IBS-PNU Joint Workshop on Physics beyond the Standard Model

Asia/Seoul
Atlantis Room, B1 (Paradise Hotel Busan)

Atlantis Room, B1

Paradise Hotel Busan

296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
Deog Ki Hong (Pusan National University (KR))
Description

The IBS-Busan Workshop on physics beyond standard model will be held during December 4-7, 2019 at the Paradise Hotel, Busan, Korea. The workshop is jointly organized by Center for Theoretical Physics of the Universe (CTPU) at IBS and High Energy Physics Group at Pusan National University (PNU). The purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers for Physics beyond the Standard Model to present and discuss our current understanding and prospects for future progress.


Information

• Workshop venue
- Paradise Hotel Busan
- More information: Paradise Hotel
- The workshop will be held in the Atlantis Room (Main Building B1).

• Accommodation
- Kolon Seacloud Hotel
- More information: Kolon Seacloud Hotel
- It takes just about 2 minutes on foot from the Kolon Seacloud Hotel to the workshop place.

• Registration deadline: November 15th, 2019
- Number of participants will be limited to 50.
- Accommodations will be provided to all invited participants and limited funds are available for some participants to support the accommodations if requested.


Invited participants and speakers

  • Gabriele Ferretti (Charmers U.)
  • Koichi Hamaguchi (Tokyo U.)
  • Francesco Sannino (CP3, SDU)
  • Viljami Leino (Munich, Tech. U.)
  • Joshua Ruderman (NYU)
  • Changrim Ahn (Ewha U.)
  • Kyu Jung Bae (Kyungpook Nat'l U.)
  • Ki Young Choi (SKKU)
  • Thomas Flacke (CTPU, IBS)
  • Seok Kim  (Seoul Nat'l U.)
  • Seyong Kim (Sejong U.)
  • Yoonabi Kim (SKKU)
  • Hyun Min Lee (Chung Ang U. /CERN)
  • Hye-Sung Lee (KAIST)
  • Kimyeong Lee (KIAS)
  • Seung Joon Lee (Korea U.)
  • Myeonghun Park (Seoul Tech U.)
  • Seong Chan Park (Yonsei U.)
  • Chang Sub Shin (CTPU, IBS)
  • Sang Jin Sin (Hanyang U.)
  • Jeonghyeon Song (Konkuk U.)
  • Seokhoon Yun (KIAS)
  • Ke-Pan Xie (Seoul Nat'l U.)
  • Zeren Simon Wang (APCTP)

Organizing Committee

• Kiwoon Choi (IBS-CTPU)
• Sanghyeon Chang (IBS-CTPU)
• Deog Ki Hong (PNU), Chair
• Kwang Sik Jeong (PNU)
• Jong-Wan Lee (PNU)
• Sang Hui Im (PNU)

 

For any information or assistance, please contact:

♦ Sang Hui Im
   imsanghui@pusan.ac.kr

 

Participants
  • Adil Jueid
  • Adriana Guerrero Menkara
  • Arnab Dasgupta
  • Bum-Hoon Lee
  • ByungSu Kim
  • Chang Sub Shin
  • Changrim Ahn
  • Chinonso Onah
  • Deog Ki Hong
  • Dhong Yeon Cheong
  • Donghun Lee
  • Francesco Sannino
  • Gabriele Ferretti
  • Gyurin Kim
  • Hye-Sung Lee
  • Hyun Min Lee
  • Jeonghyeon Song
  • JINHEUNG KIM
  • Jong-Chul Park
  • Jong-Wan Lee
  • Joshua Ruderman
  • Junbeom Park
  • Ke-Pan Xie
  • KI-Young Choi
  • Kimyeong Lee
  • Koichi Hamaguchi
  • Kwang Sik Jeong
  • Kyu Jung Bae
  • Lee Yeseong
  • Myeonghun Park
  • Nakwoo Kim
  • Sang Hui Im
  • Sang-Jin Sin
  • Sanghyeon Chang
  • Seok Kim
  • Seokhoon Yun
  • Seong Chan Park
  • Seung J. Lee
  • Seyong Kim
  • So Young Shim
  • Soo-Min Choi
  • SooJin Lee
  • Sung Mook Lee
  • Thomas Flacke
  • Ui Min
  • Viljami Leino
  • Yannis Semertzidis
  • Yongsoo Jho
  • Yoonbai Kim
  • Youngjoon Kwon
  • Zeren Simon Wang
    • 13:00 14:00
      Registration 1h Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
    • 14:00 15:30
      Afternoon session I Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Kwang Sik Jeong (PNU)
      • 14:00
        Dark Axion Portal 30m
        Speaker: Hye-Sung Lee (KAIST)
      • 14:30
        Searching for Dark Photons at the LHeC and FCC-he 30m

