Crossroads between Theory and Phenomenology
from
Monday 10 June 2024 (08:30)
to
Friday 28 June 2024 (19:00)
Monday 10 June 2024
09:45
Welcome
-
Matthew Philip Mccullough
(
CERN
)
Welcome
Matthew Philip Mccullough
(
CERN
)
09:45 - 09:50
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:00
Shining axions through astrophysical walls
-
Benjamin Safdi
Shining axions through astrophysical walls
Benjamin Safdi
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
More Axion Stars from Strings
-
Marco Gorghetto
(
DESY
)
More Axion Stars from Strings
Marco Gorghetto
(
DESY
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
We show that if dark matter consists of QCD axions in the post-inflationary scenario more than ten percent of it efficiently collapses into Bose stars at matter-radiation equality. Such a result is mostly independent of the present uncertainties on the axion mass. This large population of solitons, with asteroid masses and Earth-Moon distance sizes, might plausibly survive until today, with potentially interesting implications for phenomenology and experimental searches.
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
18:00
Unsponsored gathering
Unsponsored gathering
18:00 - 20:00
Room: Restaurant 1
Tuesday 11 June 2024
10:00
Gravitational Wave-Induced Freeze-In of Fermionic Dark Matter
-
Azadeh Maleknejad
Gravitational Wave-Induced Freeze-In of Fermionic Dark Matter
Azadeh Maleknejad
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
Where to Look and How to Look for High-Frequency Gravitational Waves
-
Raffaele D'Agnolo
(
CEA IPhT Saclay
)
Where to Look and How to Look for High-Frequency Gravitational Waves
Raffaele D'Agnolo
(
CEA IPhT Saclay
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Abstract: Stochastic backgrounds of gravitational waves can potentially open a window on extremely high energies, giving us information on phase transitions at the GUT scale and many other BSM phenomena. In this talk I will discuss simple heuristic arguments that allow to establish the smallest detectable energy density in a primordial gravitational wave background. I will focus mainly on what is achievable with realistic detectors, and comment on the potential of advanced quantum sensing techniques. In the foreseeable future, it is not feasible to go beyond the BBN bound for frequencies above 100 kHz.
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
15:00
Stability of Superconducting Strings
-
Wei Xue
(
University of Florida (US)
)
Stability of Superconducting Strings
Wei Xue
(
University of Florida (US)
)
15:00 - 15:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Wednesday 12 June 2024
10:00
Simulating Stochastic Gravitational Waves from Early Structure Formation
-
Joshua Foster
(
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
)
Simulating Stochastic Gravitational Waves from Early Structure Formation
Joshua Foster
(
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Gravitational wave detectors provide a chance to observe the state of the very early universe and have important sensitivities for studies of early universe cosmology and searches for physics beyond the Standard Model. In this talk, I will discuss the production of potentially detectable stochastic gravitational wave backgrounds in early matter dominated eras in the linear and nonlinear regimes of structure formation.
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
The Strong CP Problem in String Theory (Cosmo+Swampland meeting)
-
Jakob Ulrich Moritz
The Strong CP Problem in String Theory (Cosmo+Swampland meeting)
Jakob Ulrich Moritz
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 14:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
14:00
TH colloquium by Krishna Rajagopal, "Novel Probes of the Primordial Liquid"
TH colloquium by Krishna Rajagopal, "Novel Probes of the Primordial Liquid"
14:00 - 15:00
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Please check details on https://indico.cern.ch/event/1384507/
Thursday 13 June 2024
10:00
QCD axion strings or seeds?
-
Simone Blasi
(
DESY
)
QCD axion strings or seeds?
Simone Blasi
(
DESY
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 500/1-201 - Mezzanine
11:30
Dynamical Generation of the Baryon Asymmetry from a Scale Hierarchy
-
Jae Hyeok Chang
(
Fermilab and UIC
)
Dynamical Generation of the Baryon Asymmetry from a Scale Hierarchy
Jae Hyeok Chang
(
Fermilab and UIC
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Abstract: We propose a novel baryogenesis scenario where the baryon asymmetry originates directly from a hierarchy between two fundamental mass scales: the electroweak scale and the Planck scale. Our model is based on the neutrino-portal Affleck-Dine (AD) mechanism, which generates the asymmetry of the AD sector during the radiation-dominated era and subsequently transfers it to the baryon number before the electroweak phase transition. The observed baryon asymmetry is then a natural outcome of this scenario. The model is testable as it predicts the existence of a Majoron with a keV mass and an electroweak scale decay constant. The impact of the relic Majoron on ΔNeff can be measured through near-future CMB observations.
