The 12th International Workshop Dark Side of the Universe

Europe/Zurich
Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center (University of Bergen)

Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

University of Bergen

Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
Gerald Eigen (University of Bergen (NO)), Joern Kersten (University of Bergen), Liliana Velasco-Sevilla (University of Bergen), Torsten Bringmann (University of Oslo)
Description

The Dark Side of the Universe (DSU) workshops bring together a wide range of theorists and experimentalists to discuss current ideas on models of the dark side, and relate them to current and future experiments.

The 12th edition of DSU will take place in the colorful Norwegian city of Bergen. Topics include dark matter, dark energy, cosmology, and physics beyond the standard model.

One of the goals of the workshop is to expose in particular students and young researchers to the fascinating topics of dark matter and dark energy, and to provide them with the opportunity to meet some of the best researchers in these areas.

Participants
  • Aldo Morselli
  • Alessandra Silvestri
  • Alessandro Melchiorri
  • Anders Kvellestad
  • Andrea Vittino
  • Andrew Scarff
  • Andrzej Hryczuk
  • Anna Lipniacka
  • Antonio L. Maroto
  • Are Raklev
  • Are Traeet
  • Aurel Schneider
  • Ayuki Kamada
  • Bohdan Grzadkowski
  • Carlos Munoz
  • Chris Kouvaris
  • Christoph Weniger
  • ChungChi Lee
  • Csaba Balazs
  • David Bacon
  • David F. Mota
  • David Woodward
  • Deborah Pinna
  • Donald Spector
  • Douglas Clowe
  • Ed Copeland
  • Edward Diehl
  • Eleonora Di Valentino
  • Emidio Gabrielli
  • Eunju Jeon
  • Francesco Torsello
  • Fumihiro Takayama
  • Gabrijela Zaharijas
  • Georgios Papadomanolakis Msc.
  • Gerald Eigen
  • Hans Heum
  • Hendrik Hildebrandt
  • Håkon Høines
  • Håvard Tveit Ihle
  • Inga Strümke
  • Jan Heisig
  • Jan Ridky
  • Jesus Zavala Franco
  • Jihn E. Kim
  • Jinn-Ouk Gong
  • Joern Kersten
  • Jong-Chul Park
  • Jose Ignacio Illana
  • Jose María Ezquiaga
  • Justas Zalieckas
  • Kai Ronald Schmidt-Hoberg
  • Katherine Freese
  • Kathryn Zurek
  • Kazuya Koyama
  • Keith Alison Olive
  • Khamphee Karwan
  • Laura Covi
  • Laura Lopez Honorez
  • Laura Marini
  • Liliana Velasco-Sevilla
  • Lina Necib
  • Luca Pagani
  • Marco Incagli
  • Mario E. Gomez
  • Martin Breistein
  • Martin Krauss
  • Matthew Evans
  • Matti Heikinheimo
  • Michael Gustafsson
  • Michael Kachelriess
  • Michael Schmidt
  • Mohammad Hadi Sotoudeh
  • Mohammed Azeez Saeed
  • Nasim Saba
  • Nick Murphy
  • Nicolao Fornengo
  • Nicole Bell
  • Nikolai Fomin
  • Nikolaos Papadopoulos
  • Odd Magne Ogreid
  • Olav Albert Christophersen
  • Osamu Seto
  • Paolo Gondolo
  • Paolo Salucci
  • Pasquale Serpico
  • Pedro Ruiz-Femenia
  • Per Osland
  • Peter Dunsby
  • Qaisar Shafi
  • Ricardo Landim
  • Robert Hagala
  • Saverio Lombardi
  • Sebastian Ingenhütt
  • Sebastian Trujillo-Gomez
  • Sebastian Wild
  • Seungwon Baek
  • Seyed Hossein Hendi
  • Shi-Yu Li
  • Subhendra Mohanty
  • Taghi Mirtorabi
  • Takeshi Kobayashi
  • Teboho Abram
  • Tobias Binder
  • Tomas Gonzalo
  • Tong-Jie Zhang
  • Tor Stian Holte
  • Torsten Bringmann
  • Valerio Faraoni
  • Vladimir Dzhunushaliev
  • Yann Mambrini
  • Yi Cai
  • Yongge Ma
Support
    • 09:00 09:45
      Registration 45m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 09:45 09:50
      Welcome and practical information 5m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center (University of Bergen)

