The XXVIII International Conference on Supersymmetry and Unification of Fundamental Interactions (SUSY 2021)

Asia/Shanghai
Tianjun Li
Description

Notice to all participants: In addition to Zoom, the SUSY 2021 Plenary talks will also be broadcast live on Youtube 

 

Since its inception in 1993, the annual SUSY conference has become one of the world's largest international meetings devoted to new ideas in fundamental particle physics. Supersymmetry is one of the most elegant and promising extensions of the Standard Model, with the ability to resolve various puzzles in the Standard Model naturally. Major experimental efforts, including collider searches and dark matter experiments, are ongoing to search for supersymmetry in Nature. However, thus far no definitive evidence of supersymmetry has been found. SUSY 2021 will be dedicated to not only understanding the status of supersymmetry searches at various experiments, but also exploring whether all supersymmetric possibilities are exhausted, and if there exists any well-motivated alternative theories which can also address the issues of the Standard Model. The goal of the International Conference on Supersymmetry and Unification of Fundamental Interactions (SUSY) is to review and discuss recent progress in theoretical, phenomenological, and experimental aspects of supersymmetric theories and other approaches to physics beyond the Standard Model of particles and interactions.

 

Participants
  • Aagaman Bhusal
  • ABHI MUKHERJEE
  • ABHIJIT P. SARODE
  • Abhishek Iyer
  • Abigail Keats
  • Adam Bailey
  • Adam Davis
  • Addisalem Assefa
  • Adeel Mansha
  • Adeela Afzal
  • Adrian del Rio
  • Adrian Irles
  • Adrian Thompson
  • Adriana Guerrero Menkara
  • Afif Omar
  • Afsar Reja
  • Ahmad Ahmad Elsayed Moursy
  • Aidin Masouminia
  • Aikaterini Zyriliou
  • AJAY Kaladharan
  • Akash Kumar Saha
  • Akimasa Ishikawa
  • Alberto Tonero
  • Aldo Deandrea
  • Aleesha KT
  • Aleksander Filip Zarnecki
  • Aleksandra Dimitrievska
  • Alessandro Lenoci
  • Alessandro Podo
  • Alessandro Valenti
  • Alessio Mastroddi
  • Alex Nielsen
  • Alex Roman
  • Alexander Josef Grohsjean
  • Alexander Mann
  • Alexandria Costantino
  • Alexis Tremolada
  • Alfiia Mukhaeva
  • Ali Muhammad
  • Alicia Wongel
  • Alina Kleimenova
  • Alon Faraggi
  • Aman Mukesh Desai
  • Amandip De
  • Amin Abou Ibrahim
  • amir subba
  • Amit Adhikary
  • Amit Chakraborty
  • Amit Kumar Rao
  • AMIT PATHAK
  • Amit Tiwari
  • Anagha Aravind
  • Andrea Guiggiani
  • Andrea Messina
  • Andrea Piccinelli
  • Andrea Tesi
  • Andrea Wulzer
  • Andreas Albert
  • Andreas Crivellin
  • Andreas Schachner
  • Andrew James Whitbeck
  • Angira Rastogi
  • Anh Vu Phan
  • Anil Thapa
  • Anindya Dey
  • ANIRBAN CHATTERJEE
  • Anirban Karan
  • Anish Ghoshal
  • Anja Novosel
  • Anjan Barik
  • Ankur Verma
  • Ankush Reddy Kanuganti
  • Anton Sokolov
  • Antonia Strubig
  • Antonio De Maria
  • Antonio Portocarrero
