Conveners
Session 7: FUTURE EXPERIMENTS & BEYOND STANDARD MODEL
- Subhasis Chattopadhyay (Department of Atomic Energy (IN))
Paul Newman
(Birmingham University)
10/09/2013, 14:30
Future Facilities
Pleanary
A Deep Inelastic Scattering facility based on a new electron beam in collisions with protons and heavy ions from the Large Hadron collider could teach us much more about the structure of nuclear matter at the
smallest resolvable scales, as well as adding to our understanding of the Higgs boson and the Quark Gluon Plasma and contributing to searches for physics beyond the Standard Model. This...
Atul Gurtu
(King Abdulaziz University (SA))
10/09/2013, 15:00
Future Facilities
Pleanary
The idea of constructing the next e+e- collider has been under study for almost 2 decades. A world-wide R&D effort has led to the conclusion that physics interests would best be served by a 0.5 - 1 TeV machine accompanied by precision detectors. Dubbed the International Linear Collider (ILC) it would be a cryogenic machine, whose technology has now been established. Two detector concepts named...
Volker Friese
(GSI Darmstadt)
10/09/2013, 15:30
Hot and Dense Nuclear Matter
Pleanary
The properties of strongly interacting matter at high net-baryon densities are a largely unknown territory, both theoretically and experimentally. The CBM experiment at the accelerator facility FAIR, presently under construction in Darmstadt, Germany, will explore this part of the QCD phase diagram with heavy-ion collisions from 2A to 45A GeV beam energy. Its focus is the characterization of...
Sudhir Vempati
(Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore)
10/09/2013, 16:00
Physics beyond the Standard Model (colliders, rare processes, exotica)
Pleanary
We summarise the status of supersymmetric models in the light of results from LHC, especially the higgs mass and the direct limits. In addition we will discuss the constraints on various flavour decays which put severe constraints on Supersymmetric models. Finally we will comment on various supersymmetry breaking models and new models of supersymmetry breaking.