NA49 experiment
The NA49 experiment ("North Area experiment 49") was a particle physics experiment that investigated the properties of quark–gluon plasma. It took place in the North Area of the Super Proton Synchrotron at CERN from 1991-2002. It used a large-acceptance hadron detector (a time projection chamber) to investigate reactions induced by the collision of various heavy ions (such as those of lead) on targets made of a variety of elements.
The NA49 experiment was the follow-up to the NA35 experiment, and was approved on 18 September 1991. The experiment began taking data in November 1994 and was completed on 19 October 2002. It was succeeded by the NA61 experiment (SHINE). The spokespersons for the experiment are and Reinhard Stock.
See also[]
- NA35 experiment
- NA61 experiment
- List of SPS experiments
External links[]
- NA49 experiment website
- NA49 experiment 'general public' website
- NA49 experiment @ CERN Document Server (Includes both committee documents and publications of the NA49 collaboration)
- CERN-NA-49 experiment record on INSPIRE-HEP
Categories:
- CERN experiments
- Particle experiments
- Accelerator physics stubs