Final Activity Report Summary - STRINTQGP (Strong interactions in the quark-gluon plasma)
Altogether, they evidence that the quark-gluon plasma is strongly coupled even at temperatures as large as few times the deconfinement critical temperature in QCD. Numerical simulations of finite-temperature QCD on the lattice complement the heavy-ion experimental program. They provide a lot of new information on the nonperturbative properties of QCD in both the hadronic and the quark-gluon plasma phases.
The main objective for this project was the analysis of nonperturbative thermodynamics and kinetics of the quark-gluon plasma, as those are described by the RHIC experiments and lattice simulations. The project can be charecterised by the following keywords:
quantum chromodynamics (QCD), quark-gluon plasma, heavy-ion collisions, confinement-deconfinement phase transition, static quark-antiquark potential, QCD string-breaking in the hadronic phase, Debye screening in the quark-gluon plasma phase, chromo-magnetic gluon condensate and spatial confinement, valence gluons, QCD running coupling, event-shape variables in QCD, QCD jets, radiative energy loss and jet quenching.
Specifically, the main results were obtained in the following four directions:
1. Description of the recent lattice data on the thermodynamics of a static quark-antiquark pair at separations larger than 1.5 fermi, in the vicinity of the deconfinement phase transition.
2. The analysis of the so-called infra-red freezing (i.e. finiteness) of the running strong coupling, in the confinement and deconfinement phases of QCD.
3. Analysis of the energy loss of a parton traversing the quark-gluon plasma, which it experiences through the interactions with hard thermal gluons.
4. Studies of the degree to which the quark-gluon plasma deviates from ideality.
These results are fundamentally important for the calculation of various kinetic coefficients of the quark-gluon plasma, such as the bulk viscosity.