Workshop on the physics of HL-LHC, and perspectives at HE-LHC
This is the kickoff event for a series of meetings, running throughout 2018, with plenary events and intermediate periods of working group activities.
The main goal of the Workshop is to review, extend and further refine our understanding of the physics potential of the High Luminosity LHC.
The workshop aims to stimulate new ideas for measurements and observables, to extend the LHC discovery reach, to improve the modeling of LHC phenomena towards measurements at ultimate precision, and to prepare to exploit the HL-LHC data to the fullest possible extent.
The Workshop will also provide the opportunity to begin a more systematic study of physics at the HE-LHC, a new pp collider in the LHC ring with CM energy in the range of 27 TeV.
The activity of the Workshop will extend over a one year period, driven by working groups covering the following areas:
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QCD, EW and top quark physics
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Higgs and EWSB
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BSM
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Flavour
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Heavy Ions
The results of the Workshop will be documented in a Yellow Report, to be completed in time (~end 2018) for submission to the next review of the European strategy for particle physics.
The deadline to reserve pre-booked rooms in the CERN Hostel has expired. To book a room, please contact directly the Hostel.
Ongoing work is being discussed on the wiki.
To join the mailing list of the Workshop, click here
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Welcome and introduction 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Gavin Salam (CERN)
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Introduction to the Strategy processSpeaker: Fabiola Gianotti (CERN)
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Workshop info
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The long-term evolution of the LHC accelerator 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Andrea Dainese (INFN - Padova (IT))
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The HL-LHC upgradeSpeaker: Lucio Rossi (CERN)
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Colliding heavy ions beyond run 2Speaker: John Jowett (CERN)
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Convener: Andrea Dainese (INFN - Padova (IT))
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HE-LHC: design status and operation parametersSpeaker: Frank Zimmermann (CERN)
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Detector performance at high pp pile-up 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Andreas Meyer (KIT and DESY (DE))
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ATLAS Expected Performance at HL-LHCSpeaker: Nora Emilia Pettersson (University of Massachusetts (US))
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Status of the physics studies by the experiments for HL-LHC 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Aleandro Nisati (Sapienza Universita e INFN, Roma I (IT))
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SM physicsSpeakers: Jan Kieseler (CERN), Alessandro Tricoli (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US)), Patrizia Azzi (INFN Padova (IT)), Stephen Farry (University of Liverpool (GB))
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13:00
Lunch break
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Higgs physicsSpeakers: Maria Cepeda Hermida (CERN), Marianna Testa (INFN e Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati (IT)), Marumi Kado (Université Paris-Saclay (FR)), Philip Ilten (University of Birmingham (GB))
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a) ATLAS (20')Speaker: Marianna Testa (INFN e Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati (IT))
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Direct searches for New PhysicsSpeakers: Monica D'Onofrio (University of Liverpool (GB)), Keith Ulmer (University of Colorado, Boulder (US)), Xabier Cid Vidal (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela)
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Flavour physics probes of new physicsSpeakers: Vincenzo Vagnoni (CERN and INFN Bologna), Alex Cerri (University of Sussex (GB)), Sandra Malvezzi (Universita & INFN, Milano-Bicocca (IT)), Vladimir Gligorov (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))
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Heavy ion physicsSpeakers: Jan Fiete Grosse-Oetringhaus (CERN), Michael Andreas Winn (Université Paris-Saclay (FR)), Yen-Jie Lee (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US)), Zvi Citron (Weizmann Institute of Science (IL))
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16:00
Coffee break
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Introduction to the WG plans 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Mika Anton Vesterinen (University of Oxford (UK))
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WG2: Higgs physicsSpeakers: Francesco Riva (CERN), Stefania Gori (Perimeter Institute/Cincinnati University)
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WG4: FlavourSpeakers: Jorge Martin Camalich (CERN), Jure Zupan (University of Cincinnati)
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A welcome drink for registered participants will be offered in the area adjacent the Main Auditorium, where we shall also display the submitted posters.