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center (University of Bergen)

      Speaker: Torsten Bringmann
    • 09:50 10:05
      Opening by DSU chair 15m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      Speaker: carlos munoz (Universidad Autonoma de Madrid)
    • 10:05 10:35
      Evidence for Dark Matter 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      Speaker: Paolo Gondolo (University of Utah)
    • 10:35 11:00
      Morning Coffee Break 25m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 11:00 11:30
      Indirect Dark Matter detection: Challenges and opportunities 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      I will briefly review the current status of WIMP indirect dark matter detection, identifying recent progresses and the hurdles to overcome in order to improve sensitivity. Particular attention will be paid to the charged cosmic ray channels, although some considerations will also concern other domains, such as gamma rays. I will then discuss how indirect probes also have some chances in constraining (or possibly detecting) DM models beyond the WIMP scenario, which are often hard to identify at (if not beyond the reach of) direct or collider searches.

      Speaker: Pasquale Serpico (LAPTH, Annecy-le-vieux)
    • 11:30 12:00
      Direct Dark Matter search: status and perspectives 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      Theoretical review on the direct detection search for dark matter.

      Speaker: Nicolao Fornengo (University of Torino and INFN)
    • 12:00 12:30
      Searching for Dark Matter at Colliders 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      Speaker: Kathryn Zurek (LBNL)
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch 1h 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 14:00 14:30
      How to stop worrying about pulsars and start looking for dark matter: The Fermi Galactic center GeV excess and beyond 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      One of the long-standing challenges in indirect dark matter searches is to understand the origin of the pronounced emission of 1-3 GeV photons that is seen in Fermi LAT data in the Galactic bulge and at the Galactic center. The arguably most exciting interpretation is that it is caused by the annihilation of dark matter particles. However, before making such a claim all possible backgrounds need to be assessed with utmost care. I will here show that in contrast to previous claims millisecond pulsars (MSPs) are a valid and rather likely explanation. What is more, the MSP hypothesis can explain the non-Gaussian noise that we detected in the gamma-ray emission from the inner Galaxy, with at least 10 sigma significance, using a new dedicated wavelet decomposition analysis. The power spectrum of dust-traced gas at small angular scales, as well as the projected density of other Galactic sources is far too low to account for this signal. I will present realistic strategies of how upcoming targeted radio searches and surveys can establish or refute the MSP hypothesis with high statistical significance. If we fail to find bulge MSPs in radio soon, the dark matter interpretation of the Fermi GeV excess will become much more likely again. I will close with an outlook on indirect dark matter searches in the next ten years.

      Speaker: Christoph Weniger (University of Amsterdam)
    • 14:30 15:00
      Antimatter and photons from cosmic rays 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      After a brief review of the standard diffusion approach to the propagation of cosmic rays (CR), I discuss as alternative method the calculation of individual CR trajectories. The results obtained with this approach suggest that CR propagate strongly anisotropic, and that the antimatter fluxes observed are dominated by a single local source. Finally, I discuss
      different approaches to predict antiproton production and their theoretical uncertainties.