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
15:00
Cosmological Production of ROMP Dark Matter
-
David Dunsky
Cosmological Production of ROMP Dark Matter
David Dunsky
15:00 - 15:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Rapidly Oscillating Massive Particles (ROMPs) arise in quantum systems with non-diagonal interaction mass matrices. This misalignment between flavor and mass eigenstates leads to oscillations such as those between electron and muon neutrinos in the Standard Model, or between active and sterile neutrinos in Beyond the Standard Model frameworks to name just a few examples. In this talk, I will discuss the general framework for dark matter production via oscillations. I will focus on ROMP systems where one flavor state, chi, is weakly coupled to the Standard Model (and hence a good dark matter candidate) and the second flavor state, psi, is strongly coupled to the Standard Model such that psi oscillations to chi in the early universe can efficiently produce chi as the dark matter. I will discuss how oscillations, scatterings, thermal masses, and resonances all play a role to give ROMPs a rich cosmology.
Friday 14 June 2024
10:00
Axion dark matter from kinetic misalignment
-
Geraldine Servant
(
Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE)
)
Axion dark matter from kinetic misalignment
Geraldine Servant
(
Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE)
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Kinetic misalignment enables axion DM at low axion axion decay constant, which is particularly relevant for the whole experimental programme af axion searches. I’ll discuss its distinctive features such as axion fragmentation and its signatures, as well as UV implementations of rotating axions.
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
Probing the dark sector with Large Scale Structure
-
Ennio Salvioni
(
University of Sussex (GB)
)
Probing the dark sector with Large Scale Structure
Ennio Salvioni
(
University of Sussex (GB)
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
17:00
Unsponsored Gathering in R1 OR Beach Party
Unsponsored Gathering in R1 OR Beach Party
17:00 - 19:00
Room: Restaurant 1
Saturday 15 June 2024
Sunday 16 June 2024
Monday 17 June 2024
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:25
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:25
Welcome
-
Matthew Philip Mccullough
(
CERN
)
Welcome
Matthew Philip Mccullough
(
CERN
)
11:25 - 11:30
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
11:30
Shadow Matter
-
David Kaplan
Shadow Matter
David Kaplan
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
I will argue that there are quantum states of the field theories of general relativity and electromagnetism that we typically ignore, but have interesting phenomenological effects. These states amount to loosening the constraint equations known as the Hamiltonian and momentum constraints in GR and Gauss’ law in EM. Turning off the Hamiltonian constraint sources non-dynamical parts of the metric which mimic a pressureless dust, and thus these effects may be the explanation as to why we have inferred the existence of dark matter, both locally and cosmologically. Turning off the momentum constraints add additional velocity-dependent source terms to this effective dust, but these effects are not conserved and redshift quickly outside the horizon. Turning off the Gauss’ law constraint mimics a charge density that does not respond to electric forces, but follows geodesics, thus adding a charged component to the dust. If this new structure in the gravitational and electric fields explain dark matter, it forbids an early period of inflation and therefore requires a different explanation for density perturbations.
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
15:00
Continuous-Spin Particles, On Shell
-
Brando Bellazzini
Continuous-Spin Particles, On Shell
Brando Bellazzini
15:00 - 15:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
17:00
Unsponsored gathering
Unsponsored gathering
17:00 - 19:00
Room: Restaurant 1
Tuesday 18 June 2024
10:00
n-shell relations between effective field theories of gluons
-
Quentin Bonnefoy
(
DESY
)
n-shell relations between effective field theories of gluons
Quentin Bonnefoy
(
DESY
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
It is known that universal algebraic structures govern the scattering amplitudes of a large web of theories, whose boundaries are however not well understood. In this talk, I will comment on effective field theory deformations of this web. Focussing on tree-level dynamics, I will explain that the scattering amplitudes of gluons minimally coupled to adjoint scalars contain all of the information required to construct those of a tower of gluon EFTs. For instance, I will present closed-form expressions for all-multiplicity scattering amplitudes in the (CP-even) EFT of gluons at mass dimension six, and for a specific choice of Wilson coefficients at dimension eight — all constructed through a systematic and explicit recycling of dimension-four data. I will also mention how one can recursively turn spacetime dimensions into operator dimensions. The technique behind those results is our extension of the so-called covariant color-kinematics duality introduced by Cheung and Mangan.
