Où docteurs et entreprises se rencontrent
Menu
Connexion

PhD in subatomic physics (M/F) – Quarkonia production in proton-proton and nucleus-nucleus collisions at LHC in ALICE experiment

ABG-138742 Sujet de Thèse
27/04/2026 Contrat doctoral
Nantes Université
NANTES - Pays de la Loire - France
PhD in subatomic physics (M/F) – Quarkonia production in proton-proton and nucleus-nucleus collisions at LHC in ALICE experiment
  • Physique

Description du sujet

Ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions delivered by the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) provides extreme conditions of temperature and density of nuclear matter allowing the study of Quark Gluon Plasma, a deconfined state of quarks and gluons, predicted by Quantum ChromoDynamics (QCD).

Quarkonia, pairs of heavy quark and anti-quark, are produced very early during a heavy ion collision. Therefore, they are very useful to understand the initial stages of such collisions and characterize the QGP evolution and properties. Indeed, they are very sensitive to the temperature of the medium created during the heavy ion collision. If the temperature is high enough, the charmed quark pairs initially produced will be dissolved in the medium. This phenomenon is called quarkonia suppression. 

The measurements done at LHC during Run 1 and 2 shed a new light on quarkonia production mechanisms. In particular, the J/ψ suppression is not as high as expected in the most central collisions. Indeed, the massive production of charm quarks at the LHC energies allows these quarks, after interaction in QGP, to form a new quarkonia state. This regeneration mechanism could explain the observed production of charmonia. 

However, the constraints that such measurements provide on theoretical models are still limited since the measurements are done on inclusive charmonia production. The Run 3 at LHC allows to separate the charmonia directly produced during the collisions from the ones produced by other particle decays such as B meson. The separation of these two components is necessary to understand the production and interaction with the medium of charmonia. This is possible in Run3 with ALICE thanks to the new Muon Forward Tracker detector that has been installed in the experiment. 

The goal of the PhD will be to study the quarkonia production in the muon decay channel at forward rapidities using data collected during the Run3 ALICE data taking in pp, pO, Ne-Ne, OO and/or Pb-Pb. The candidate will be involved in the data analysis on one of the topics of interest currently explored by the group.

This thesis focuses on the study and understanding of the mechanisms governing the production and interaction of heavy flavors in a quark-gluon plasma within the ALICE experiment. The Subatech laboratory has made a significant contribution to the design, construction, and implementation of the Muon Forward Tracker detector within ALICE for the 2022–2026 data run. The goal of this thesis is to analyze the data collected with this detector in order to separate the charm and beauty contributions in quarkonium production. Additionally, one of the key objectives of this thesis will be the development of machine learning-based algorithms for data analysis. 

Prise de fonction :

01/10/2026

Nature du financement

Contrat doctoral

Précisions sur le financement

Présentation établissement et labo d'accueil

Nantes Université

 

The candidate will join the SUBATECH PLASMA team (9 permanent physicists and 2 PhD students). He/she will be involved in ALICE experiment analysis software developments, and the calibration of the detectors (MFT, Muon spectrometer).

As part of the ALICE collaboration the candidate will have access to the data and computing resources of the collaboration (computing grid, software…). 

Several stays at CERN (Switzerland) are foreseen.

Results will be presented in collaboration meetings, documented in internal analysis notes and published in scientific journals. At least one talk in an international conference is expected during the PhD.

Etablissement délivrant le doctorat

Nantes Université

Profil du candidat

  • Master degree in particle physics, hadronic physics or nuclear physics 
  • Good knowledge in programming (C++ or object oriented language, python)
  • Good knowledge in english  (writing, speaking)
  • Skills in teamwork and communication
31/05/2026
Partager via
Postuler
Fermer

Vous avez déjà un compte ?

Nouvel utilisateur ?