  • Anupam Mazumdar
  • Anzhong Wang
  • Aoki Shuntaro
  • Apostolos Pilaftsis
  • ARGHYAJIT DATTA
  • Ariel Arza
  • Arif Akhundov
  • Arindam Chatterjee
  • Arindam Das
  • Aritra Biswas
  • Arnab Dasgupta
  • Arnab Roy
  • Artur Shaikhiev
  • Aruna Kumar Nayak
  • ARUPJYOTI PATHAK
  • Arvind Bhaskar
  • Arvind Kumar Mishra
  • Arvind Rajaraman
  • Asesh K Datta
  • Ashutosh Alok
  • Asuka Ito
  • Athanasios Dedes
  • Atsushi HINATA
  • Atsuya Niki
  • Aurora Melis
  • Auttakit Chatrabhuti
  • Avnish .
  • Bachir Moussaoui
  • Baiyang Sun
  • Baljinder Kour
  • Bangalore Sathyaprakash
  • Barbara Szczerbinska
  • Bardia Najjari
  • Barmak Shams Es Haghi
  • Bartosz Fornal
  • Basabendu Barman
  • Bathiya Samarakoon
  • Benjamin Fuks
  • Benjamin Sheff
  • Bethany Suter
  • Bhaskar Dutta
  • Bhubanjyoti Bhattacharya
  • Bhupal Dev
  • Bhuvaneshwari Kashi
  • Bibhabasu De
  • Bilal Ahmad
  • Billy Parrish
  • Bin Chen
  • Bin Yan
  • Bindusar Sahoo
  • Biplob Bhattacherjee
  • BIPUL BHUYAN
  • Björn Herrmann
  • Bo-Lin Li
  • Bo-Qiang Ma
  • Bobby McGovern
  • Bodo Lampe
  • Borut Bajc
  • Bowen Fu
  • Brian Williams
  • Brooks Thomas
  • Bryan Field
  • cai yanbo
  • Cai-Dian Lu
  • cailian jiang
  • Caleb James Smith
  • Caleb Levy
  • Camellia Bose
  • Carlos E. M. Wagner
  • Carlos Moreno Martinez
  • Carlos Pires
  • Cash Hauptmann
  • CB Y
  • Ce Zhang
  • Cem Salih Un
  • Chakrit Pongkitivanichkul
  • Chandan Hati
  • Chandrima Sen
  • chang jing cheng
  • Changjun Gao
  • Changqiao Li
  • Chao Zhang
  • Charanjit Kaur Khosa
  • Chayanit Asawatangtrakuldee
  • Chen Suping
  • Chen Zhang
  • chendong Jiao
  • Cheng Li
  • Cheng Peng
  • Cheng Xu
  • Cheng-Yang Lee
  • Chengcheng Han
  • Chengfeng Cai
  • chengpo chen
  • Chengxi LI
  • Chengyi Li
  • Chiara Lucarelli
  • Chiara Rizzi
  • Chinmoy Dey
  • Chong-Bin Chen
  • Chris Kolda
  • Christiane Scherb
  • Christophe Grojean
  • Christopher Dessert
  • Christopher Erickson
  • Christopher Hughes
  • Christopher Madrid
  • Christopher Pope
  • Christopher Verhaaren
  • Christos Vergis
  • Chuang Li
  • Chun Liu
  • Chunxue Yuan
  • Claudia Hagedorn
  • Claudio Andrea Manzari
  • Clement Helsens
  • Cong Zhang
  • Congfeng Qiao
  • Cosmos Dong
  • Cristian Felipe Sierra Fonseca
  • Cristian Moscoso
  • Cristina Fernandez
  • Csaba Balazs
  • Cui xiangyi
  • Cyrin Neeraj
  • Da Xu
  • Dale Adam Julson
  • Dan Kondo
  • dan xie
  • Daniela Katherinne Paredes Hernandez
  • Daohan Wang
  • Dario Buttazzo
  • david aboagye
  • David Damgaard
  • David Dunsky
  • David Hui
  • David Jackson
  • David Marsden
  • De-Sheng Li
  • Debajit Bose
  • Debangshu Mukherjee
  • Debashree Priyadarsini Das
  • Debottam Das
  • Debottam Nandi
  • Debtosh Chowdhury
  • Deepan Jayakumar
  • Demi Antoinette Jacomilla
  • Denis Rathjens
  • Deniz Soyuer
  • Devabrat Mahanta
  • Dexu LIN
  • di chen
  • Di Zhang
  • Di Zhang
  • Dibyakrupa Sahoo
  • Dibyashree Sengupta