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
Vignettes from Strongly-Coupled Dark Sectors
-
Graham Kribs
Vignettes from Strongly-Coupled Dark Sectors
Graham Kribs
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
I’ll discuss three recent developments related to dark glueball, dark meson, and dark baryon theory and phenomenology. Along the way we’ll see the continued importance of prompt and long-lived searches at LHC, as well as a surprising symmetry impacting dark baryon direct detection that appears in a broad class of strongly-coupled dark sectors.
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
15:00
Learning new tricks with the Higgs?
-
Christoph Englert
Christoph Peter Englert
(
University of Glasgow (GB)
)
Learning new tricks with the Higgs?
Christoph Englert
Christoph Peter Englert
(
University of Glasgow (GB)
)
15:00 - 15:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Wednesday 19 June 2024
10:00
A different view on colliders
-
Marc Riembau
(
CERN
)
A different view on colliders
Marc Riembau
(
CERN
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Energy correlators do live at the crossroads between theory and phenomenology. I will briefly review developments on both fronts that explain the resurgence of interest on these old observables. Then, I present how to compute high point correlators from recursion relations, what can be learned from low point ones, and how to go beyond energies.
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
Higgs Shift-Symmetries
-
Javi Serra
(
IFT
)
Higgs Shift-Symmetries
Javi Serra
(
IFT
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
14:00
New physics on the run from precision tests - TH colloquium
-
Sophie Alice Renner
(
University of Glasgow (GB)
)
New physics on the run from precision tests - TH colloquium
Sophie Alice Renner
(
University of Glasgow (GB)
)
14:00 - 15:00
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
15:00
Coffee
Coffee
15:00 - 16:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
Thursday 20 June 2024
10:00
Non-decoupling new particles
-
David Sutherland
Non-decoupling new particles
David Sutherland
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 500/1-201 - Mezzanine
11:30
Probing ultralight dark matter with gravity wave detectors
-
Hyungjin Kim
Probing ultralight dark matter with gravity wave detectors
Hyungjin Kim
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
15:00
Matching EFT to LHC
-
Markus Luty
(
University of California Davis
)
Matching EFT to LHC
Markus Luty
(
University of California Davis
)
15:00 - 15:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Friday 21 June 2024
10:00
Non-invertible Naturalness and Quantum Flavodynamics
-
Seth Koren
(
University of Notre Dame
)
Non-invertible Naturalness and Quantum Flavodynamics
Seth Koren
(
University of Notre Dame
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
Strong gauge dynamics and BSM model building tools
-
Hitoshi Murayama
(
University of California Berkeley (US)
)
Strong gauge dynamics and BSM model building tools
Hitoshi Murayama
(
University of California Berkeley (US)
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Many attractive ideas on BSM physics involve strong gauge dynamics we do not understand well. I present recent attempts to gain better understanding of strong gauge dynamics using supersymmetry and anomaly mediation of supersymmetry breaking. Then I speculate on areas of BSM model building that they may open up.
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
17:00
Unsponsored gathering
Unsponsored gathering
17:00 - 19:00
Room: Restaurant 1
Saturday 22 June 2024
Sunday 23 June 2024
Monday 24 June 2024
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:25
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:25
Welcome
-
Tim Cohen
(
CERN
)
Welcome
Tim Cohen
(
CERN
)
11:25 - 11:30
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
11:30
Talk
-
T. Daniel Brennan
Talk
T. Daniel Brennan
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
15:00
Particle Physics meets Gravitational Wave Physics
-
Jung-Wook Kim
Particle Physics meets Gravitational Wave Physics
Jung-Wook Kim
15:00 - 15:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
I will give an overview of how quantum field theory—the main tool of particle physics—is applied to the study of relativistic two-body problem, how it is relevant to precision measurements in future gravitational wave observatories, and how it connects to my research in this topic; the effects of spin in binary dynamics.
