The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC ) is the first and one of only two operating heavy-
ion colliders, and the only
spin-polarized proton
A proton is a stable subatomic particle, symbol , Hydron (chemistry), H+, or 1H+ with a positive electric charge of +1 ''e'' (elementary charge). Its mass is slightly less than the mass of a neutron and approximately times the mass of an e ...
collider ever built. Located at
Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) in
Upton, New York, and used by an international team of researchers, it is the only operating particle collider in the US.
[
] By using RHIC to collide
ions traveling at
relativistic speeds, physicists study the
primordial form of matter that existed in the
universe
The universe is all of space and time and their contents. It comprises all of existence, any fundamental interaction, physical process and physical constant, and therefore all forms of matter and energy, and the structures they form, from s ...
shortly after the
Big Bang
The Big Bang is a physical theory that describes how the universe expanded from an initial state of high density and temperature. Various cosmological models based on the Big Bang concept explain a broad range of phenomena, including th ...
. By colliding spin-polarized protons, the spin structure of the
proton
A proton is a stable subatomic particle, symbol , Hydron (chemistry), H+, or 1H+ with a positive electric charge of +1 ''e'' (elementary charge). Its mass is slightly less than the mass of a neutron and approximately times the mass of an e ...
is explored.
RHIC is as of 2019 the second-highest-energy heavy-ion collider in the world, with nucleon energies for collisions reaching 100 GeV for gold ions and 250 GeV for protons. As of November 7, 2010, the
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) has collided heavy ions of lead at higher energies than RHIC. The LHC operating time for ions (lead–lead and lead–proton collisions) is limited to about one month per year.
In 2010, RHIC physicists published results of temperature measurements from earlier experiments which concluded that temperatures in excess of 345 MeV (4 terakelvin or 7 trillion degrees Fahrenheit) had been achieved in gold ion collisions, and that these collision temperatures resulted in the breakdown of "normal matter" and the creation of a liquid-like
quark–gluon plasma
Quark–gluon plasma (QGP or quark soup) is an interacting localized assembly of quarks and gluons at Thermodynamic equilibrium#Local and global equilibrium, thermal (local kinetic) and (close to) chemical (abundance) equilibrium. The word ''plasm ...
.
In January 2020, the US Department of Energy Office of Science selected the eRHIC design for the future
Electron–Ion collider (EIC), building on the existing RHIC facility at BNL.
RHIC will cease to operate in 2025.
The accelerator
RHIC is an intersecting
storage ring particle accelerator
A particle accelerator is a machine that uses electromagnetic fields to propel electric charge, charged particles to very high speeds and energies to contain them in well-defined particle beam, beams. Small accelerators are used for fundamental ...
. Two independent rings (arbitrarily denoted as "Blue" and "Yellow") circulate heavy
ions and/or polarized
proton
A proton is a stable subatomic particle, symbol , Hydron (chemistry), H+, or 1H+ with a positive electric charge of +1 ''e'' (elementary charge). Its mass is slightly less than the mass of a neutron and approximately times the mass of an e ...
s in opposite directions and allow a virtually free choice of colliding positively
charged particle
In physics, a charged particle is a particle with an electric charge. For example, some elementary particles, like the electron or quarks are charged. Some composite particles like protons are charged particles. An ion, such as a molecule or atom ...
s (the
eRHIC upgrade will allow collisions between positively and negatively charged particles). The RHIC double storage ring is
hexagonally shaped and has a circumference of , with curved edges in which stored particles are deflected and focused by 1,740
superconducting magnet
A superconducting magnet is an electromagnet made from coils of superconducting wire. They must be cooled to cryogenic temperatures during operation. In its superconducting state the wire has no electrical resistance and therefore can conduct much ...
s using
niobium-titanium conductors. The
dipole magnets operate at . The six interaction points (between the particles circulating in the two rings) are in the middle of the six relatively straight sections, where the two rings cross, allowing the particles to collide. The interaction points are enumerated by clock positions, with the injection near 6 o'clock. Two large experiments, STAR and sPHENIX, are located at 6 and 8 o'clock respectively. The sPHENIX experiment is the newest experiment to be built at RHIC, replacing PHENIX at the 8 o'clock position.
