU - Behnke, C.
AU - Belounnas, A.
AU - Belyaev, A.
AU - Berger-Chen, J. C.
AU - Biernat, J.
AU - Blanco, A.
AU - Blume, C.
AU - Böhmer, M.
AU - Bordalo, P.
AU - Chernenko, S.
AU - Chlad, L.
AU - Deveaux, C.
AU - Dittert, D.
AU - Dreyer, J.
AU - Dybczak, A.
AU - Epple, E.
AU - Fabbietti, L.
AU - Fateev, O.
AU - Filip, P.
AU - Fonte, P.
AU - Franco, C.
AU - Friese, J.
AU - Fröhlich, I.
AU - Galatyuk, T.
AU - Garzón, J. A.
AU - Gernhäuser, R.
AU - Golubeva, M.
AU - Greifenhagen, R.
AU - Guber, F.
AU - Gumberidze, M.
AU - Harabasz, S.
AU - Heinz, T.
AU - Hennino, T.
AU - Hlavac, S.
AU - Höhne, C.
AU - Holzmann, R.
AU - Ierusalimov, A.
AU - Ivashkin, A.
AU - Kämpfer, B.
AU - Karavicheva, T.
AU - Kardan, B.
AU - Koenig, I.
AU - Koenig, W.
AU - Kolb, B. W.
AU - Korcyl, G.
AU - Kornakov, G.
AU - Kotte, R.
AU - Kugler, A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2019/10/1
Y1 - 2019/10/1
N2 - About 10 μs after the Big Bang, the universe was filled—in addition to photons and leptons—with strong-interaction matter consisting of quarks and gluons, which transitioned to hadrons at temperatures close to kT = 150 MeV and densities several times higher than those found in nuclei. This quantum chromodynamics (QCD) matter can be created in the laboratory as a transient state by colliding heavy ions at relativistic energies. The different phases in which QCD matter may exist depend for example on temperature, pressure or baryochemical potential, and can be probed by studying the emission of electromagnetic radiation. Electron–positron pairs emerge from the decay of virtual photons, which immediately decouple from the strong interaction, and thus provide information about the properties of QCD matter at various stages. Here, we report the observation of virtual photon emission from baryon-rich QCD matter. The spectral distribution of the electron–positron pairs is nearly exponential, providing evidence for a source of temperature in excess of 70 MeV with constituents whose properties have been modified, thus reflecting peculiarities of strong-interaction QCD matter. Its bulk properties are similar to the dense matter formed in the final state of a neutron star merger, as apparent from recent multimessenger observation.
AB - About 10 μs after the Big Bang, the universe was filled—in addition to photons and leptons—with strong-interaction matter consisting of quarks and gluons, which transitioned to hadrons at temperatures close to kT = 150 MeV and densities several times higher than those found in nuclei. This quantum chromodynamics (QCD) matter can be created in the laboratory as a transient state by colliding heavy ions at relativistic energies. The different phases in which QCD matter may exist depend for example on temperature, pressure or baryochemical potential, and can be probed by studying the emission of electromagnetic radiation. Electron–positron pairs emerge from the decay of virtual photons, which immediately decouple from the strong interaction, and thus provide information about the properties of QCD matter at various stages. Here, we report the observation of virtual photon emission from baryon-rich QCD matter. The spectral distribution of the electron–positron pairs is nearly exponential, providing evidence for a source of temperature in excess of 70 MeV with constituents whose properties have been modified, thus reflecting peculiarities of strong-interaction QCD matter. Its bulk properties are similar to the dense matter formed in the final state of a neutron star merger, as apparent from recent multimessenger observation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85069915641&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41567-019-0583-8
DO - 10.1038/s41567-019-0583-8
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85069915641
SN - 1745-2473
VL - 15
SP - 1040
EP - 1045
JO - Nature Physics
JF - Nature Physics
IS - 10
ER -