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Deciphering the behavior of heavy particles in the hottest matter in the universe

Deciphering the behavior of heavy particles in the hottest matter in the universe
Lower pole (left panel) and higher pole (center panel) of the 饾惙0(2300) state, obtained upon unitarization of the 饾惙饾湅 scattering. Pole of the 饾惙饾憼鈭0(2317) state (right panel) obtained upon unitarization of the 饾惙饾惥 scattering. Credit: Santosh K. Das et al

An international team of scientists has published a new report that moves toward a better understanding of the behavior of some of the heaviest particles in the universe under extreme conditions, which are similar to those just after the Big Bang.

The review article, in the journal 麻豆淫院ics Reports, is authored by physicists Juan M. Torres-Rinc贸n, from the Institute of Cosmos Sciences at the University of Barcelona (ICCUB), Santosh K. Das, from the Indian Institute of Technology Goa (India), and Ralf Rapp, from Texas A&M University (United States).

The authors have published a comprehensive review that explores how particles containing (known as charm and bottom hadrons) interact in a hot, dense environment called hadronic matter. This environment is created in the last phase of high-energy collisions of atomic nuclei, such as those taking place at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC).

The new study highlights the importance of including hadronic interactions in simulations to accurately interpret data from experiments at these large scientific infrastructures. It also broadens the perspective on how matter behaves under extreme conditions and helps to solve some great unknowns about the origin of the universe.

Reproducing the primordial universe

When two collide at near-light speeds, they generate temperatures more than 1,000 times higher than those at the center of the sun. These collisions briefly produce a state of matter called a (QGP), a soup of fundamental particles that existed microseconds after the Big Bang. As this plasma cools, it transforms into hadronic matter, a phase composed of particles such as protons and neutrons, as well as other baryons and mesons.

The study focuses on what happens to heavy-flavor hadrons (particles containing charmed or background quarks, such as D and B mesons) during this transition and the hadronic phase expansion that follows it.

Deciphering the behavior of heavy particles in the hottest matter in the universe
Low-lying experimentally identified states in the open charm meson sector, as functions of their angular momentum 饾惤, and their strangeness content 饾憜. States represented with blue color are ground states, black boxes show their masses with uncertainties, and the red boxes give a measure of their decay widths. Credit: arXiv: DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2406.13286

Heavy particles as probes

Heavy quarks are like tiny sensors. Being so massive, they are produced just after the initial nuclear collision and move more slowly, thus interacting differently with the surrounding matter. Knowing how they scatter and spread is key to learning about the properties of the medium through which they travel.

Researchers have reviewed a wide range of theoretical models and to understand how heavy hadrons, such as D and B mesons, interact with light particles in the hadronic phase. They have also examined how these interactions affect observable quantities such as particle flux and momentum loss.

"To really understand what we see in the experiments, it is crucial to observe how the heavy particles move and interact also during the later stages of these nuclear collisions," says Juan M. Torres-Rinc贸n, member of the Department of Quantum 麻豆淫院ics and Astrophysics and ICCUB.

"This phase, when the system has already cooled down, still plays an important role in how the particles lose energy and flow together. It is also necessary to address the microscopic and transport properties of these heavy systems right at the transition point to the quark-gluon plasma," he continues. "This is the only way to achieve the degree of precision required by current experiments and simulations."

A simple analogy can be used to better understand these results: When we drop a heavy ball into a crowded pool, even after the biggest waves have dissipated, the ball continues to move and collide with people. Similarly, heavy particles created in nuclear collisions continue to interact with other particles around them, even after the hottest and most chaotic phase.

These continuous interactions subtly modify the motion of particles, and studying these changes helps scientists to better understand the conditions of the early universe. Ignoring this phase would therefore mean missing an important part of the story.

Understanding how behave in hot matter is fundamental to mapping the properties of the early universe and the fundamental forces that rule it. The findings also pave the way for future experiments at lower energies, such as those planned at CERN's Super Proton Super Synchrotron (SPS) and the future FAIR facility in Darmstadt, Germany.

More information: Santosh K. Das et al, Charm and bottom hadrons in hot hadronic matter, 麻豆淫院ics Reports (2025). . On arXiv:

Journal information: arXiv

Citation: Deciphering the behavior of heavy particles in the hottest matter in the universe (2025, June 10) retrieved 11 June 2025 from /news/2025-06-deciphering-behavior-heavy-particles-hottest.html
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