ALICE is the acronym for A Large Ion Collider Experiment, the experiment at the Large Hadron Collider devoted to the physics of matter at infinitely small scale exploiting heavy-ion collisions. Its scientific programme aims at answering a series of fundamental questions such as:
- What is the phase of matter under extreme conditions of temperature, 200'000 times larger than the temperature at the center of the Sun ?
- What generates the mass mass of ordinary matter such that the protons and neutrons weight 100 times more than the quarks they are made of ?
- What is the dynamics of the strong interaction that binds quarks inside ordinary matter ? You can find more information on the ALICE detector and physics on the ALICE website
About ALICE Data
The following are provided through this portal:
Data in the primary datasets are in a format known as ESD (Event Summary Data), produced by the ALICE reconstruction procedure
Disclaimer
- The open data are released under the Creative Commons CC0 waiver. Neither ALICE nor CERN endorse any works, scientific or otherwise, produced using these data.
- All released data samples will have a unique DOI that you are requested to cite in any applications or publications.
- Despite being processed, the high-level primary datasets remain complex and selection criteria need to be applied in order to analyse them, requiring some understanding of particle physics and detector functioning. The data cannot be viewed in simple data tables for spreadsheet-based analyses.
- ALICE had just started data taking in 2010 and the methods are evolving, in particular to respond to the evolving beam conditions of the LHC.