A particle passes through several stages of
boosters before it reaches the RHIC storage ring. The first stage for ions is the
electron beam ion source (EBIS), while for protons, the
linear accelerator
A linear particle accelerator (often shortened to linac) is a type of particle accelerator that accelerates charged subatomic particles or ions to a high speed by subjecting them to a series of oscillating electric potentials along a linear ...
(Linac) is used. As an example, gold nuclei leaving the EBIS have a
kinetic energy
In physics, the kinetic energy of an object is the form of energy that it possesses due to its motion.
In classical mechanics, the kinetic energy of a non-rotating object of mass ''m'' traveling at a speed ''v'' is \fracmv^2.Resnick, Rober ...
of per nucleon and have an electric charge ''Q'' = +32 (32 of 79 electrons stripped from the gold atom). The particles are then accelerated by the Booster
synchrotron to per nucleon, which injects the projectile now with ''Q'' = +77 into the
Alternating Gradient Synchrotron (AGS), before they finally reach per nucleon and are injected in a ''Q'' = +79 state (no electrons left) into the RHIC storage ring over the AGS-to-RHIC Transfer Line (AtR).
To date the types of particle combinations explored at RHIC are ,
, , , , , , , , and . The projectiles typically travel at a speed of 99.995% of the
speed of light
The speed of light in vacuum, commonly denoted , is a universal physical constant exactly equal to ). It is exact because, by international agreement, a metre is defined as the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time i ...
. For collisions, the
center-of-mass energy is typically per
nucleon-pair, and was as low as per
nucleon-pair. An average
luminosity
Luminosity is an absolute measure of radiated electromagnetic radiation, electromagnetic energy per unit time, and is synonymous with the radiant power emitted by a light-emitting object. In astronomy, luminosity is the total amount of electroma ...
of was targeted during the planning. The current average luminosity of the collider has reached , 44 times the design value.
[
] The heavy ion luminosity is substantially increased through
stochastic cooling.
One unique characteristic of RHIC is its capability to collide polarized protons. RHIC holds the record of highest energy polarized proton beams. Polarized protons are injected into RHIC and preserve this state throughout the energy ramp. This is a difficult task that is accomplished with the aid of corkscrew magnetics called 'Siberian snakes' (in RHIC a chain 4 helical
dipole magnets). The corkscrew induces the magnetic field to spiral along the direction of the beam
Run-9 achieved center-of-mass energy of on 12 February 2009. In Run-13 the average luminosity of the collider reached , with a time and intensity averaged polarization of 52%.
AC dipoles have been used in non-linear machine diagnostics for the first time in RHIC.
File:Helium refrigeration system at Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC).jpg, The 25 MW Helium refrigeration system that cools the superconducting magnets down to the operating temperature of 4.5 K
File:Arc dipole magnet of Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC).jpg, An arc dipole magnet. Electrical bus slots (top and bottom) and beam tube (middle) at the top section of the vacuum shell
File:Curvature of beam tube of Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider arc dipole magnet.jpg, Curvature of beam tube seen through the ends of an arc dipole magnet
File:Two main accelerator rings inside the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider tunnel.jpg, Two main accelerator rings inside the RHIC tunnel
File:STAR Detector at Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider.jpg, STAR detector
File:A Forward Silicon Vertex Detector (FVTX) sensor on a microscope.jpg, A Forward Silicon Vertex Detector (FVTX) sensor of PHENIX detector on a microscope
The experiments

There are two
detectors currently operating at RHIC:
STAR
A star is a luminous spheroid of plasma (physics), plasma held together by Self-gravitation, self-gravity. The List of nearest stars and brown dwarfs, nearest star to Earth is the Sun. Many other stars are visible to the naked eye at night sk ...
(6 o'clock, and near the AGS-to-RHIC Transfer Line) and
sPHENIX (8 o'clock), the successor to
PHENIX. PHOBOS (10 o'clock) completed its operation in 2005, and BRAHMS (2 o'clock) in 2006.
