29 September 2025 to 1 October 2025
Dubrovnik
Europe/Zurich timezone

Session

Experiment session

29 Sept 2025, 11:15
Dubrovnik

Dubrovnik

Conveners

Experiment session

  • Marina Kolosova (University of Florida (US))

Experiment session

  • Evan Armstrong Koenig (University of Florida (US))

Experiment session

  • Tristan Arnoldus Du Pree (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))

Experiment session: LHC Higgs WG - HHH - YR5 discussions

  • There are no conveners in this block

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. Jacobo Konigsberg (University of Florida (US))
    29/09/2025, 11:15
    Experimental session
  2. Brian Moser (University of Freiburg (DE))
    29/09/2025, 11:45
    Experimental session
  3. Loukas Gouskos (Brown University (US))
    29/09/2025, 12:15
    Experimental session
  4. Osama Karkout (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))
    29/09/2025, 14:00
    Experimental session
  5. Marko Stamenkovic (Brown University (US)), Xinyue Geng (Peking University (CN))
    29/09/2025, 14:30
    Experimental session
  6. Gabriel Oliveira Correa (The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology (BIST) (ES))
    29/09/2025, 15:00
    Experimental session
  7. Dennis Roy (Kansas State University (US))
    29/09/2025, 15:30
    Experimental session
  8. Jurjan Bootsma (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))
    30/09/2025, 09:00
    Experimental session
  9. Roshan Joshi (Ohio State University (US))
    30/09/2025, 09:30
    Experimental session
  10. Clara Ramon Alvarez (University of Virginia (US))
    30/09/2025, 10:00
    Experimental session
  11. Benjamin Fuks, Greg Landsberg (Brown University (US)), William Balunas (University of Cambridge (GB))
    30/09/2025, 10:30
  12. Marija Rapseviciute (Vilnius University (LT))
    Theory session

    This overview of the Monte Carlo (MC) simulation process at the four main experiments - ATLAS, CMS, ALICE, and LHCb - at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is provided in this talk. Given the complexity and noise of proton-proton collisions, simulated samples are essential for understanding and interpreting the experimental results, enabling precise measurements and searches for new physics. The...

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