Bulletin of the American Physical Society
5th Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan
Volume 63, Number 12
Tuesday–Saturday, October 23–27, 2018; Waikoloa, Hawaii
Session LL: Mini-Symposium: Chirality and Vorticity in High-energy Nuclear Collisions
9:00 AM–11:30 AM,
Saturday, October 27, 2018
Hilton
Room: Queen's 5
Chair: Michael Lisa, The Ohio State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.HAW.LL.3
Abstract: LL.00003 : Quantitative Predictions for the Chiral Magnetic Effect with Event-By-Event Anomalous Viscous Fluid Dynamics from AuAu to Isobaric Collisions at RHIC*
(Author Not Attending)
Presenter:
Jinfeng Liao
(Indiana Univ - Bloomington)
Author:
Jinfeng Liao
(Indiana Univ - Bloomington)
Chiral Magnetic Effect (CME) is the macroscopic manifestation of the fundamental chiral anomaly in a many-body system of chiral fermions, and emerges as a generic anomalous transport current in the hydrodynamic framework. The study of CME has attracted significant recent interest across many disciplines from condensed matter to nuclear physics. An experimental observation of CME in heavy ion collisions would further provide the tantalizing evidence for the chiral symmetry restoration as well as QCD topological fluctuations. Currently the most pressing theoretical challenge is the quantitative modeling of CME while also accounting for background contamination. We report a significant step forward toward this goal, by the development of the full-fledged Event-By-Event Anomalous Viscous Fluid Dynamics (EBE-AVFD) framework. We use the EBE-AVFD to generate millions of simulation events which are then analyzed with the same observables and methods as the experimental analysis. We present a systematic analysis of CME signals in CuCu, AuAu and UU collisions at RHIC. We also make state-of-the-art quantitative predictions for the CME signals in isobaric collisions (RuRu v.s. ZrZr) at RHIC.
*NSF PHY-1352368 and DOE BEST Collaboration.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.HAW.LL.3
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