      Speaker: Michael Kachelriess (NTNU)
    • 15:00 16:00
      Indirect Dark Matter Detection Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 15:00
        Cosmic antideuterons from dark matter and primordial black holes 15m
        Speaker: Andrea Vittino (TU Munich)
      • 15:15
        Dark matter decays from non-minimal coupling to gravity 15m
        Speaker: Sebastian Ingenhütt
      • 15:30
        DRAGON 2: implications for dark matter searches 15m
        Speaker: Andrea Vittino (TU Munich)
      • 15:45
        AMS results after 5 years of data taking on the International Space Station 15m
        Speaker: Marco Incagli (Universita di Pisa & INFN (IT))
    • 16:00 16:30
      Afternoon coffee break 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 16:30 18:30
      Direct Dark Matter Detection Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 16:30
        Dark Forces in the Sky: signals from Z' and the dark Higgs 15m
        Speaker: Dr Yi Cai (The University of Melbourne)
      • 16:45
        DAMA confronts null searches in the effective theory of dark matter-nucleon interactions 15m
        Speaker: Mr Sebastian Wild (TU Munich)
      • 17:00
        New Ideas for Detecting Light Dark Matter 15m
        Speaker: Kathryn Zurek (LBNL)
      • 17:15
        The LUX-ZEPLIN dark matter experiment 15m
        Speaker: David Woodward (University of Sheffield)
      • 17:30
        Latest results from the DRIFT dark matter detector 15m
        Speaker: Andrew Scarff (University of Sheffield)
      • 17:45
        COSINE-100 experiment at Yangyang underground laboratory 15m
        Speaker: Dr Eunju Jeon (Center for Underground Physics, IBS)
      • 18:00
        Direct dark matter detection with the DarkSide experiment 15m
        Speaker: Luca Pagani (Università degli studi di Genova and INFN)
      • 18:15
        Dark matter annual modulation with CUORE experiment 15m
        Speaker: Ms Laura Marini (University of Genoa - INFN)
    • 18:45 20:45
      Reception 2h Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 09:30 10:00
      Dark energy: current and future observations 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      I will give an overview of the current state of dark energy research, from an observational point of view. Current and future probes of dark energy will be discussed; I will examine the latest constraints on dark energy physics from cosmological surveys, and describe future prospects for yet more powerful measurements in the coming decade.

      Speaker: David Bacon (University of Portsmouth)
    • 10:00 10:30
      Dark Energy Theory Overview 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      The problem facing us with dark energy has manifested itself through the many theoretical models that have been published, all with the same goal, to explain the late time acceleration of the Universe. I will try and summarise the state of play with the models, recap the original cosmological constant problem which prevents many of us from simply accepting there is a constant energy density driving the acceleration, and discuss some recent attempts to address the problem. Throughout we will see the need for fine tuning which enters with pretty much every model, and we will see how particle physics considerations can have a huge impact on the type of models that are consistent with the data.

      Speaker: Ed Copeland (Nottingham University)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Morning Coffee Break 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 11:00 11:30
      Detecting Black Holes with LIGO 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) recently made the first direct detection of gravitational waves; minute distortions in space-time caused by cataclysmic events far away in the universe. I will talk about the source of the signal we detected, the physics behind the detectors, and prospects for the future of this emerging field.

      Speaker: Matthew Evans (MIT)
    • 11:30 12:00
      Unveiling dark energy with the large scale structure: the theoretical side of the challenge 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      I will focus on the challenge posed by dark energy and discuss theoretical issues involved in finding an optimal framework to unveil its nature from upcoming high precision measurements of the large scale structure, giving an overview of recent progress.

      Speaker: Dr Alessandra Silvestri (Leiden University)
    • 12:00 12:30
      Dark Energy and Modified Gravity Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 12:00
        A new formalism for scalar-tensor theories of gravity and its applicability 15m
        Speaker: Jose María Ezquiaga (Instituto de Física Teórica UAM-CSIC)
      • 12:15
        Is cosmography a useful tool for testing cosmology? 15m

        Model-independent methods in cosmology have become an essential tool in order to deal with an increasing number of theoretical alternatives for explaining the late-time acceleration of the Universe. In principle, this provides a way of testing the Cosmological Concordance (or LambdaCDM) model under different assumptions and ruling out whole classes of competing theories. One such model-independent method is the so-called cosmographic approach, which relies only on the homogeneity
        and isotropy of the Universe on large scales. We show that this method suffers from many short-comings, providing biased results depending on the auxiliary variable used in the series expansion and is unable to rule out models or adequately reconstruct theories with higher-order derivatives in either the gravitational or matter sector. Consequently, in its present form, this method seems unable to provide reliable or useful results for cosmological applications.

