May 23 – 26, 2024
Mitchell Institute, Texas A&M University
America/Chicago timezone

Session

Neutrino

May 24, 2024, 10:45 AM
Hawking Auditorium (Mitchell Institute, Texas A&M University)

Hawking Auditorium

Mitchell Institute, Texas A&M University

Conveners

Neutrino

  • Frank F Deppisch

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. Baishan Hu
    5/24/24, 10:45 AM

    Over the past decades, ab initio nuclear calculation has made dramatic progress, especially reaching the heavy mass region as 208Pb recently. This means that it becomes possible to obtain first-principles computation (with quantified uncertainties) of quantities which even reside in the heavy-mass region. The quantities include these relevant for astrophysics and searches for physics beyond...

    Go to contribution page
  2. Shirley Li (UC Irvine)
    5/24/24, 11:10 AM

    The standard calculations of neutrino oscillation are predicated on the assumption that neutrinos' wave packets maintain coherence throughout their propagation. Effects associated with neutrinos wave packets decoherence--- specifically, damping of the oscillation probabilities---were considered unobservable in terrestrial experiments. However, recent claims suggest that if sterile neutrinos...

    Go to contribution page
  3. Zahra Khajeh Tabrizi
    5/24/24, 11:35 AM

    Neutrino physics is advancing into a precision era with the construction of new experiments, particularly in the few GeV energy range. Within this energy range, neutrinos exhibit diverse interactions with nucleons and nuclei. In this talk I will delve in particular into neutrino–nucleus quasi-elastic cross sections, taking into account both standard and, for the first time, non-standard...

    Go to contribution page
  4. Min-Gwa Park (Jeonbuk National University)
    5/24/24, 12:00 PM
  5. Kate Scholberg

    I will present an overview of recent results from the COHERENT experiment.

    Go to contribution page
Building timetable...