8–18 Dec 2014
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone
Gauge/gravity duality (or holographic duality) relates the dynamics of certain strongly interacting quantum field theories to the dynamics of classical gravity in one higher dimension. Over the last decade holographic duality has emerged as a powerful tool for studying strongly interacting systems. A significant part of these developments has been motivated by experimentally explored strongly coupled systems ranging from the quark-gluon plasma produced in ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions at RHIC and at the LHC to various condensed matter systems including superfluidity, quantum phase transitions, and non-Fermi liquids. One of the assets of holography is that it can yield insight into the real-time dynamics of strongly coupled quantum field theories via classical partial differential equations in the gravity dual. To date, the vast majority of work in holographic duality is focused on problems which are either static, or sufficiently close to equilibrium that analytic methods can be used to solve the required differential equations. However, in recent years there has been increasing attention focused on challenging problems which require greater use of numerical techniques. These include the question of how strongly coupled systems far from equilibrium relax, how turbulent behavior can be studied in the gravity dual description of fluids or superfluids, and how ground states of strongly interacting matter with broken translational invariance can be found. This workshop aims at an in-depth exchange on the class of challenging problems that are now under study with numerical techniques in holography. Confirmed participants include: Dongsu Bak (University of Seoul) David Berenstein (UC Santa Barbara) Michal P. Heller (Universiteit van Amsterdam / National Centre for Nuclear Research) Steven Gubser (Princeton University) Chris Herzog (Stony Brook) Luis Lehner (Perimeter Institute) Krishna Rajagopal (MIT) Andrzej Rostworowski (Jagiellonian University) Jorge Santos (Stanford / Cambridge) Wilke van der Schee (Universiteit Utrecht) Sang-Jin Sin (Hanyang University) Larry Yaffe (University of Washington) Urs Wiedemann (CERN) Toby Wiseman (Imperial College)
Starts
Ends
Europe/Zurich
CERN
4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
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We have reserved a limited number of rooms in the CERN Hostel. Participants interested in this on-site accommodation should indicate their request with arrival and departure dates in the corresponding section of the registration. Participants interested in staying off campus are asked to make their own arrangements. Please note that CERN closes on the last day of the workshop: accomodation on site will not be available for the night from 19 to 20 December.