        Speaker: Peter Dunsby (University of Cape Town)
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch 1h 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 14:00 15:45
      Dark Energy and Modified Gravity Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 14:00
        Waves in Modified Gravity 15m
        Speaker: Robert Hagala
      • 14:15
        KiDS-450: Cosmological parameter constraints from tomographic weak gravitational lensing 15m
        Speaker: Hendrik Hildebrandt
      • 14:30
        The Vainshtein mechanism in general disformal gravity 15m
        Speaker: Dr Khamphee Karwan (The Institute for Fundamental Study)
      • 14:45
        Exact Analytic Solution for Non-Linear Density Fluctuation in a LCDM Universe 15m
        Speaker: Jinn-Ouk Gong (Asia Pacific Centerfor Theoretical Physics)
      • 15:00
        Observational constraints on viable f(R) gravity models 15m
        Speaker: Dr Chung-Chi Lee (National Center for Theoretical Sciences, Taiwan)
      • 15:15
        Coupled dark energy: a dynamical analysis with complex scalar field 15m
        Speaker: Ricardo Landim (University of Sao Paulo)
      • 15:30
        Small nonassociative corrections to the SUSY generators and cosmological constant 15m
        Speaker: Vladimir Dzhunushaliev (al-Farabi KazNU)
    • 15:45 16:30
      Afternoon coffee break 45m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 16:30 17:45
      Alternatives to LambdaCDM Cosmology Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 16:30
        Sterile neutrino dark matter production from scalar decay 15m
        Speaker: Michael Schmidt (The University of Sydney)
      • 16:45
        Cosmological implications of the NMSSM domain wall decay 15m
        Speaker: Osamu Seto
      • 17:00
        Finding the Missing Dwarfs: a challenge to CDM? 15m
        Speaker: Sebastian Trujillo-Gomez (University of Zurich)
      • 17:15
        Enhancing dark-matter self interaction by a Higgs resonance 15m
        Speaker: Bohdan Grzadkowski (University of Warsaw)
      • 17:30
        Coherent fields in cosmology 15m
        Speaker: Antonio L. Maroto (Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
    • 18:15 19:45
      PUBLIC LECTURE 1h 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center (University of Bergen)

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center (University of Bergen)

      The ordinary atoms that make up the known universe, from our bodies and the air we breathe to the planets and stars, constitute only 5% of all matter and energy in the cosmos. The remaining 95% is made up of a recipe of 25% dark matter and 70% dark energy, both nonluminous components whose nature remains a mystery. Freese will recount the hunt for dark matter, from the discoveries of visionary scientists like Knut Lundmark and Fritz Zwicky, the astronomers who coined the term "dark matter" in the 1930's, to the deluge of data today from underground laboratories, satellites in space, and the Large Hadron Collider. Theorists contend that dark matter consists of fundamental particles known as WIMPs, or weakly interacting massive particles. Billions of them pass through our bodies every second without us even realizing it, yet their gravitational pull is capable of whirling stars and gas at breakneck speeds around the centers of galaxies, and bending light from distant bright objects. In this talk Freese will provide an overview of this cosmic cocktail, including the evidence for the existence of dark matter in galaxies. Many cosmologists believe we are on the verge of solving this mystery and this talk will provide the foundation needed to fully fathom this epochal moment in humankind's quest to understand the universe.

      Speaker: Katherine Freese (University of Michigan)
    • 09:30 10:00
      Evidence for Dark Matter from Astronomical Observations 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      I will review evidence for dark matter's existence from astronomical observations. I will focus primarily evidence from dwarf galaxies and galaxy clusters, but also discuss results from cosmological observations of the cosmic microwave background and large scale structure.

      Speaker: Douglas Clowe
    • 10:00 10:30
      Towards an Effective THeory Of Structure formation (ETHOS) 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      Although there is substantial gravitational evidence for the existence of dark matter, its particle nature
      remains one of the biggest mysteries in modern physics. The favourite theoretical model, Cold Dark Matter
      (CDM), assumes that non-gravitational dark matter interactions are irrelevant for galaxy formation and evolution.

      Surprisingly, current astronomical observations allow significant departures from the CDM hypothesis
      that have a relevant impact on our understanding of how galaxies form and evolve. Moreover, the observed
      properties of the smallest galaxies have been a consistent challenge for the CDM model.