        Extensions of the Standard Model (SM) gauge group with a new $U(1)_X$ predict an additional gauge boson. Through kinetic mixing with the SM photons featured by a coupling $\epsilon$, the ensuing so-called dark photons $\gamma'$, which acquire mass as a result of the breaking of the gauge group $U(1)_X$, can interact with the SM field content. These massive dark photons can therefore decay to pairs of leptons, hadrons, or quarks, depending on their mass $m_{\gamma'}$. In this work, we discuss searches for dark photons in the mass range around and below one GeV at the LHeC and FCC-he colliders. The signal is given by the displaced decays of the long-lived dark photon into two charged fermions. We discuss the impact of conceivable irreducible (SM and machine-related) backgrounds and different signal efficiencies. Our estimates show that the LHeC and FCC-he can test a domain that is complementary to other present and planned experiments.

        Speaker: Zeren Simon Wang (APCTP)
      • 15:00
        Axion-photon-dark photon oscillation and its implication for 21 cm observation 30m

        We examine the resonant conversion of axion-like particle (ALP) or dark photon to the electromagnetic photon in the early Universe, which takes place due to the ALP-photon-dark photon oscillations in background dark photon gauge fields. It is noted that the corresponding conversion probability can have an unusual spectral feature which allows strong conversion at low frequency domain, but has negligible conversion at high frequencies above certain critical frequency which is determined by the ALP coupling to dark photon and the strength of background dark photon gauge field. We apply this scheme to heat up the 21 cm photons without affecting the Cosmic Microwave Background, which can explain the tentative absorption signal of 21 cm photons detected recently by the EDGES experiment.

        Speaker: Seokhoon Yun (KIAS)
    • 15:30 16:00
      Coffee break 30m Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
    • 16:00 18:00
      Afternoon session II Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Sang Hui Im (PNU)
      • 16:00
        Probing charged Higgs bosons using Top quark polarisation 30m

        We study the production and the decay of a heavy charged Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in gb fusion. The chiral structure of the $H^+ \bar{t} b$ coupling can trigger a particular spin state of the top quark produced in the decay of a Charged Higgs boson and therefore, is sensitive to the underlying mechanism of the electroweak symmetry breaking (EWSB). Taking two benchmark models (2HDM type-I and 2HDM type-Y) as an example, we show that observables sensitive to the top quark polarisation -- constructed of energies and angles of the top quark’s decay products -- can be used both as a discovery as well as a characterization tool. We discuss the resilience of these observables to the flavor scheme used in the calculations, and to the NLO QCD corrections.

        Speaker: Adil Jueid (Konkuk University)
      • 16:30
        Matter-antimatter asymmetry without loops 30m

        We propose a new mechanism for generating matter-antimatter asymmetry via the interference of tree-level diagrams only. We first derive a general result that a nonzero CP-asymmetry can be generated via at least two sets of interfering tree-level diagrams involving either 2→2 or 1→N(with N≥3) processes. We illustrate this point in a simple TeV-scale extension of the Standard Model with an inert Higgs doublet and right-handed neutrinos, along with an electroweak-triplet scalar field. The imaginary part needed for the required CP-asymmetry comes from the trilinear coupling of the inert-doublet with the triplet scalar. Small Majorana neutrino masses are generated by both scotogenic and type-II seesaw mechanisms. The real part of the neutral component of the inert-doublet serves as a cold dark matter candidate. The evolutions of the dark matter relic density and the baryon asymmetry are intimately related in this scenario.

        Speaker: Arnab Dasgupta (Seoul National University of Science and Technology)
      • 17:00
        Cosmological Relaxation from Dark Fermion Production 30m

        We consider the cosmological relaxation solution to the electroweak hierarchy problem using the fermion production as a dominant friction force. In our approach, neither super-Planckian field excursions nor a large number of e-folds arise, and scanning over thermal Higgs mass squared is avoided. The produced fermions from the relaxion source through the derivative coupling are SM-singlets, what we call dark fermions, and they can serve as the keV scale warm dark matter candidates.

