Challenges in QCD matter physics - The Compressed Baryonic Matter experiment at FAIR
CBM Collaboration: T. Ablyazimov, A. Abuhoza, R.P. Adak, M. Adamczyk,, K. Agarwal, M.M. Aggarwal, Z. Ahammed, F. Ahmad, N. Ahmad, S. Ahmad, A., Akindinov, P. Akishin, E. Akishina, T. Akishina, V. Akishina, A. Akram, M., Al-Turany, I. Alekseev, E. Alexandrov, I. Alexandrov

TL;DR
The paper discusses the CBM experiment at FAIR, designed to explore the QCD phase diagram at high baryon densities, aiming to discover new properties of dense nuclear matter and its implications for understanding the strong interaction.
Contribution
It introduces the CBM experiment's design, goals, and its potential to uncover the QCD phase structure at high baryon densities, complementing existing high-energy research.
Findings
Preparation activities for data collection starting in 2022.
Expected to provide insights into the QCD phase diagram at high mu_B.
Potential to discover new phases of dense nuclear matter.
Abstract
Substantial experimental and theoretical efforts worldwide are devoted to explore the phase diagram of strongly interacting matter. At LHC and top RHIC energies, QCD matter is studied at very high temperatures and nearly vanishing net-baryon densities. There is evidence that a Quark-Gluon-Plasma (QGP) was created at experiments at RHIC and LHC. The transition from the QGP back to the hadron gas is found to be a smooth cross over. For larger net-baryon densities and lower temperatures, it is expected that the QCD phase diagram exhibits a rich structure, such as a first-order phase transition between hadronic and partonic matter which terminates in a critical point, or exotic phases like quarkyonic matter. The discovery of these landmarks would be a breakthrough in our understanding of the strong interaction and is therefore in the focus of various high-energy heavy-ion research programs.…
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