      In this talk, I will argue that to explain galaxy formation and evolution in the broadest sense,
      an effective dark matter theory must contain a wider range of dark matter particle physics. I will describe the
      first steps we have taken towards developing ETHOS and present some of its applications.

      Speaker: Jesus Zavala Franco (University of Iceland)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Morning Coffee Break 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 11:00 12:20
      Cosmological Probes of Dark Matter Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 11:00
        Astrophysical Signatures of Dark Matter 15m
        Speaker: Chris Kouvaris (CP3-Origins, University of Southern Denmark)
      • 11:15
        Constraining dark matter with small-scale structure formation 15m
        Speaker: Aurel Schneider (University of Zurich)
      • 11:30
        Late Kinetic Decoupling from Dark Matter - Dark Radiation Scattering 15m
        Speaker: Håvard Tveit Ihle (University of Oslo)
      • 11:45
        Dark Matter in galaxies: a review 20m

        Recent observations have revealed the structural properties of the dark
        and luminous mass distribution in galaxies from dwarfs to giants. Their study led to the
        vision of a new and amazing scenario. The investigation of single and
        coadded objects has in fact shown that the rotation curves of spirals
        follow, from their centers out to their virial radii, an universal profile
        that implies a tuned combination of their stellar disk and dark halo mass
        distributions. The mass distribution of ellipticals and dwarf spheroidals
        is found similar. This, alongside with accurate mass modeling of
        individual galaxies, poses important challenges to the presently
        theoretically favored LCDM Cosmology and indicate a surprising direct interaction between
        the dark and the luminous components.

        Speaker: Paolo Salucci (SISSA)
      • 12:05
        Detecting self interacting and dissipative dark matter by gravitational waves 15m
        Speaker: Prof. Subhendra Mohanty (Physical Research Laboratory)
    • 12:20 12:30
      Announcements about the Social Program 10m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      Speaker: Joern Kersten (University of Bergen)
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch 1h 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 14:00 19:00
      Excursion 5h

      Boat Trip from Bergen to Osterøy. The boat departs from the Bergen harbour Dreggekaien.

    • 19:45 22:45
      Banquet 3h

      See separate handout and/or conference webpage for details

    • 09:30 10:00
      Dark matter searches in ATLAS 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      Dark matter particles may be produced at the LHC in combination with other particles, typically from initial state radiation. We present results from the ATLAS experiment from searches for phenomena with jets, photons, heavy quarks, electroweak gauge bosons, or Higgs bosons recoiling against large missing transverse momentum. The measurements are interpreted using several theoretical frameworks including simplified models with pair production of Weakly Interacting Massive Particles, effective field theories, and other beyond the Standard Model scenarios. Constraints from dijet searches are compared with results from the “Mono-X” searches to provide a combined interpretation in the context of simplified models.

      Speaker: Edward Diehl (University of Michigan (US))
    • 10:00 10:30
      Dark Matter Searches at CMS and Future Plans 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      The existence of dark matter, indicated by astronomical observations, is one of the main proofs of physics beyond the standard model. Despite its abundance, dark matter has not been directly observed yet. This talk reviews the latest results and future plans of searches for dark matter at the CMS experiment at the LHC.

      Speaker: Deborah Pinna (Universitaet Zuerich (CH))
    • 10:30 11:00
      Morning Coffee Break 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 11:00 11:30
      Unitarity and Dark Matter -- implications for collider searches and indirect detection 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      Will discuss issues related to unitarity and gauge invariance of DM interactions, covering both collider searches and indirect detection.

      Speaker: Nicole Bell (University of Melbourne)
    • 11:30 12:00
      Dark Matter at Particle Colliders Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 11:30
        Search for Dark photons at colliders 15m
        Speaker: Dr Emidio Gabrielli (Nat. Inst. of Chem.Phys. & Biophys. (EE))
      • 11:45
        The 750 GeV in the light of Dark Matter 15m
        Speaker: Dr Yann Mambrini (LPT, Paris Saclay)
    • 12:00 12:30
      Dark Matter Models Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 12:00
        Diphoton and Diquark Resonances in U(1) Extension of the MSSM 15m
        Speaker: Qaisar Shafi (Bartol Research Institute)
      • 12:15
        GAMBIT: the Global and Modular BSM Inference Tool 15m
        Speaker: Csaba Balazs (Monash University)
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch 1h 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 14:00 14:30
      Status on Decaying Dark Matter (and other very weakly interacting candidates) 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      We review model of decaying Dark Matter and other very weakly interacting
      DM candidates and present the status of theoretical developments for those
      models and DM searches both in indirect detection and at colliders.