        Speaker: Ui Min (KAIST)
      • 17:30
        Probing sterile neutrino in meson decays with and without sequential neutrino decay 30m

        We present the most systematic approach to discover a sterile neutrino $N$ or constrain $\left| U_{\ell N} \right|^2$, the mixing between active neutrino $\nu_\ell$ (with $\ell=\mu,\tau$) and the sterile neutrino $N$, from $B \to D\ell N$ decays. Our constraint on $\left| U_{\mu N} \right|^2$ achievable from Belle II data is comparable with that from the much larger data set of upgraded LHCb, even much better for mass of sterile neutrino $m_N < 2$~GeV. We can also probe the Dirac and Majorana nature of $N$ by observing the sequential decay of $N$, including suppression factors associated with observation of a displaced
        vertex and helicity flip, for Majorana $N$.

        Speaker: Donghun Lee (Yonsei University)
    • 09:00 12:00
      Morning session Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Kyu Jung Bae (Kyungpook National U)
      • 09:00
        Dark Matter Heating vs. Rotochemical Heating in Old Neutron Stars 1h

        Dark matter (DM) particles in the Universe accumulate in neutron stars (NSs) through their interactions with ordinary matter. It has been known that their annihilation inside the NS core causes late-time heating, with which the surface temperature becomes a constant value of 2000-3000 K for the NS age t > 10^6-10^7 years. This conclusion is, however, drawn based on the assumption that the beta equilibrium is maintained in NSs throughout their life, which turns out to be invalid for rotating pulsars. The slowdown in the pulsar rotation drives the NS matter out of beta equilibrium, and the resultant imbalance in chemical potentials induces late-time heating, dubbed as rotochemical heating. This effect can heat a NS up to 10^6 K for t > 10^6−10^7 years. In fact, recent observations found several old NSs whose surface temperature is much higher than the prediction of the standard cooling scenario and is consistent with the rotochemical heating. Motivated by these observations, we reevaluate the significance of the DM heating in NSs, including the effect of the rotochemical heating. We show that the signature of DM heating can still be detected in old ordinary pulsars, while it is concealed by the rotochemical heating for old millisecond pulsars. On the other hand, a discovery of a very cold NS can give a robust constraint on the DM heating, and thus on DM models.

        Speaker: Koichi Hamaguchi (University of Tokyo)
      • 10:00
        Coffee break 30m
      • 10:30
        Dark Matter Targets with Exponentially Small Couplings 1h
        Speaker: Joshua Ruderman (New York University)
      • 11:30
        Four-form relaxation of Higgs mass and cosmological constant 30m

        We consider the cosmological relaxation of the Higgs mass and the cosmological constant due to the four-form fluxes in four dimensions. We introduce non-minimal four-form couplings for reheating the Universe after the last membrane nucleation and propose some simple examples with a pseudo-scalar or a complex singlet scalar field. We also discuss the implications of the non-minimal four-form coupling to gravity for flattening the inflaton potential in chaotic inflation models with a pseudo-scalar field.

        Speaker: Hyun Min Lee (Chung-Ang University and CERN)
    • 12:00 14:00
      Lunch 2h
    • 14:00 15:30
      Afternoon session I Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Hyun Min Lee (Chung Ang Univ. and CERN)
      • 14:00
        Higgs inflation: updated 30m

        Higgs inflation is the best fitting model of cosmological inflation after the Planck data. I would like to discuss some recent discussions on fine-tuning, unitarity, violent preheating, and primordial black hole formation in Higgs inflation.

        Speaker: Seong Chan Park (Yonsei University)
      • 14:30
        Magnetogenesis from rotating scalar: à la scalar chiral magnetic effect 30m

        The chiral magnetic effect is a phenomenon that an electric current parallel to the magnetic fields is induced in the presence of the chiral asymmetry in the fermionic system. In this talk, I would like to point out that the electric current induced by the dynamics of a pseudo scalar field that anomalously couples to electromagnetic fields can be interpreted as a similar effect in the scalar system. Noting that the velocity of the pseudo scalar field, which is the phase of a complex scalar, represents that the system carries a global U(1) number asymmetry, we see that the induced current is proportional to the asymmetry and parallel to the magnetic field, which is the same to the chiral magnetic effect. The mechanism like the Affleck-Dine mechanism an asymmetry carried by the Affleck-Dine field can induce the electric current and give rise to the instability in the (electro)magnetic field if it is unbroken by the expectation value of the Affleck-Dine field. Cosmological consequences of this mechanism are investigated.

