ALICE INDICO
- ongoing - Hard Probes 2023 (and Moriond) rehearsals
- 09:00 EPN Technical Meeting
- 09:30 MFT Operation Board Online
- 09:30 CERN HF and jet weekly meeting CERN 160/R-009
- 09:30 Meeting of spokesperson office with physics coordinators
- 10:00 ALICE 3 Simulation and Performance
- 11:00 O2 DQ developments CERN
- 13:30 FoCal-H Meeting 23 March 2023
- 14:00 TPSCo65 - ITS3 WP2 Designers Meeting
- 14:00 Physics Board Meeting CERN 160/R-009
- 15:00 Flattenicity meeting
- 15:00 O2 RCT dev meeting
- 15:00 Release Coordination Weekly Meeting CERN 3294/R-008
- 15:00 FOCAL physics and simulation meeting
- 15:30 PWG HF - PWG JE shared PAG HF-Jets
- 15:30 FIT Software Meeting CERN
- 16:00 ALICE Nuclei and Exotica PAG meeting Zoom Virtual
- 16:30 RC Daily Meeting CERN 3294/R-008
- 17:00 TPC-QC meeting
- 18:00 Hadrex group meeting DRCC/IFGW Auditório Méson Pi
ALICE Calendar
ALICE mission
The ALICE Collaboration has built a detector optimized to study the collisions of nuclei at the ultra-relativistic energies provided by the LHC. The aim is to study the physics of strongly interacting matter at the highest energy densities reached so far in the laboratory. In such conditions, an extreme phase of matter - called the quark-gluon plasma - is formed. Our universe is thought to have been in such a primordial state for the first few millionths of a second after the Big Bang, before quarks and gluons were bound together to form protons and neutrons. Recreating this primordial state of matter in the laboratory and understanding how it evolves will allow us to shed light on questions about how matter is organized and the mechanisms that confine quarks and gluons. For this purpose, we are carrying out a comprehensive study of the hadrons, electrons, muons, and photons produced in the collisions of heavy nuclei (208Pb). ALICE is also studying proton-proton and proton-nucleus collisions both as a comparison with nucleus-nucleus collisions and in their own right. In 2021 ALICE is completing a significant upgrade of its detectors to further enhance its capabilities and continue its scientific journey at the LHC for many years to come.
Latest ALICE Submissions
Upcoming Conferences (Next Week)
Jobs info
Jobs info
Job - Postdoctoral Researcher - Machine Learning in Nuclear Physics, Brookhaven National Laboratory (22-03-2023) |
Job - Tenure Track Position in DUNE at LAPP (Annecy) (21-03-2023) |
ALICE Job - Advertisement for Detector Physicist Position at STFC Daresbury Laboratory, UK (16-03-2023) |
Job - Detector Physicist (permanent staff) (14-03-2023) |
Job - Assistant professor at University of Groningen (NL) (13-03-2023) |
Diversity and Inclusivity in ALICE
The ALICE Collaboration embraces and values the diversity of its team members and colleagues. We are committed to fostering an inclusive environment for all people regardless of their nationality/culture, profession, age/generation, family situation and gender, as well as individual differences such as but not limited to ethnic origin, sexual orientation, belief, disability, or opinions provided that they are consistent with the Organization’s values.
News of cards
The Zero Degree Calorimeter (ZDC) is fully commissioned for data taking in Run 3. Read more ...
The ALICE collaboration submitted a letter of intent for ALICE 3 - the next-generation heavy-ion experiment for LHC Run 5 and 6 (from the year 2035 onwards).
ALICE DCS measured the effects of Tonga volcano eruption (and confirmed the speed of sound)