Anna Porredon (Ohio State University) “Dark Energy Survey Year 3 Results from Galaxy Clustering and Weak Lensing”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

ABSTRACT: The cosmological information extracted from photometric surveys is more robust when multiple probes of the large-scale structure of the universe are used. Two of the most sensitive probes are galaxy clustering and weak lensing. I will present cosmological results …

Anna Porredon (Ohio State University) “Dark Energy Survey Year 3 Results from Galaxy Clustering and Weak Lensing” Read More »

Anya Butter (Heidelberg University) “Big Data Techniques for Precision Simulations and Optimal Observables”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

ABSTRACT: Over the next years, measurements at the LHC and the HL-LHC will provide us with a wealth of data. The best hope of answering fundamental questions like the nature of dark matter, is to adopt big data techniques in …

Anya Butter (Heidelberg University) “Big Data Techniques for Precision Simulations and Optimal Observables” Read More »

Nedaa Alexandra Asbah (Harvard) “Evidence of the Four-Top-Quark Production at the LHC”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

ABSTRACT: A summary of the latest results on the evidence of the four-top-quark production using proton-proton collision data at a centre of-mass energy of 13 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider with an integrated luminosity …

Nedaa Alexandra Asbah (Harvard) “Evidence of the Four-Top-Quark Production at the LHC” Read More »

Kendall Mahn (Michigan State University) “Results from T2K  and the current landscape of neutrino oscillation”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

Abstract: Neutrinos are a tiny subatomic particle with surprising properties under active study. In particular, neutrinos oscillate, that is, they convert from one type of neutrino to another, is a surprising phenomenon under active study. The origin of neutrino mass …

Kendall Mahn (Michigan State University) “Results from T2K  and the current landscape of neutrino oscillation” Read More »

Christian Bauer (LBNL) “Quantum computing for High Energy Physics”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

ABSTRACT: I will review the Quantum Computing efforts in the Physics division, with the goal of allowing to calculate important properties of the Standard Model non-perturbatively and ultimately to simulate scattering at colliders from first principles. I will present several …

Christian Bauer (LBNL) “Quantum computing for High Energy Physics” Read More »

Derun Li (LBNL) “Overview of the Muon Collider challenges and R&D Progress under the US Muon Accelerator Program (MAP)”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

Abstract: There is an increasingly growing interest in Muon Collider in High Energy Physics community and Snowmass 2021.  Considerable progresses have been made under the US Muon Accelerator Program (MAP) to target technical challenges associated with Muon Collider.  The US …

Derun Li (LBNL) “Overview of the Muon Collider challenges and R&D Progress under the US Muon Accelerator Program (MAP)” Read More »

Laura Jeanty (Oregon) “Perspectives from Run 2: Status and Outlook for Supersymmetry Searches at the LHC”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

ABSTRACT: The second run of the LHC, from 2015-2018, produced an unprecedented trove of data in which the ATLAS and CMS collaborations have been searching for evidence of new particles and new phenomena. Supersymmetry remains one of the most promising theories for new physics accessible at …

Laura Jeanty (Oregon) “Perspectives from Run 2: Status and Outlook for Supersymmetry Searches at the LHC” Read More »

Caterina Vernieri (Stanford) “A “Cool” Route to Unveil the Higgs Boson’s Secrets”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

ABSTRACT: The Higgs boson was discovered in 2012 by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at the world’s most powerful particle collider, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in Geneva, Switzerland. This particle plays a unique role in fundamental physics. It gives …

Caterina Vernieri (Stanford) “A “Cool” Route to Unveil the Higgs Boson’s Secrets” Read More »

Taylor Hoyt (University of Chicago) “Using Astrophysical Distance Indicators to Test Standard Cosmology”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

Abstract: Measurements of the universe's present-day expansion rate, or the Hubble constant (H0), that use a Cepheid variable star calibration of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are in >4σ disagreement with values predicted by the standard, Lambda cold dark matter …

Taylor Hoyt (University of Chicago) “Using Astrophysical Distance Indicators to Test Standard Cosmology” Read More »

Emily Ann Thompson (DESY) “The Quest For Long-Lived Particles: Searching For Displaced Vertices and Tracking in the Trigger”

Zoom Talk 50A-5132, Berkeley, ca

Abstract: The existence of long-lived particles (LLPs) is a common feature in many theories beyond the Standard Model. For example, models with small couplings (i.e. R-parity-violating supersymmetry) and models with compressed mass spectra (i.e. co-annihilating dark matter) predict the presence …

Emily Ann Thompson (DESY) “The Quest For Long-Lived Particles: Searching For Displaced Vertices and Tracking in the Trigger” Read More »