Quarkonium tomography of heavy ion collisions at the LHC
Ivan Vitev

TL;DR
This paper investigates quarkonium suppression in heavy ion collisions at the LHC, using a theoretical model that combines dissociation and screening effects, providing insights into the quark-gluon plasma's properties.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive formalism for quarkonium suppression that matches experimental data and offers predictions for future collision energies and smaller systems.
Findings
Good agreement with experimental suppression patterns
Predictions for 5.02 TeV Pb+Pb collisions
Preliminary results for Xe+Xe collisions
Abstract
Quarkonium production in high-energy hadronic collisions provides a fundamental test of QCD. Its modification in a nuclear medium is a sensitive probe of the space-time temperature profile and transport properties of the QGP, yielding constraints complementary to the ones obtained from the quenching of light hadrons and jets, and open heavy flavor. In these proceedings, we report new results for the suppression of high transverse momentum charmonium [] and bottomonium [] states in Pb+Pb collisions at the Large Hadron Collider. Our theoretical formalism combines the collisional dissociation of quarkonia, as they propagate in the quark-gluon plasma, with the thermal wavefunction effects due to the screening of the attractive potential in the medium. We find that a good description of the relative suppression of…
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