Lectures (Academic, Basic)
• Academic lectures will cover the fundamental concepts of detector technologies such as gaseous, silicon, photon, etc. as well as cross-cutting topics such as signal processing, modeling, and simulation, which are essential for designing, characterizing, and interpreting the performance of detectors and instrumentation.
• Clear connection to the laboratory sessions (almost one to one).
• Two lectures per day.
• Each topic will consist of two hours of lectures, split across two days to facilitate interaction between students and lecturers (including discussions and follow-up on key questions).
• Everyone is encouraged to propose names.
Invited Talks (Review, Application-Driven, Future-Oriented)
• Keynote speakers – relevant scientist in the field
• One-hour contributions, approximately one per day.
• Possible topics include: Avenues for the Physics to Come; Particle Accelerators: Past, Present, and Future; State-of-the-Art and Future Perspectives in Tracking, Calorimetry, Timing, and Beam Instrumentation; Engineering and Mechanics of Future Detectors; Neutrino Physics; Physics Beyond Colliders (PBC); Particle Physics and Medical Applications; Applications Beyond HEP; Quantum Technology Sensors.
• Everyone is encouraged to propose topics and speaker names.