Among the two larger detectors, STAR is aimed at the detection of
hadron
In particle physics, a hadron is a composite subatomic particle made of two or more quarks held together by the strong nuclear force. Pronounced , the name is derived . They are analogous to molecules, which are held together by the electri ...
s with its system of
time projection chambers covering a large
solid angle and in a conventionally generated solenoidal
magnetic field
A magnetic field (sometimes called B-field) is a physical field that describes the magnetic influence on moving electric charges, electric currents, and magnetic materials. A moving charge in a magnetic field experiences a force perpendicular ...
, while PHENIX is further specialized in detecting rare and electromagnetic particles, using a partial coverage detector system in a superconductively generated axial magnetic field. The smaller detectors have larger
pseudorapidity coverage, PHOBOS has the largest
pseudorapidity coverage of all detectors, and tailored for bulk particle multiplicity measurement, while BRAHMS is designed for momentum spectroscopy, in order to study the so-called "small-''x''" and saturation physics. There is an additional experiment, PP2PP (now part of STAR), investigating
spin dependence in p + p
scattering
In physics, scattering is a wide range of physical processes where moving particles or radiation of some form, such as light or sound, are forced to deviate from a straight trajectory by localized non-uniformities (including particles and radiat ...
.
The spokespersons for each of the experiments are:
*STAR: Frank Geurts (
Rice University
William Marsh Rice University, commonly referred to as Rice University, is a Private university, private research university in Houston, Houston, Texas, United States. Established in 1912, the university spans 300 acres.
Rice University comp ...
) and Lijuan Ruan (
Brookhaven National Laboratory)
*PHENIX: Yasuyuki Akiba (
Riken)
*sPHENIX: Gunter Roland (
MIT) and David Morrison (
Brookhaven National Laboratory)
Current results
For the experimental objective of creating and studying the quark–gluon plasma, RHIC has the unique ability to provide baseline measurements for itself. This consists of both the lower energy and also lower
mass number
The mass number (symbol ''A'', from the German word: ''Atomgewicht'', "atomic weight"), also called atomic mass number or nucleon number, is the total number of protons and neutrons (together known as nucleons) in an atomic nucleus. It is appro ...
projectile combinations that do not result in the density of 200 GeV Au + Au collisions, like the p + p and d + Au collisions of the earlier runs, and also Cu + Cu collisions in Run-5.
Using this approach, important results of the measurement of the hot QCD matter created at RHIC are:
* Collective anisotropy, or
elliptic flow. The major part of the particles with lower
momenta is emitted following an angular distribution
(''p''
T is the transverse momentum,
angle with the reaction plane). This is a direct result of the elliptic shape of the nucleus overlap region during the collision and
hydrodynamical property of the matter created.
*
Jet quenching. In the heavy ion collision event, scattering with a high transverse ''p''
T can serve as a probe for the hot QCD matter, as it loses its energy while traveling through the medium. Experimentally, the quantity ''R
AA'' (''A'' is the mass number) being the quotient of observed jet yield in ''A'' + ''A'' collisions and ''N''
bin × yield in p + p collisions shows a strong damping with increasing ''A'', which is an indication of the new properties of the hot QCD matter created.
*
Color glass condensate saturation. The Balitsky–Fadin–Kuraev–Lipatov (BFKL) dynamics which are the result of a resummation of large logarithmic terms ln''(1/x)'' for
deep inelastic scattering with small Bjorken-''x'', saturate at a unitarity limit
, with ''N''
part/2 being the number of participant nucleons in a collision (as opposed to the number of binary collisions). The observed charged multiplicity follows the expected dependency of
, supporting the predictions of the
color glass condensate model. For a detailed discussion, see e.g.
Dmitri Kharzeev ''et al.''; for an overview of color glass condensates, see e.g. Iancu & Venugopalan.
* Particle ratios. The particle ratios predicted by statistical models allow the calculation of parameters such as the temperature at chemical freeze-out ''T''
ch and hadron chemical potential
. The experimental value ''T''
ch varies a bit with the model used, with most authors giving a value of 160 MeV < ''T''
ch < 180 MeV, which is very close to the expected QCD
phase transition
In physics, chemistry, and other related fields like biology, a phase transition (or phase change) is the physical process of transition between one state of a medium and another. Commonly the term is used to refer to changes among the basic Sta ...
value of approximately 170 MeV obtained by lattice QCD calculations (see e.g. Karsch).
