Office Hours: Wednesday 1:30pm - 3:30pm
Research Interests:
The experimental nuclear physics group at the University of Colorado studies the properties of the strong nuclear interaction, one of the four fundamental forces, under extreme conditions. When ordinary nuclear matter is subjected to sufficiently high temperatures and densities, the sub-atomic quark and gluon particles which comprise it become free and form a quark-gluon plasma (QGP). In the first few microseconds after the Big Bang, all the quarks and gluons which would eventually condense into the nuclear matter we see around us existed in a QGP phase. Thus, studying this phase of matter allows us to explore the properties of the Early Universe. We can create these high-temperature, high-density conditions at particle colliders around the world such as at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) or Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). In these machines, large nuclei (called heavy ions) are accelerated to energies equal to several hundred or thousand times their rest mass and brought into a head-on collision, creating a droplet of primordial QGP.
Our group is involved in the Heavy Ions program at the at the LHC, situated at in Geneva, Switzerland. The LHC collides pairs of nuclei and nuclei with protons at TeV-scale energies, producing the hottest matter ever made on Earth (over five trillion Kelvin). Within ATLAS, we participate in operational data-taking at the LHC and in offline data analysis. In addition, we are involved in building the next-generation collider detector for nuclear physics, the at RHIC, situated at in Long Island, NY. RHIC is a versatile machine which can collide a variety of nuclear species and investigate the QGP under conditions closer to the phase transition temperature than the LHC. Our work for sPHENIX includes experimental beam tests of calorimeters, development the electronic trigger system, and simulations work.
My particular research areas are: (1) understanding how high-energy quarks and gluons lose energy as the traverse the QGP using reconstructed jet, electroweak, and heavy flavor probes; (2) finding the limiting system size or conditions under which traditional signatures of QGP formation appear or disappear; and (3) exploring the momentum and spatial structure of nuclei in small collision systems where a sizable region of QGP is not expected to be formed.
Publications:
A full list of my ATLAS, PHENIX (and eventually sPHENIX), neutron scattering, and few-author papers may be found at .
Publications and Preliminary results from the ATLAS Heavy Ions working group can be found at the .
In the News:
- February 2020:ÌýÂ鶹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØphysicist wins top science award
- September 2017: Dennis Perepelitsa Named DOE Early Career Award Winner
- July 2017:ÌýNational Nuclear Physics School 2017 Hosted in Boulder
- February 2017: Brookhaven National Laboratory Receives Approval for Upgraded sPHENIX Detector
- September 2016: Physics Professor Dennis Perepelitsa wins Lee Grodzins Postdoctoral Award