      Speaker: Laura Covi (Georg-August-Universitaet Goettingen (DE))
    • 14:30 15:15
      Probing the nature of dark matter with gamma rays: status of the Fermi LAT searches and prospects for the CTA 45m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      High-energy gamma rays are one of the most promising tools to constrain or reveal the nature of Dark Matter (DM), in particular the Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMP) models. During the almost eight years of the Fermi satellite mission, the data from its Large Area Telescope (LAT) were used to set constraints on the WIMP annihilation cross section which cut well into the theoretically-motivated region of parameter space for WIMP masses below 100 GeV. At the same time, the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is well into its prototyping phase and will soon offer a chance to probe a complementary parameter space of heavier dark matter (from O(200 GeV) up to several tens of TeV ), with unprecedented sensitivity.

      In this talk I will describe methods used to search for evidence of dark matter with the LAT, and review the status of the searches. I will discuss projections of the expected sensitivities with continued LAT data taking, together with the latest sensitivity predictions on the various targets with CTA.

      Speaker: Dr Gabrijela Zaharijas (University of Nova Gorica)
    • 15:15 16:00
      Indirect Dark Matter Detection Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 16:00 16:30
      Afternoon coffee break 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 16:30 18:30
      Dark Matter Models Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 16:30
        A global fit of the gamma-ray galactic center excess within the scalar Higgs portal model 15m
        Speaker: Dr Jan Heisig (RWTH Aachen University)
      • 16:45
        SUSY scenarios in GUT Models with Non-Universal Scalar Masses 15m
        Speaker: Mario E. Gomez (Universidad de Huelva)
      • 17:00
        Observational Constraints on Decoupled Hidden Sectors 15m
        Speaker: Matti Heikinheimo (Helsinki Institute of Physics)
      • 17:15
        A realistic model for Dark Matter interactions in the neutrino portal paradigm 15m
        Speaker: Jose Ignacio Illana (University of Granada)
      • 17:30
        Leptophilic dark matter and h -> mu tau 15m
        Speaker: Seungwon Baek
      • 17:45
        Domain walls in axion models with ultra-violet completion 15m
        Speaker: Prof. Jihn E. Kim (Kyung Hee University)
      • 18:00
        Majorana fermion dark matter from discrete flavor symmetry 15m
        Speaker: Prof. Fumihiro Takayama (Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto U.)
      • 18:15
        Dark matter from the vector of SO (10) 15m
        Speaker: Martin Krauss (INFN - LNF and Chalmers University)
    • 09:30 10:00
      SO(10) Dark Matter Models 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      There are several reasons supersymmetric models are appealing as
      a candidate for beyond the standard models physics. These include help with
      gauge coupling unification, the gauge hierarchy problem, the stabilization of the
      electroweak vacuum, radiative electroweak symmetry breaking, dark matter, and perhaps
      an improvement to low energy phenomenology.
      The lack of evidence for low energy supersymmetry at the LHC implies a
      supersymmetry scale in excess a TeV. While this is consistent (and even helpful) with
      a Higgs boson mass at $\approx$ 125 GeV, simple supersymmetric models with scalar
      and gaugino mass universality are being pushed into strips of parameter space.
      In contrast, non-supersymmetric grand unified theories such as SO(10) may
      provide equivalent benefits to all of the above issues normally associated with
      supersymmetry, including a dark matter candidate. Because of the presence of an intermediate scale,
      these theories may unify gauge couplings, provide for neutrino masses and a suitably long lived proton.
      The construction of SO(10) dark matter models
      will be discussed.