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Posters will remain visible for the whole duration of the workshop
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Top-quark mass from diphton mass spectrum
We study $gg\to\gamma\gamma$ amplitudes by including $t\bar t$ bound-state effects near their mass threshold. In terms of the non-relativistic expansion of the amplitude, the LO contribution is an energy-independent term in the one-loop amplitude, and a part of the NLO contribution is described by the non-relativistic Green function. We find that due to the interference of these terms, the diphoton mass spectrum shows a characteristic dip-and-bump shape near the threshold. In addition, the position of the dip and the bump is determined by the 1S mass of the $t\bar t$ resonance which is well predicted in terms of the short-distance mass of top-quark in NRQCD. Thanks to the simple and clean nature in its experimental measurement, it can give a superior method to determine the top-quark short-distance mass at hadron colliders.
Speaker: Hiroshi Yokoya (KIAS, QUC) -
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An alternative approach to Higgs self-coupling determination at the LHCSpeaker: Xiaoran Zhao
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Adding timing to the LHCb VELO
The LHCb experiment is designed to perform high precision measurements of matter-antimatter asymmetries and searches for rare and forbidden decays, with the aim of discovering new and unexpected particles and forces. In 2030 the LHC beam intensity will increase by a factor of 50 compared to current operations. This means increased samples of the particles we need to study, but it also presents experimental challenges. In particular, with current technology it becomes impossible to differentiate the many (>50) separate proton-proton collisions which occur for each bunch crossing. A Monte Carlo simulation was developed to model the operation of a silicon pixel vertex detector surrounding the collision region at LHCb, under the conditions expected after 2030, after the second upgrade of the Vertex Locator(VELO).The main goal was studying the effect of adding '4D' detectors which save high-precision timing information, in addition to the usual three spatial coordinates, as charged particles pass through them. With the additional information on the particle timing, it is possible to separately reconstruct the individual 50+ collisions, allowing the next generation of high-precision measurements to be made at the LHCb.
Speakers: Biljana Mitreska (CERN), Mark Richard James Williams (University of Manchester (GB)) -
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Partially Reconstructed Beauty Decays at LHCb for the Phase-II Upgrade
Semileptonic beauty decays provide a theoretically clean probe of CKM Unitarity since their decay rates factorise into leptonic and hadronic currents. At hadron colliders the full kinematic properties of these decays cannot be determined due to the unreconstructable neutrino. The kinematics can however be inferred through the conservation of momentum perpendicular to the flight direction that can be resolved by the LHCb Vertex Locator (VELO). The RF foil is an essential component of the LHCb vertex locator (VELO), separating the secondary vacuum of the VELO from the primary vacuum of the LHC. The foil protects the VELO modules from beam induced effects such as RF waves, and protects the LHC vacuum from hardware effects such as outgassing. The RF foil contributes to the material budget of the experiment and degrades the quality of tracks resulting in a worsened resolution for the reconstructed production and decay vertices. The phase-II upgrade can greatly improve the performance of semileptonic measurements at LHCb. The additional luminosity provided by the LHC coupled with advances in LHCb’s hardware and detector design will allow us to probe previously unobserved decays, while improving our understanding of decays currently under investigation. Improvements in the VELO design will improve the resolution of production and decay vertices, significantly improving the physics performance of semileptonic measurements. In addition, the removal, or thinning, of the RF foil can allow the resolution of measured vertices to be improved even further, while simultaneously improving background rejection, tracking efficiencies and reducing ghost rates. The physics performance increase, solely from improved resolution on semileptonic kinematics due to the removal of the RF foil is estimated.
Speaker: Iwan Thomas Smith (University of Edinburgh (GB)) -
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Prospects on HH production at the HL-LHC with the CMS experiment
Observing double Higgs production (HH) will enable a direct determination of the Higgs self-coupling, a crucial parameter of the Standard Model. Given the extreme small rate of this process, detecting it will only be possible with the HL-LHC and the 3 ab-1 of data it is expected to provide, and with an upgraded CMS detector capable to cope with high levels of radiation and pileup. Sensitivity studies on HH, based on the projected performance of the CMS Phase II detector, as well as extrapolations of Run 2 searches for HH production to the ultimate HL-LHC luminosity, are presented.
