CERN Accelerating science

Article
Report number arXiv:2201.00202
Title Possible early universe signals in proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider
Author(s) Sahoo, Raghunath (Indian Inst. Tech., Kanpur ; CERN) ; Nayak, Tapan Kumar (CERN ; NISER, Jatni)
Publication 2021
Imprint 2022-01-01
Number of pages 7
Note 7 pages and 7 figures, written for general multi-disciplinary readers, Published version in Current Science
In: Curr. Sci. 121 (2021) 1403
DOI 10.18520/cs/v121/i11/1403-1408 (publication)
Subject category nucl-th ; Nuclear Physics - Theory ; nucl-ex ; Nuclear Physics - Experiment ; hep-th ; Particle Physics - Theory ; hep-ex ; Particle Physics - Experiment ; hep-ph ; Particle Physics - Phenomenology
Abstract Our universe was born about 13.8 billion years ago from an extremely hot and dense singular point, in a process known as the Big Bang. The hot and dense matter which dominated the system within a few microseconds of its birth was in the form of a soup of elementary quarks and gluons, known as the quark-gluon plasma (QGP). Signatures compatible with the formation of the QGP matter have experimentally been observed in heavy-ion (such as Au or Pb) collisions at ultra-relativistic energies. Recently, experimental data of proton-proton (pp) collisions at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) have also shown signals resembling those of the QGP formation, which made these studies quite stimulating as to how the collision of small systems features in producing the early universe signals. In this article, we report on some of the compelling experimental results and give an account of the present understanding. We review the pp physics program at the LHC and discuss future prospects in the context of exploring the nature of the primordial matter in the early universe.
Copyright/License preprint: (License: CC BY 4.0)



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