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Topic of the Week

US/Central
Sunrise - WH11NE (Fermilab)

Sunrise - WH11NE

Fermilab

Christian Herwig (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US)), Yuri Gershtein (Rutgers State Univ. of New Jersey (US))
Zoom Meeting ID
99765449186
Host
Yuri Gershtein
Alternative hosts
Christian Herwig, Gabriele Benelli, Marguerite Belt Tonjes
Useful links
Join via phone
Zoom URL
    • 1
      A "cool" route to unveil the Higgs boson’s secrets

      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 all of the known elementary particles, including itself, their masses. While we now have a strong evidence that the Higgs field is indeed the unique source of mass for the known elementary particles, the next step is to search for new interactions that could also explain why the Higgs field has the properties required by the Standard Model of particle physics. We have no clear roadmap to this new theory but the Higgs boson plays a crucial role in this quest. The goal of a next-generation e+e- collider is to carry out precision measurements to per-cent level of the Higgs boson properties that are not accessible at the LHC and HL-LHC. In this talk we present the study of a new concept for a high gradient, high power accelerator, the Cool Copper Collider (C^3), that could provide a rapid route to precision Higgs physics with a compact footprint. The exploitation of the complementarity between LHC and future colliders will be the key to understanding fundamentally the Higgs boson.

      Speaker: Caterina Vernieri (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (US))