Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2015 Fall Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics
Volume 60, Number 13
Wednesday–Saturday, October 28–31, 2015; Santa Fe, New Mexico
Session KB: Awards Session |
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Chair: John Wilkerson, University of North Carolina Room: Sweeney Ballroom A |
Friday, October 30, 2015 2:00PM - 2:36PM |
KB.00001: 2015 DNP Mentoring Award Talk Invited Speaker: John Dirk Walecka I will talk about my students. [Preview Abstract] |
Friday, October 30, 2015 2:36PM - 3:12PM |
KB.00002: The standard model for relativistic heavy-ion collisions and electromagnetic tomography Invited Speaker: Chun Shen The relativistic heavy-ion programs at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC) and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is entering a new era of precision investigation into the behavior of deconfined, strongly-interacting matter -- the Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP). In this talk, focused on work done for my dissertation, I introduce a standard theoretical framework to study the bulk dynamics and electromagnetic probes of relativistic heavy-ion collisions. With this framework, a broad range of phenomenological studies on hadronic and electromagnetic observables has been done and utilized to extract information about the transport properties of the QGP as well as about the initial state fluctuation spectrum. Electromagnetic tomography provides complementary constraints on determining the QGP viscosities. [Preview Abstract] |
Friday, October 30, 2015 3:12PM - 3:48PM |
KB.00003: The DOE Isotopes Program Invited Speaker: Jehanne Gillo The DOE Isotope Program is a small federal program with a great deal of impact and is managed by the DOE Office of Nuclear Physics. The Isotope Program has been managed by the Office of Nuclear Physics since 2009, and since that time, has been re-defined in terms of mission, scope and operations. The program produces critical isotopes that are in short supply or simply unavailable from elsewhere to facilitate research and applications. Research is also supported to develop or improve production techniques that will increase availability of isotopes in high demand, such as alpha emitters for cancer therapy. [Preview Abstract] |
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