While in the first years, theorists were eager to claim that RHIC has discovered the quark–gluon plasma (e.g. Gyulassy & McLarren), the experimental groups were more careful not to jump to conclusions, citing various variables still in need of further measurement. The present results shows that the matter created is a fluid with a viscosity near the quantum limit, but is unlike a weakly interacting plasma (a widespread yet not quantitatively unfounded belief on how quark–gluon plasma looks).
A recent overview of the physics result is provided by th
RHIC Experimental Evaluations 2004, a community-wide effort of RHIC experiments to evaluate the current data in the context of implication for formation of a new state of matter. These results are from the first three years of data collection at RHIC.
New results were published in ''
Physical Review Letters
''Physical Review Letters'' (''PRL''), established in 1958, is a peer-reviewed, scientific journal that is published 52 times per year by the American Physical Society. The journal is considered one of the most prestigious in the field of physics ...
'' on February 16, 2010, stating the discovery of the first hints of
symmetry transformations, and that the observations may suggest that bubbles formed in the aftermath of the collisions created in the RHIC may break
parity symmetry, which normally characterizes
interactions between
quark
A quark () is a type of elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter. Quarks combine to form composite particles called hadrons, the most stable of which are protons and neutrons, the components of atomic nucleus, atomic nuclei ...
s and
gluon
A gluon ( ) is a type of Massless particle, massless elementary particle that mediates the strong interaction between quarks, acting as the exchange particle for the interaction. Gluons are massless vector bosons, thereby having a Spin (physi ...
s.
[
]
The RHIC physicists announced new temperature measurements for these experiments of up to 4 trillion kelvins, the highest temperature ever achieved in a laboratory. It is described as a recreation of the conditions that existed during the
birth of the Universe.
[
]
Possible closure under flat nuclear science budget scenarios
In late 2012, the Nuclear Science Advisory Committee (NSAC) was asked to advise the Department of Energy's Office of Science and the National Science Foundation how to implement the nuclear science long range plan written in 2007, if future nuclear science budgets continue to provide no growth over the next four years. In a narrowly decided vote, the NSAC committee showed a slight preference, based on non-science related considerations, for shutting down RHIC rather than canceling the construction of the
Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB).
By October 2015, the budget situation had improved, and RHIC continued operations into the next decade.
The future
RHIC began operation in 2000 and until November 2010 was the highest-energy heavy-ion collider in the world. The
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) of
CERN
The European Organization for Nuclear Research, known as CERN (; ; ), is an intergovernmental organization that operates the largest particle physics laboratory in the world. Established in 1954, it is based in Meyrin, western suburb of Gene ...
, while used mainly for colliding protons, operates with heavy ions for about one month per year. The LHC has operated with 25 times higher energies per nucleon. As of 2018, RHIC and the LHC are the only operating hadron colliders in the world.
Due to the longer operating time per year, a greater number of colliding ion species and collision energies can be studied at RHIC. In addition and unlike the LHC, RHIC is also able to accelerate spin polarized protons, which would leave RHIC as the world's highest energy accelerator for studying spin-polarized proton structure.
A major upgrade is the Electron–Ion Collider (EIC), the addition of a 18 GeV high intensity electron beam facility, allowing electron–ion collisions. At least one new detector will have to be built to study the collisions. A review was published by Abhay Deshpande et al. in 2005. A more recent description is at:
On January 9, 2020, It was announced by Paul Dabbar, undersecretary of the US Department of Energy Office of Science, that the BNL eRHIC design has been selected for the future
electron–ion collider (EIC) in the United States. In addition to the site selection, it was announced that the BNL EIC had acquired CD-0 (mission need) from the Department of Energy.
Critics of high-energy experiments
Before RHIC started operation, critics postulated that the extremely high energy could produce catastrophic scenarios,
such as creating a
black hole
A black hole is a massive, compact astronomical object so dense that its gravity prevents anything from escaping, even light. Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity predicts that a sufficiently compact mass will form a black hole. Th ...