      Speaker: Prof. Keith Olive (University of Minnesota)
    • 10:00 10:30
      Hunting for SUSY and decaying gravitino DM with the µνSSM 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      The µνSSM solves the µ-problem of SUSY models simply using right-handed neutrinos ν’s, while simultaneously explains the origin of neutrino masses. In this context, novel signatures of SUSY at the LHC are present through the new states of the model. On the other hand, since R parity is broken, a decaying gravitino turns out to be an interesting candidate for dark matter which can be searched through gamma-ray observations such as those of the Fermi Large Area Telescope.

      Speaker: Prof. Carlos Munoz (Universidad Autonoma de Madrid & IFT)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Morning Coffee Break 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
    • 11:00 11:30
      Cosmological tests of modified gravity 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      I review recent progress in the construction of modified gravity models as alternatives to dark energy as well as the development of cosmological tests of gravity. Einstein's theory of General Relativity (GR) has been tested accurately within the local universe i.e. the Solar System, but this leaves the possibility open that it is not a good description of gravity at the largest scales in the Universe. In 1998, astronomers made the surprising discovery that the expansion of the Universe is accelerating, not slowing down. Within the framework of GR, the acceleration would originate from an unknown dark energy. Alternatively, it could be that there is no dark energy and GR itself is in error on cosmological scales.

      In this talk, I first give an overview of recent developments in modified gravity theories. I then focus on common properties these models share, such as screening mechanisms they use to evade the stringent Solar System tests. Once armed with a theoretical knowledge of modified gravity models, I move on to discuss how we can test modifications of gravity on cosmological scales. Since screening mechanisms leave distinct signatures in the non-linear structure formation, I review novel astrophysical tests of gravity using clusters, dwarf galaxies and stars.

      Speaker: Kazuya Koyama (University of Portsmouth)
    • 11:30 12:30
      Cosmological Probes of Dark Matter Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 11:30
        Relic density at NLO: the thermal corrections 15m
        Speaker: Andrzej Hryczuk (University of Oslo)
      • 11:45
        Relic density of wino-like dark matter in the MSSM 15m
        Speaker: Pedro Ruiz-Femenia (Technische Universität München)
      • 12:00
        Cosmological constraints on thermal axions and neutrinos from Planck 2015 temperature and polarization data 15m
        Speaker: Eleonora Di Valentino (Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris)
      • 12:15
        Dark matter annihilations and 21cm signal 15m
        Speaker: Laura Lopez Honorez (Vrije Universiteit Brussel)
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch 1h 30m
    • 14:00 14:30
      The case for dark matter self interactions 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      I will review motivations for the existence of self interacting dark matter and discuss possible astrophysical observables.
      Self-interactions of dark matter particles can potentially lead to an observable separation between the dark matter halo
      and the stars of a galaxy moving through a region of large dark matter density. Such a separation has recently been
      observed in a galaxy falling into the core of the galaxy cluster Abell 3827.
      I discuss the DM self-interaction cross section needed to reproduce the observed effects.

      Speaker: Kai Ronald Schmidt-Hoberg (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE))
    • 14:30 14:45
      Small-Scale Structure and Interacting Dark Matter and Radiation 15m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway

      I will review attempts to address the small-scale problems of Lambda-CDM using a combination of dark matter self-interactions and dark matter interactions with a dark radiation-like species. We will see that most models are rather tightly constrained. New results outlining the role of non-perturbative corrections to these interactions will be presented.

      Speaker: Basudeb Dasgupta (Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai)
    • 14:45 15:35
      Alternatives to LambdaCDM Cosmology Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway
      • 14:45
        Anomalies and tensions in current cosmological data and hints for new physics 20m

        In this talk I will briefly review the tensions and anomalies
        in current cosmological data that hint for possible extensions
        to the "concordance" LCDM model.

        Speaker: Alessandro Melchiorri
      • 15:05
        Cosmological Aspects of Spontaneous Baryogenesis 15m
        Speaker: Takeshi Kobayashi (SISSA)
      • 15:20
        Turnaround radius in an accelerated universe in Einstein and in modified gravity 15m
        Speaker: Valerio Faraoni (Bishop's University)
    • 15:35 16:05
      Afternoon coffee break 30m Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      Egget auditorium in the UiB Student Center

      University of Bergen

      Parkveien 1, 5007 Bergen, Norway