Speaker: Mr Sebastien Wertz (Universite Catholique de Louvain (UCL) (BE)) -
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H->γγ studies with the CMS Experiment at the HL-LHC
The upgraded CMS detector at the HL-LHC will allow the properties of the Higgs boson to be measured with unprecedented precision. This poster presents the expected performance of Higgs measurements in the diphoton decay channel using the upgraded CMS detector. Current CMS analyses and near-term plans are summarised. Recent studies of the projected diphoton mass resolution at the HL-LHC, taking into account the proposed barrel calorimeter upgrade and potential timing capabilities, are discussed. In addition, extrapolations of Run 2 measurements to the full HL-LHC dataset are presented under different scenarios.
Speaker: Edward Scott (Imperial College (GB)) -
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Search for Heavy Stable Charged Particles in the CMS Experiment
Several theoretical models inspired in the idea of supersymmetry (SUSY) accommodate the possibility of HSCPs (Heavy Stable Charged Particles). The phase-II upgrade of the CMS-RPC system will allow the trigger and identification of these kind of particles exploiting the Time of Flight Technique with the improved time resolution that a new DAQ system will provide (~1ns). Moreover new RPC chambers will be installed to extend the acceptance coverage up to $|\eta|<2.1$ with similar time resolution and better space resolution to complement this search.
In this poster a trigger strategy to detect HSCPs with the RPC detectors is presented, its performance is studied with Monte Carlo simulations and the expected results with the High Luminosity LHC data are shown.
Speaker: Gabriel Ramirez Sanchez (Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del IPN (MX)) -
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Tracking in CMS at the HL-LHC
The CMS experiment is in the process of designing a completely new track detector for the high-luminosity phase of LHC. The results of the future offline tracking performance of CMS will be shown in this poster, such as the excellent efficiency and the very good track separation in the core of a jet. Moreover, some recent developments using the Outer Tracker are included in the poster. The modules in the Outer Tracker of CMS in Phase 2 will provide a new type of hits, so-called vector hits, containing both position and direction information. In this way real tracks can be distinguished from purely random combination of hits. A new seeding is introduced in the Outer Tracker to reconstruct tracks coming from displaced vertices. Preliminary performance results will be presented.
Speaker: Erica Brondolin (Austrian Academy of Sciences (AT)) -
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Tau reconstruction and identification performance with the ATLAS detector for the High Luminosity LH
Tau leptons play an important role in many Standard Model and Beyond the Standard Model physics processes that are being investigated at the LHC. This poster details studies of the expected performance of the reconstruction and identification of hadronic tau lepton decays using the ATLAS detector for the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) upgrade.
The performance studies adapts the current ATLAS Tau algorithms to the specific beam conditions and detector upgrade expected for the HL-LHCSpeaker: Martina Laura Ojeda (University of Toronto (CA)) -
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Searches for top squarks in compressed SUSY scenarios at HL-LHC with the ATLAS detector
Top squark pair production in scenarios with compressed mass spectra are experimentally challenging. The reach at the high-luminosity phase of the LHC is expected to significantly extend beyond the current limits, when considering models where the top squarks decays via $\tilde{t}_{1} \rightarrow t\tilde\chi^0_1$. This poster presents benchmark studies targeting dileptonic final states with a parameterised simulation of the ATLAS detector at a centre-of-mass energy of 14 TeV.