17:00
Unsponsored gathering
Unsponsored gathering
17:00 - 19:00
Room: Restaurant 1
Tuesday 25 June 2024
10:00
A holographic view of the QCD axion
-
Tony Gherghetta
A holographic view of the QCD axion
Tony Gherghetta
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
Axion couplings as UV probes
-
Michael Nee
(
Harvard University
)
Axion couplings as UV probes
Michael Nee
(
Harvard University
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
15:00
Geometry of Scattering Amplitudes
-
Andreas Helset
(
CERN
)
Geometry of Scattering Amplitudes
Andreas Helset
(
CERN
)
15:00 - 15:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Wednesday 26 June 2024
10:00
Hamiltonian Truncation and Effective Field Theory
-
Kara Michelle Farnsworth
(
Universite de Geneve (CH)
)
Hamiltonian Truncation and Effective Field Theory
Kara Michelle Farnsworth
(
Universite de Geneve (CH)
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
On-shell techniques for the standard-model effective theory
-
Gauthier Durieux
(
CP3 - UCLouvain
)
On-shell techniques for the standard-model effective theory
Gauthier Durieux
(
CP3 - UCLouvain
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 14:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
14:00
Thinking Outside the Hypercube: RS and its Implications - TH colloquium
-
lisa randall
(
harvard
)
Thinking Outside the Hypercube: RS and its Implications - TH colloquium
lisa randall
(
harvard
)
14:00 - 15:00
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Thursday 27 June 2024
10:00
Gravitational waves from domain walls bounded by inflated cosmic strings
-
Liantao Wang
Gravitational waves from domain walls bounded by inflated cosmic strings
Liantao Wang
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 500/1-201 - Mezzanine
11:30
The quantum width of a causal diamond
-
Kathryn Zurek
(
Caltech
)
The quantum width of a causal diamond
Kathryn Zurek
(
Caltech
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
15:00
Topological Portal to the Dark Sector: from EFT to UV
-
Joseph Enea Davighi
Topological Portal to the Dark Sector: from EFT to UV
Joseph Enea Davighi
15:00 - 15:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
Friday 28 June 2024
10:00
SU(N) and O(N) Representation Theory at non-integer N
-
Xiaochuan Lu
(
University of California, San Diego
)
SU(N) and O(N) Representation Theory at non-integer N
Xiaochuan Lu
(
University of California, San Diego
)
10:00 - 10:45
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
The standard representation theory for SU(N) and O(N) groups are defined at positive integer N. However, cases of non-integer N are often encountered, e.g. when studying dimensional regularization, evanescent operators, conformal bootstrap, etc. A natural continuation to non-integer N (such as N=3.99) is to take the one at infinitely large integer N. This contains representations with arbitrarily high ranks, which must appear ("specialize") as representations with valid ranks when N is taken to be an integer. This specialization map is complicated to work out for the O(N) group. In this talk, I will introduce a very efficient new algorithm through clipping the Young diagram. I also clarify that the Racah-Speiser algorithm in textbooks is for a completely different task, which cannot achieve what our new algorithm does.
10:45
Coffee
Coffee
10:45 - 11:30
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
11:30
Abelian Instantons and Monopole Scattering
-
Ofri Telem
(
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
)
Abelian Instantons and Monopole Scattering
Ofri Telem
(
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
)
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
It is usually assumed that 4D instantons can only arise in non-Abelian theories. In our recent work arXiv:2406.13738, we re-examine this conventional wisdom by explicitly constructing instantons in an Abelian gauge theory: $QED_4$ with $N_f$ flavors of Dirac fermions, in the background of a Dirac monopole. This is the low-energy effective field theory for fermions interacting with a 't Hooft-Polyakov monopole, in the limit where the monopole is infinitely heavy (hence pointlike) and static. This theory, whose non-topological sectors were studied by Rubakov and Callan, has a far richer structure than previously explored. We show how to calculate the topological instanton number, demonstrate the existence of 't Hooft zero modes localized around such instantons, and show how instantons in the path integral provide the underlying mechanism for the Callan-Rubakov process: monopole-catalyzed baryon decay with a cross-section that saturates the unitarity bound. Our computation relies on correctly identifying the relevant EFT for monopole catalysis as axial $QED_2$ in an effective $AdS_2$ metric.
13:30
Coffee
Coffee
13:30 - 15:00
Room: 4/2-011 - TH common room
17:00
Unsponsored gathering
Unsponsored gathering
17:00 - 19:00
Room: Restaurant 1