Institution
Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar
Facility•Bhubaneswar, Orissa, India•
About: Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar is a facility organization based out in Bhubaneswar, Orissa, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Large Hadron Collider & Higgs boson. The organization has 566 authors who have published 1768 publications receiving 64889 citations.
Topics: Large Hadron Collider, Higgs boson, Hadron, Pseudorapidity, Quark
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the most important experimental results from the first three years of nucleus-nucleus collision studies at RHIC were reviewed, with emphasis on results of the STAR experiment.
2,750 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the theoretical formulation of supersymmetric quantum mechanics and discuss many applications, including shape invariance and operator transformations, and show that a supersymmetry inspired WKB approximation is exact for a class of shape invariant potentials.
2,688 citations
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B. I. Abelev1, Madan M. Aggarwal2, Zubayer Ahammed3, A. V. Alakhverdyants4 +345 more•Institutions (49)
1,696 citations
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TL;DR: The Large Ion Collider Experiment (ALICE) as discussed by the authors is a general-purpose, heavy-ion detector at the CERN LHC which focuses on QCD, the strong-interaction sector of the Standard Model.
Abstract: ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) is a general-purpose, heavy-ion detector at the CERN LHC which focuses on QCD, the strong-interaction sector of the Standard Model. It is designed to address the physics of strongly interacting matter and the quark-gluon plasma at extreme values of energy density and temperature in nucleus-nucleus collisions. Besides running with Pb ions, the physics programme includes collisions with lighter ions, lower energy running and dedicated proton-nucleus runs. ALICE will also take data with proton beams at the top LHC energy to collect reference data for the heavy-ion programme and to address several QCD topics for which ALICE is complementary to the other LHC detectors. The ALICE detector has been built by a collaboration including currently over 1000 physicists and engineers from 105 Institutes in 30 countries. Its overall dimensions are 161626 m3 with a total weight of approximately 10 000 t. The experiment consists of 18 different detector systems each with its own specific technology choice and design constraints, driven both by the physics requirements and the experimental conditions expected at LHC. The most stringent design constraint is to cope with the extreme particle multiplicity anticipated in central Pb-Pb collisions. The different subsystems were optimized to provide high-momentum resolution as well as excellent Particle Identification (PID) over a broad range in momentum, up to the highest multiplicities predicted for LHC. This will allow for comprehensive studies of hadrons, electrons, muons, and photons produced in the collision of heavy nuclei. Most detector systems are scheduled to be installed and ready for data taking by mid-2008 when the LHC is scheduled to start operation, with the exception of parts of the Photon Spectrometer (PHOS), Transition Radiation Detector (TRD) and Electro Magnetic Calorimeter (EMCal). These detectors will be completed for the high-luminosity ion run expected in 2010. This paper describes in detail the detector components as installed for the first data taking in the summer of 2008.
1,218 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the production of mesons containing strange quarks (KS, φ) and both singly and doubly strange baryons (,, and − + +) are measured at mid-rapidity in pp collisions at √ s = 0.9 TeV with the ALICE experiment at the LHC.
1,176 citations
Authors
Showing all 571 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Zoltan Laszlo Trocsanyi | 134 | 1492 | 93255 |
Peter Raics | 128 | 1219 | 80843 |
Aruna Nayak | 128 | 1158 | 79945 |
Balazs Ujvari | 125 | 1105 | 77728 |
János Karancsi | 124 | 1070 | 72010 |
Bedangadas Mohanty | 116 | 827 | 49619 |
Basanta Kumar Nandi | 112 | 572 | 43331 |
Y. P. Viyogi | 111 | 467 | 41044 |
D. P. Mahapatra | 106 | 376 | 38487 |
Raghunath Sahoo | 106 | 556 | 37588 |
R. K. Choudhury | 87 | 454 | 38281 |
M. Pachr | 85 | 232 | 24470 |
Susan L. Swain | 84 | 332 | 27152 |
Pradip Kumar Sahu | 78 | 378 | 20153 |
Anand Kumar Dubey | 78 | 341 | 18808 |