, a transition into a different
quantum mechanical vacuum
A vacuum (: vacuums or vacua) is space devoid of matter. The word is derived from the Latin adjective (neuter ) meaning "vacant" or "void". An approximation to such vacuum is a region with a gaseous pressure much less than atmospheric pressur ...
(see
false vacuum), or the creation of
strange matter that is more stable than ordinary
matter
In classical physics and general chemistry, matter is any substance that has mass and takes up space by having volume. All everyday objects that can be touched are ultimately composed of atoms, which are made up of interacting subatomic pa ...
. These hypotheses are complex, but many predict that the Earth would be destroyed in a time frame from seconds to millennia, depending on the theory considered. However, the fact that objects of the Solar System (e.g., the Moon) have been bombarded with
cosmic particles of significantly higher energies than that of RHIC and other man-made colliders for billions of years, without any harm to the Solar System, were among the most striking arguments that these hypotheses were unfounded.
The other main controversial issue was a demand by critics for
physicist
A physicist is a scientist who specializes in the field of physics, which encompasses the interactions of matter and energy at all length and time scales in the physical universe. Physicists generally are interested in the root or ultimate cau ...
s to reasonably exclude the
probability
Probability is a branch of mathematics and statistics concerning events and numerical descriptions of how likely they are to occur. The probability of an event is a number between 0 and 1; the larger the probability, the more likely an e ...
for such a catastrophic scenario. Physicists are unable to demonstrate experimental and
astrophysical constraints of zero probability of catastrophic events, nor that tomorrow Earth will be struck with a "
doomsday"
cosmic ray
Cosmic rays or astroparticles are high-energy particles or clusters of particles (primarily represented by protons or atomic nuclei) that move through space at nearly the speed of light. They originate from the Sun, from outside of the ...
(they can only calculate an upper limit for the likelihood). The result would be the same destructive scenarios described above, although obviously not caused by humans. According to this argument of upper limits, RHIC would still modify the chance for the Earth's survival by an infinitesimal amount.
Concerns were raised in connection with the RHIC particle accelerator, both in the media
[
] and in the popular science media. The risk of a doomsday scenario was indicated by
Martin Rees, with respect to the RHIC, as being at least a 1 in 50,000,000 chance. With regards to the production of
strangelets,
Frank Close, professor of physics at the
University of Oxford
The University of Oxford is a collegiate university, collegiate research university in Oxford, England. There is evidence of teaching as early as 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the List of oldest un ...
, indicates that "the chance of this happening is like you winning the major prize on the lottery 3 weeks in succession; the problem is that people believe it is possible to win the lottery 3 weeks in succession."
After detailed studies, scientists reached such conclusions as "beyond reasonable doubt, heavy-ion experiments at RHIC will not endanger our planet" and that there is "powerful empirical evidence against the possibility of dangerous strangelet production".
[
]
The debate started in 1999 with an exchange of letters in ''
Scientific American
''Scientific American'', informally abbreviated ''SciAm'' or sometimes ''SA'', is an American popular science magazine. Many scientists, including Albert Einstein and Nikola Tesla, have contributed articles to it, with more than 150 Nobel Pri ...
'' between
Walter L. Wagner and
F. Wilczek, in response to a previous article by M. Mukerjee. The media attention unfolded with an article in UK ''
Sunday Times'' of July 18, 1999, by J. Leake,
[
] closely followed by articles in the U.S. media. The controversy mostly ended with the report of a
committee
A committee or commission is a body of one or more persons subordinate to a deliberative assembly or other form of organization. A committee may not itself be considered to be a form of assembly or a decision-making body. Usually, an assembly o ...
convened by the
director of Brookhaven National Laboratory,
J. H. Marburger, ostensibly ruling out the catastrophic scenarios depicted.
[ However, the report left open the possibility that relativistic cosmic ray impact products might behave differently while transiting earth compared to "at rest" RHIC products; and the possibility that the qualitative difference between high-E proton collisions with earth or the moon might be different than gold on gold collisions at the RHIC. Wagner tried subsequently to stop full-energy collision at RHIC by filing Federal lawsuits in San Francisco and New York, but without success. The New York suit was dismissed on the technicality that the San Francisco suit was the preferred forum. The San Francisco suit was dismissed, but with leave to refile if additional information was developed and presented to the court.
