Particle Theory Seminar | Isabel Garcia Garcia (UCSB, KITP) – Gravitational instabilities of spacetime
Isabel Garcia Garcia (UCSB) https://lbnl.zoom.us/j/170483588 Gravitational instabilities of spacetimeTheories with compact extra dimensions can be unstable to decay into a bubble of nothing — an instability that results in the destruction of spacetime. In this talk, I will discuss whether bubbles of nothing can exist in realistic theories where the moduli field responsible for setting the size of the extra dimensions is stabilized … Read More
Particle Theory Seminar | Xiaochuan Lu (University of Oregon) – Effective Field Theory for Physics Beyond the Standard Model
Xiaochuan Lu (University of Oregon) https://lbnl.zoom.us/j/170483588 In this talk, I interpret the Standard Model (SM) as a low-energy Effective Field Theory (EFT), with a particular emphasis on the indirect impact of heavy new particles. Introducing non-renormalizable interactions that preserve SM symmetries provides a robust parameterization of these effects. This well-known SMEFT framework, once truncated in mass dimension, has only a … Read More
Ofri Telem – Practice Job Talk – Confinement and Chiral Symmetry Breaking in Near-SUSY Theories
In-person, also on Zoom: https://lbnl.zoom.us/j/170483588 Abstract: The study of non-supersymmetric, strongly coupled gauge theories is notoriously hard, and exact results are scarce. In this talk, I present a new way to study the vacua of non-supersymmetric theories by perturbing their supersymmetric versions with Anomaly Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking (AMSB). Thanks to the UV-insensitivity of AMSB, SUSY results can be perturbed with no … Read More
Particle Seminar: Cari Cesarotti (Harvard) “Searching for New Physics at Future Muon Colliders”
Searching for New Physics at Future Muon CollidersTalk Abstract: We propose a new beam dump experimenta at future muon colliders at TeV energy scales. This provides an opportunity to expand the theory, energy, and intensity frontier of new physics searches. If we were to construct a muon collider, a beam dump would be an economical and effective way to increase the discovery potential of the experiment in a … Read More
Particle Theory Seminar | Itay Bloch-Maimouni (Tel-Aviv Uni.) “The NASDUCK collaboration: using quantum magnetometers to look for ultralight dark matter”
When DM bosons have an ultra-light mass, they can act as a classical, coherent field. In many cases, and specifically in some ALP models, this field has magnetic properties, and it can therefore be measured by quantum magnetometers. The Noble and Alkali Spin Detectors for Ultralight Coherent darK matter (NASDUCK) collaboration, was formed last year in order to measure such … Read More
NO PARTICLE THEORY SEMINAR | THANKSGIVING
Particle Theory Seminar | Davide Racco (Stanford) “Utilizing the causal spectrum of gravity waves”
Abstract: The low frequency part of the gravitational wave spectrum generated by local physics, such as a phase transition, is largely fixed by causality, offering a clean window into the early Universe.Due to the difference between sub-horizon and super-horizon physics, a distinct spectral feature can allow for the direct measurement of the conformal Hubble rate at which the phase transition … Read More
Particle Theory Seminar | Jasmine Brewer (CERN) “Jet modification in heavy-ion collisions”
Heavy-ion collision experiments provide unprecedented access to the physics of the deconfined phase of QCD, the quark-gluon plasma. A crucial part of this program is using the modified properties of jets in heavy-ion collisions as a probe of the plasma they pass through. I will give a brief introduction on the theory and modelling of parton energy loss and jet … Read More
Particle Theory Seminar | Meet & Greet
Zoom only: https://lbnl.zoom.us/j/170483588
Particle Theory Seminar | Joachim Kopp (CERN/U. Mainz) “Quo vadis, MiniBooNE? – An update on the short-baseline neutrino oscillation anomalies”
Abstract: For two decades, neutrino physics has witnessed an accumulation of anomalies reported by short-baseline oscillation measurements. As a new generation of experiments is beginning to resolve these anomalies, we comment on the current status of these anomalies, focusing in particular on the MiniBooNE anomaly in light of recent MicroBooNE results.