Results are shown for an integrated luminosity of 3000 $fb^{-1}$Speaker: Marco Rimoldi (Universitaet Bern (CH)) -
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BJ/Psi phi studies for HL/HE-LHC with ATLAS
Real data as well as Monte Carlo simulations are used to study the decay of $B^0_s \to J/\psi\phi$ in order to measure the $CP$ violating mixing phase and the width difference between the $B^0_s$ eigenstates. The increased sensitivity is expected mainly due to the improved decay time resolution obtained with the ATLAS upgraded IBL and ITk inner tracking detector
Speakers: Radek Novotny (Czech Technical University (CZ)), Tomas Jakoubek (Acad. of Sciences of the Czech Rep. (CZ)) -
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Roman Pots @ High-Luminosity LHC
Roman Pots are special devices that allow operation of detectors very close to the beam. This technique is used for measurements of forward protons, scattered in diffractive or electromagnetic interactions. Presently, several detectors housed in Roman Pots operate at LHC. The poster presents the physics motivation and first feasibility studies for such detectors the HL-LHC
Speakers: Janusz Chwastowski (Polish Academy of Sciences (PL)), Rafał Staszewski (IFJ PAN Cracow (PL)) -
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Instantons and spharelons at HL and HE-LHC
Instantons are nonperturbative tunneling processes between topologically distinct vacua which occurs in non-Abelian gauge theories. Even though instanton processes are a core prediction of the SM, providing insights in the vacuum structure of the theory, they have so far not been experimentally observed. Instanton processes in the electroweak sector (sphalerons) lead to violation of baryon+lepton number, and have important implications for baryogenesis. While their cross-section is predicted to be vanishingly small at LHC energies, sphalerons might be in reach of upcoming high energy colliders, such as the HE-LHC. We present promising search strategies for sphaleron production, based on the large predicted multiplicity of gauge bosons and the expected upper limits on their cross-section achievable at both the high luminosity and high energy LHC. In the QCD sector instantons lead to chirality violation and are thought to play a role in many aspects of the long distance behaviour of the theory.
QCD instantons have been searched for in ep scattering at HERA, but insofar they have not been looked for in pp collisions, where their cross-section is predicted to be enhanced. We discuss possible search strategies for both the LHeC and HL/HE-LHCSpeaker: Simone Amoroso (CERN) -
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HH->bbyy and triple H coupling in ATLAS
The HH->bbγγ is a promising channel to measure the trilinear Higgs self-coupling, benefitting from the narrow mass peak of the H->γγ decay and the large branching fraction of the H->bb decay. The prospects for observing di-Higgs production through the bbγγ channel in the HL-LHC are presented. This study assumes an integrated luminosity of 3000 fb-1 and mean pileup rates < μ > of 200. An expected significance of 1.05 is obtained in HH->bbγγ observation which translates into the Higgs boson self-coupling being constrained to -0.8 < 𝜆/𝜆SM < 7.7 at 95% confidence level.
Speaker: Daniel Lawrence Briglin (University of Birmingham (GB))
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Flavour WG: session 1 40/S2-A01 - Salle Anderson
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TH on future of the BSM measurements from flavor observablesSpeaker: Javier Virto (Massachussets Institute of Technology)
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LHCb physics : RD + LFV/LUSpeaker: Paula Alvarez Cartelle (Imperial College (GB))
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Belle II legacy + correlation w/HL-LHCSpeaker: Pablo Goldenzweig (KIT - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (DE))
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Higgs WG: session 1 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Philip Ilten (University of Birmingham (GB))
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HH measurements in ATLAS and CMSSpeaker: Dr Stephane Jezequel (LAPP (CNRS-USMB))
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ttH and tH in ATLAS and CMSSpeaker: Matthias Schroeder (KIT - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (DE))
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Jet and Photon PhysicsSpeaker: Pavel Starovoitov (Ruprecht Karls Universitaet Heidelberg (DE))
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Conveners: Riccardo Torre (CERN), Xabier Cid Vidal (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela)
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Theoretical overview of Supersymmetry at the energy frontiersSpeaker: Tilman Plehn (Heidelberg University)
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Search for Long-lived particles at ATLASSpeaker: Simone Pagan Griso (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US))
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Search for Long-Lived particles at CMSSpeaker: Juliette Alimena (Ohio State University (US))
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Searches for Long-lived particles at LHCbSpeaker: Carlos Vazquez Sierra (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))
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New proposals for long-lived particle studiesSpeaker: David Curtin (University of Maryland)