On March 17, 2005, the ]BBC
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a British public service broadcaster headquartered at Broadcasting House in London, England. Originally established in 1922 as the British Broadcasting Company, it evolved into its current sta ...
published an article implying that researcher Horaţiu Năstase believes black holes have been created at RHIC. However, the original papers of H. Năstase and the ''New Scientist
''New Scientist'' is a popular science magazine covering all aspects of science and technology. Based in London, it publishes weekly English-language editions in the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia. An editorially separate organ ...
'' article cited by the BBC state that the correspondence of the hot dense QCD matter created in RHIC to a black hole is only in the sense of a correspondence of QCD scattering in Minkowski space and scattering in the ''AdS''5 × ''X''5 space in AdS/CFT; in other words, it is similar mathematically. Therefore, RHIC collisions might be described by mathematics relevant to theories of quantum gravity
Quantum gravity (QG) is a field of theoretical physics that seeks to describe gravity according to the principles of quantum mechanics. It deals with environments in which neither gravitational nor quantum effects can be ignored, such as in the v ...
within AdS/CFT, but the described physical phenomena are not the same.
Financial information
The RHIC project was sponsored by the United States Department of Energy
The United States Department of Energy (DOE) is an executive department of the U.S. federal government that oversees U.S. national energy policy and energy production, the research and development of nuclear power, the military's nuclear w ...
, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear physics. It had a line-item budget of 616.6 million U.S. dollars.[
For fiscal year 2006 the operational budget was reduced by 16.1 million U.S. dollars from the previous year, to 115.5 million U.S. dollars. Though operation under the fiscal year 2006 federal budget cut was uncertain, a key portion of the operational cost (13 million U.S. dollars) was contributed privately by a group close to Renaissance Technologies of East Setauket, New York.
]
In fiction
* The novel ''Cosm'' () by the American author Gregory Benford takes place at RHIC. The science fiction
Science fiction (often shortened to sci-fi or abbreviated SF) is a genre of speculative fiction that deals with imaginative and futuristic concepts. These concepts may include information technology and robotics, biological manipulations, space ...
setting describes the main character Alicia Butterworth, a physicist at the BRAHMS experiment, and a new universe
The universe is all of space and time and their contents. It comprises all of existence, any fundamental interaction, physical process and physical constant, and therefore all forms of matter and energy, and the structures they form, from s ...
being created in RHIC by accident, while running with uranium
Uranium is a chemical element; it has chemical symbol, symbol U and atomic number 92. It is a silvery-grey metal in the actinide series of the periodic table. A uranium atom has 92 protons and 92 electrons, of which 6 are valence electrons. Ura ...
ions.[
]
* The zombie apocalypse novel '' The Rising'' by the American author Brian Keene referenced the media concerns of activating the RHIC raised by the article in ''The Sunday Times
''The Sunday Times'' is a British Sunday newspaper whose circulation makes it the largest in Britain's quality press market category. It was founded in 1821 as ''The New Observer''. It is published by Times Newspapers Ltd, a subsidiary of N ...
'' of July 18, 1999, by J. Leake. As revealed very early in the story, side effects of the collider experiments of the RHIC (located at "Havenbrook National Laboratories") were the cause of the zombie uprising in the novel and its sequel '' City of the Dead''.
See also
* The ISABELLE Project
* Large Hadron Collider
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the world's largest and highest-energy particle accelerator. It was built by the CERN, European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) between 1998 and 2008, in collaboration with over 10,000 scientists, ...
References
Further reading
* Preprints are available at
:
BRAHMS
:
:
:
STAR
External links
*
Brookhaven National Laboratory Collider-Accelerator Department
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Google Maps
RHIC Run Overview
{{Hadron colliders
Particle accelerators
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Laboratories in the United States