        Speaker: Chang Sub Shin (IBS-CTPU)
      • 15:00
        Neutrino self-interaction in the signals from blazar TXS 0506+056 30m

        Even though conventional leptonic or lepto-hadronic models of blazar successfully explain the observed electromagnetic component of the flaring signal from the Blazar TXS 0506+056 in a large range of energy window 𝐸𝛾∈(10−1eV,102 GeV), the predicted neutrino flux is too small to be consistent with the IceCube observation at 𝐸𝜈∼300 TeV. We show that a sizable self-interaction of neutrinos with a light messenger resolves the discrepancy. Interestingly, the same physics can relieve the cosmological tension in 𝐻0 and 𝜎8.

        Speaker: Yongsoo Jho (Yonsei University)
    • 15:30 16:00
      Coffee break 30m Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
    • 16:00 18:00
      Afternoon session II Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Thomas Flacke (IBS-CTPU)
      • 16:00
        Towards the ultimate axion dark matter sensitivity in the 1-20 GHz frequency range 30m

        The IBS-CAPP has currently accomplished all its technical challenges towards achieving the ultimate sensitivity in axion dark matter: DFSZ level even for 10% axion dark matter content in the local halo. Early next year we are expecting to receive a low temperature superconducting (LTS), 12T magnet LTS-12T/320mm, based on Nb3Sn cable, from Oxford Instruments, which will enable us to cover the 1-8 GHz axion frequency range. For the rest of the frequency range of 8-20 GHz we need to finish the high temperature superconducting (HTS) 25T magnet being developed at BNL. I will present the current status and the rising competition from around the world for the various frequency ranges.

        Speaker: Yannis Semertzidis (IBS-CAPP and KAIST)
      • 16:30
        Strong first order phase transition in composite Higgs models 30m

        We study the strong first order electroweak phase transition (SFOEWPT) with the SO(6)/SO(5) composite Higgs model, whose scalar sector contains one Higgs doublet and one real singlet. Six benchmark models are built with fermion embeddings in 1, 6, and 15 of SO(6). We show that SFOEWPT cannot be triggered under the minimal Higgs potential hypothesis, which assumes the scalar potential is dominated by the form factors from the lightest composite resonances. To get a SFOEWPT, the contributions from local operators induced by physics above the cutoff scale are needed. We take the 6 + 6 model as an example to investigate the gravitational waves prediction and the related collider phenomenology.

        Speaker: Ke-Pan Xie (Seoul National University)
      • 17:00
        Recent (non-Rx) highlights from Belle 30m

        In this talk, we present recent highlights of physics results from Belle, other than R(D()), R_K(). We also show a recent status of the Belle II experiment.

        Speaker: Yongjoon Kwon (Yonsei University)
    • 09:00 12:00
      Morning session Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Deog Ki Hong (PNU)
      • 09:00
        Recent developments in partial compositeness 1h

        I review attempts at constructing models of partial compositeness from strongly coupled gauge theories. A few minimality assumptions allow one to isolate a small number of prototypical models that can be studied on the lattice and probed at colliders. I review recent results in these
        two areas, such as the spectrum from the lattice and two possible exotic signatures at colliders, namely light and weakly coupled additional ALPs and additional decays of top partners.

        Speaker: Gabriele Ferretti (Chalmers University)
      • 10:00
        Coffee break 30m
      • 10:30
        The Lattice Study of SU(2) with Many Fermions 1h

        Depending on the number of Fermions a gauge theory can have a behavior ranging from asymptotic freedom to asymptotic safety. I show the behavior of SU(2) gauge theory with 4,6,8,24, and 48 fermions measured from lattice field theory simulations. We observe limits for the lower and upper edge of the conformal window and measure anomalous dimensions for mass and coupling. We also try to understand the behavior with very high number of fermions, possibly leading to second conformal window.