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challenges and needs for BSM searches: experimentalists perspectiveSpeakers: Keith Ulmer (University of Colorado, Boulder (US)), Monica D'Onofrio (University of Liverpool (GB)), Xabier Cid Vidal (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela)
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Flavour WG: session 2 40/S2-A01 - Salle Anderson
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TH on future of the SM measurements from flavor observablesSpeaker: Luca Silvestrini (INFN Rome)
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CMS physicsSpeaker: Subir Sarkar (Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics (IN))
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Heavy Ions WG: session 1 4/3-006 - TH Conference RoomConvener: Jan Fiete Grosse-Oetringhaus (CERN)
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Introduction
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Heavy Flavour and Quarkonia: Discussion
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Radiation/low-mass dileptonsSpeaker: Michael Weber (Stefan Meyer Institute for Subatomic Physics (SMI), Austrian Academy of Sciences (AT))
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Joint session: Higgs and SM 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Dieter Zeppenfeld
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Higgs productionSpeaker: Keith Hamilton
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EW physics, di- and multi-boson, VBF/VBSSpeaker: Claire Lee (Brookhaven National Laboratory (US))
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13:00
Lunch break
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Convener: Michael Andreas Winn (Université Paris-Saclay (FR))
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Jets/energy loss: TheorySpeaker: Korinna Christine Zapp (LIP Laboratorio de Instrumentacao e Fisica Experimental de Part)
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Jets/energy loss: Discussion
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Flow/correlations: ExperimentSpeaker: Martin Spousta (Charles University)
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Flow/correlations: Discussion
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Joint session: Higgs, flavour and BSM 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConveners: Jure Zupan (University of Cincinnati), Xabier Cid Vidal (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela)
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Higgs, light Yukawas, and FC couplingsSpeaker: Fady Bishara (University of Oxford (GB))
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Light Yukawa Couplings: experimental searchesSpeaker: Oscar Augusto De Aguiar Francisco (CERN)
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Physics potential for the e-p collider: Higgs, BSM and flavourSpeaker: Uta Klein (University of Liverpool (GB))
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Flavour anomaly inputs for high pT measurementsSpeaker: Admir Greljo (University of Mainz)
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Discussion on Flavour anomalies after high lumiSpeaker: Tevong You
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a) The Case for Future Hadron Colliders From B→K(∗)μ+μ−B→K(∗)μ+μ− Decays
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PDFs, theory issues (inc. EW, ep/eA DIS option)Speaker: Dr Lucian Harland-Lang (University of Oxford)
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Experimental Inputs to PDF fitsSpeaker: Amanda Sarkar (University of Oxford (GB))
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Precision EWK measurementsSpeaker: Alexander Savin (University of Wisconsin Madison (US))
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Flavour WG: session 3 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
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LHCb physics : SpectroscopySpeaker: Marco Pappagallo (University of Edinburgh)
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HL/HE questions for SpectroscopySpeaker: Antonio Polosa (Universita' La Sapienza, Roma - Italy)
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Precision measurements of the charm and beauty masses and densities in the proton through epSpeaker: Max Klein
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Physics recap discussion
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Convener: Yen-Jie Lee (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US))
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Flow/correlations: Discussion
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Small Systems: Discussion
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Joint session: Higgs and BSM 500/1-001 - Main Auditorium
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Searches for heavy resonances in bosonic final statesSpeaker: Stephane Yves G Willocq (University of Massachusetts (US))
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Searches for heavy resonances in fermionic final statesSpeaker: Kerstin Hoepfner (Rheinisch Westfaelische Tech. Hoch. (DE))
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Experimental DM searches and higgs implicationsSpeakers: Anne-Marie Magnan (Imperial College (GB)), Anne-Marie Magnan (Imperial College (GB))
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High mass dileptons dijets EWPTSpeaker: Marco Farina (Rutgers University)
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EW physcis in forward regionSpeaker: Chitsanu Khurewathanakul (EPFL - Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne (CH))
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DPS, photon induced production of vector bosons or jetsSpeaker: Marc Dunser (CERN)
