\/svg>","ionicons-filled--link":"<\/svg>"}) Accessibility Tools Invert colors Monochrome Dark contrast Light contrast Low saturation High saturation Highlight links Highlight headings Screen reader Read mode Content scaling 100% Font size 100% Line height 100% Letter spacing 100% Skip to main content PL The Institute The Institute General information Emploees News Scientific News Gender equality plan Address and contact data Research Research profile List of publications List of Projects Information in BIP Scientific Council Organizational structure GDPR Events Seminars Current seminars List of seminars Conferences Current conferences Past conferences For students Doctoral school General Information Curriculum Recruitment School Council Doctoral Student Council Teaching Doctoral students Mid-term evaluation For students Master theses Student training Visiting the Institute For employees Institute e-mail Eduroam Publication registry Contact us Address and contact data Important phone numbers and emails PL The Institute The Institute General information Emploees News Scientific News Gender equality plan Address and contact data Research Research profile List of publications Information in BIP Scientific Council Organizational structure GDPR Events Seminars Current seminars List of seminars Conferences Current conferences Past conferences For students Doctoral school General Information Curriculum Recruitment School Council Doctoral Student Council Teaching Doctoral students Mid-term evaluation For students Master theses Student training Visiting the Institute For employees Institute e-mail Eduroam Publication registry Contact us Address and contact data Important phone numbers and emails Events Home Events List of seminars Seminar of the Institute of Theoretical Physics of University of Wrocław 12:15, 16-05-06 UWr, pl. Maksa Borna 9, sala 422 The hunt for (almost) perfect fluiddr Pasi HuovinenThe fundamental building blocks of matter, quarks and gluons, are always confined to form hadrons. However, we expect that in extremely large temperatures and densities this confinement would be broken and quarks and gluons would move freely forming so called quark matter or quark-gluon plasma. It is believed that such a state of matter did exist a few milliseconds after the big bang, and that it has been recreated in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions of large nuclei in the experiments at Brookhaven National Laboratory and CERN. It looks like that the matter created in these collisions has extraordinary properties like such a low kinematic viscosity that it has been described as perfect fluid. In this talk I will describe how we have come to believe that quark-gluon plasma has been created in the heavy-ion collisions, and our attempts to evaluate its hydrodynamical properties.
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The fundamental building blocks of matter, quarks and gluons, are always confined to form hadrons. However, we expect that in extremely large temperatures and densities this confinement would be broken and quarks and gluons would move freely forming so called quark matter or quark-gluon plasma. It is believed that such a state of matter did exist a few milliseconds after the big bang, and that it has been recreated in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions of large nuclei in the experiments at Brookhaven National Laboratory and CERN. It looks like that the matter created in these collisions has extraordinary properties like such a low kinematic viscosity that it has been described as perfect fluid. In this talk I will describe how we have come to believe that quark-gluon plasma has been created in the heavy-ion collisions, and our attempts to evaluate its hydrodynamical properties.