Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1835482 Nuclear and Particle Physics Proceedings 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The goal of ALICE at the CERN-LHC is to study the structure of the QCD phase diagram at extremely high temperature and very large energy density. In particular, ALICE focuses on the properties of the hot and dense matter created in ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions. The ALICE experiment features tracking to low transverse momentum (down to 150 MeV/c), as well as a variety of particle identification techniques, and jet identification. After the LS2 (2018-19 Long Shutdown), ALICE will focus on rare probes, such as heavy-flavors, quarkonia, photons and jets with improved performance, thanks to the detector upgrade which will further strengthen the physics potential of the experiment. In order to carry out the precision measurements of rare and untriggerable probes, the long-term strategy of the ALICE upgrade is to fully utilize high luminosity provided by the LHC after the LS2, and to collect 10 nb−1 at the collision rates of 50 kHz (luminosity L = 6 × 1027cm−2s−2). In this talk, we present the current status of the ALICE detector, the limitations of existing measures and the prospects for physical measurements with the upgrade.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Nuclear and High Energy Physics