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Diffractive physics and UPCSpeaker: Christoph Mayer (Polish Academy of Sciences (PL))
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COST Project (VBS network)Speaker: Pietro Govoni (Universita & INFN, Milano-Bicocca (IT))
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Conveners: Keith Ulmer (University of Colorado, Boulder (US)), Riccardo Torre (CERN)
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Dark Photons and other Exotic SearchesSpeaker: Martino Borsato (Universidade de Santiago de Compostela (ES))
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Searches for SUSY from ATLASSpeaker: Federico Meloni (Universitaet Bern (CH))
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Searches for SUSY (and other non-resonant signatures) from CMSSpeaker: Giovanni Zevi Della Porta (Univ. of California San Diego (US))
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Heavy Ions WG: session 4 40/S2-A01 - Salle AndersonConvener: Urs Wiedemann (CERN)
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Cosmic ray physics: opportunities in fixed target and pOSpeaker: Dr Hans Peter Dembinski (Max-Planck-Institute for Nuclear Physics, Heidelberg)
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nPDFs/small-x/UPC: ExperimentSpeaker: Francesco Bossu (Université Paris-Saclay (FR))
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nPDFs/small-x/UPC: Discussion
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Higgs WG: Session 2 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Stefania Gori (University of Cincinnati (US))
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Offshell couplings and Higgs width in ATLAS and CMSSpeaker: Roberto Di Nardo (CERN)
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New decay modes of heavy Higgs bosonsSpeaker: Bibhushan Shakya (University of Cincinnati/University of Michigan)
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SM WG: session 4 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
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EFT in top physicsSpeaker: Liam Ronald Moore (Universite Catholique de Louvain (UCL) (BE))
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Top mass and cross sectionsSpeaker: Pedro Vieira De Castro Ferreira Da Silva (CERN)
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Top properties and FCNCSpeaker: Frederic Deliot (Université Paris-Saclay (FR))
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BSM WG: session 3 ( vidyo link: https://vidyowebrtc.web.cern.ch/client-select?url=https%3A%2F%2Fvidyoportal.cern.ch%2Fjoin%2FxR9WVNmRVG ) 222/R-001
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R-parity Violating ModelsSpeakers: Dr Manuel E. Krauss (Bonn University), Manuel Krauss (Bayerische Julius Max. Universitaet Wuerzburg (DE))
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Discussion of submitted abstracts and other ideasSpeaker: AllAdditional Material
- Baer - Signatures for SUSY with light higgsinos.pdf
- Barducci - VLQs coupling determination.pdf
- Chekanov - Precision searches in dijets at the HL-LHC and HE-LHC
- Iyer - Dissecting multi-photon resonances at the large hadron collider.pdf
- Westhoff - Integrating in the Higgs Portal to Fermion Dark Matter
- Westhoff - Virtual signatures of dark sectors in Higgs couplings
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Flavour WG: session 4 4/3-006 - TH Conference Room
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ATLAS track trigger + tracker impactSpeaker: Julie Hart Kirk (STFC - Rutherford Appleton Lab. (GB))
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LHCb timing tracker impactSpeaker: Mark Richard James Williams (University of Manchester (GB))
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CMS track trigger + tracker impactSpeaker: Louise Skinnari (Cornell University (US))
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LHCb calorimetry impactSpeaker: Preema Rennee Pais (EPFL - Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne (CH))
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Detector/physics interplay discussion
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Heavy Ions WG: session 5 40/S2-A01 - Salle AndersonConvener: Zvi Citron (Weizmann Institute of Science (IL))
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Physics of identified spectra and nuclei, net-charge fluctuationsSpeaker: Francesca Bellini (CERN)
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Open questions – LHC and beyond: Intro ISpeaker: Yen-Jie Lee (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US))
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Open questions – LHC and beyond: Discussion
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Higgs WG: session 3 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumConvener: Maria Cepeda Hermida (CERN)
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SM Higgs prospects in ATLAS and CMSSpeaker: Dr Giacomo Ortona (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))
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Diboson pair productionSpeaker: Joan Elias-Miro (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
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Higgs four lepton signaturesSpeaker: Yi Chen (CERN)
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DELPHES: a fast simulation tool to study the HL/HE-LHC physics potential 500/1-001 - Main AuditoriumSpeaker: Michele Selvaggi (CERN)
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Wrap up and next steps
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