        Speaker: Viljami Leino (Technical University of Munich)
      • 11:30
        Common exotic decays of vector-like top partners: Motivation, challenges, and opportunities for collider searches 30m
        Speaker: Thomas Flacke (IBS-CTPU)
    • 12:00 14:00
      Lunch 2h
    • 14:00 15:30
      Afternoon session I Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Jong-Wan Lee (PNU)
      • 14:00
        A Natural Composite GUT 30m
        Speaker: Seung Joon Lee (Korea University)
      • 14:30
        Lattice NRQCD study of heavy quark and anti-quark annihilations in QGP and heavy dark matter annihilations in early universe 30m
        Speaker: Seyong Kim (Sejong University)
      • 15:00
        Inert Doublet Model with U(1) symmetry 30m
        Speaker: Jeonghyeon Song (Konkuk University)
    • 15:30 16:00
      Coffee break 30m Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
    • 16:00 18:00
      Afternoon session II Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Seong Chan Park (Yonsei U)
      • 16:00
        Higgs precision with Deep Learning 30m
        Speaker: Myeonghun Park (Seoultech)
      • 16:30
        Neutrino Oscillations in Dark Matter 30m
        Speaker: Ki-Young Choi (Sungkyunkwan University)
      • 17:00
        4D asymptotically safe quantum field theories (Skype) 30m
        Speaker: Francesco Sannino (CP3, University of Southern Denmark)
      • 17:30
        Searching for New Physics Signals from Timing Spectra at Neutrino Experiment 30m

        We propose a novel strategy to search for new physics signals in timing spectra, envisioning the situation in which new particles come from the decay of a heavier mother particle with a finite particle width. For example, the timing distribution of events induced by the dark matter particle scattering at the detector may populate in a relatively narrow range, forming a "resonance-like" shape. Due to this structural feature, the signal may be isolated from the backgrounds, in particular when the backgrounds are uniformly distributed in energy and time. We analyze the existing data for the CsI detector of the COHERENT experiment with a timing cut and an energy cut, and find an excess in the timing distribution which can be explained by dark matter. Our new approach can be generally utilized for searching for new physics such as light dark matter or non-standard neutrino interaction in coherent neutrino scattering experiments including CCM, COHERENT, and JSNS^2.

        Speaker: Jong-Chul Park (Chungnam National University)
    • 18:00 20:00
      Banquet 2h Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
    • 09:00 12:00
      Morning session Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea
      Convener: Changrim Ahn (Ewha Womans U)
      • 09:00
        Why the quark mass is so small: the chiral symmetry and Heun's equation 30m

        We show that a holographic abelian Higgs model leads us to the Heun's equation, which is the same one derived for the bag model studied by Lichtenberg. The correspondence between two models resembles the AdS/CFT dictionary. The spectrum follows linear confinement for zero quark mass, while it is highly non-linear for finite quark mass. It can be traced back to the difference in the singularity class of equation of motion made by the quark mass. It suggests that the origin of the chiral symmetry is tied to the dynamics of color confinement.

        Speaker: Sang-Jin Sin (Hanyang University)
      • 09:30
        Higher Curvature Gravity and its implication 30m

        Einstein gravity may be coming from the leading linear term of the curvature in the low energy effective action. As the simplest extension of the Einstein gravity with the higher curvature term, we study the model with the Gauss-Bonnet term, which is the simplest term allowing the equation of motion to be at the 2nd order. The model wi analyze is the dilaton Einstein Gauss-Bonnet theory. We study the properties of this model, especially the black holes, and the cosmological implications in the early universe.

        Speaker: Bum-Hoon Lee (Sogang University)
      • 10:00
        Coffee break 30m
      • 10:30
        Black holes in holographic quantum gravity 30m
        Speaker: Seok Kim (Seoul National University)
      • 11:00
        Complete Prepotential of 5d Superconformal Field Theories 30m
        Speaker: Kimyeong Lee (KIAS)
      • 11:30
        Perturbative methods in holography vs. Supersymmetric Localization 30m

        We study supergravity BPS equations which correspond to mass- deformation of some representative AdS/CFT examples. The field theory of interest are N=4, D=4 super Yang-Mills, the ABJM model in D=3, and the Brandhuber-Oz fixed point in D=5. For these gauge theories the free energy with mass terms for matter multiplets is calculable in large-N limit using supersymmetric localization technique. We suggest a perturbative method to solve the supergravity equations. For the dual of mass-deformed ABJM model we reproduce the known exact solutions. For the mass-deformed Brandhuber-Oz theory our method gives the holographic free energy in analytic form. For N=1* deformations of N=4 super Yang-Mills, we calculated exactly some expansion coefficients, which were only known numerically before our work.

        Speaker: Nakwoo Kim (Kyung Hee University)
    • 12:00 12:10
      Closing 10m Atlantis Room, B1

      Atlantis Room, B1

      Paradise Hotel Busan

      296, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro (Jung-dong), Haeundae-gu, Busan, Korea