  • Diego Jose Gonzalez Vizoso
  • Diego Restrepo
  • Digesh Raut
  • Dimitrios Karamitros
  • Dinesh Kumar Singha
  • Diogo Buarque Franzosi
  • Dipak Maity
  • Dipan Sengupta
  • Dipendu Bhandari
  • Dmitrii Galakhov
  • Dmitry Madigozhin
  • Dominik Stoeckinger
  • Dong-Hui Du
  • Doojin Kim
  • Douglas Jacob
  • Edmund Xiang Lin Ting
  • Eirini Tziaferi
  • El Abassi Abderrazaq
  • Elena Ginina
  • Elena Michelle Villhauer
  • Eleni Vryonidou
  • Elias Metral
  • Emanuela Musumeci
  • Emanuele Angelo Bagnaschi
  • Emanuele Copello
  • Emanuele Usai
  • Emilian Dudas
  • Emily Anne Thompson
  • Emily Nardoni
  • En-Kun Li
  • Encieh Erfani
  • Enrico Herrmann
  • Enrico Morgante
  • Ergin Sezgin
  • Eric Ballabene
  • Eric Madge
  • Eric Sharpe
  • Erik eduardo Barranzuela grijalba
  • Esteban Jimenez
  • Eung Jin Chun
  • Eva Silverstein
  • Fa Peng Huang
  • Fabian Hahner
  • FAIZUDDIN AHMED
  • Fang Xu
  • Fanrong Xu
  • Farida Fassi
  • Fariha Vardag
  • Farinaldo Queiroz
  • Farnaz Kazi
  • Fazlollah Hajkarim
  • Federico Leo Redi
  • Federico Meloni
  • Federico von der Pahlen
  • Fedor Bezrukov
  • Fei Huang
  • Fei Wang
  • Fei Yan
  • Feihu Liu
  • Felix Egle
  • Felix Yu
  • FENG Hao-Rong
  • Fengwangdong Zhang
  • Filippo Revello
  • Filmon Andom Ghebretinsae
  • Francesco Brizioli
  • Francesco Carnevali
  • Francisco de Anda
  • Francisco Martínez López
  • Frank Coronado
  • Fucheng Zhong
  • Fuminobu Takahashi
  • Futoshi Yagi
  • Fëanor Reuben Ares
  • Gabi Zafrir
  • Gael Alguero
  • Gaetano Lambiase
  • gang chen
  • Gao-Ming Deng
  • Gary Shiu
  • Gauthier Durieux
  • Gen Ye
  • Georg Weiglein
  • George Leontaris
  • George Manolakos
  • George Qiao
  • George W.S. Hou
  • Georgios Manolakos
  • Georgios Papathanasiou
  • Gerald Cleaver
  • Germano Nardini
  • Gi-Chol Cho
  • Giacomo Cacciapaglia
  • Giacomo De Pietro
  • Giacomo De Pietro
  • Giancarlo Rossi
  • Gianguido Dall'Agata
  • Gianluca Calcagni
  • Gino Isidori
  • Giorgio Arcadi
  • Giovanni Grilli di Cortona
  • Go Noshita
  • Gonzalo Herrera
  • Gregory Loges
  • Gregory Patellis
  • Grégoire Uhlrich
  • Gudrid Moortgat-Pick
  • Guo-Li Liu
  • Guofang shen
  • guohe yang
  • Guy Koren
  • Hai Lin
  • Hai-Jun Li
  • Hai-Qing Zhang
  • Haibin Chen
  • Haijun Yang
  • Haipeng An
  • Haitang Yang
  • Haiyong(海勇) Gu(顾)
  • Hajime Fukuda
  • Hajime Otsuka
  • Halil Saka
  • HAN ZHOU
  • Hang Zhou
  • Hans-Günther Moser
  • Hanwen Feng
  • Hao Geng
  • Hao Ouyang
  • Hao Zhou
  • Hao-Yuan Chang
  • HAOHAO ZHANG
  • Haoming Nie
  • Haoyu Sun
  • Harishankar Tiwari
  • Harjot Kaur
  • HARSH MISHRA
  • Hector Hortua
  • Henning Bahl
  • Henning Samtleben
  • Hidetoshi Omiya
  • HIDEYUKI NAKAZAWA
  • Hikaru Uchida
  • HIREN KAKKAD
  • Hiroshi Isono
  • Hitoshi Murayama
  • Hoang Long
  • Holly Pacey
  • Hong Lu
  • hong ma
  • Hong-Hao Zhang
  • Hongchao Zhang
  • Hongfei Gao
  • Hongyao Jin
  • Hope Sword
  • Horia Magureanu
  • Houwen Wu
  • Howard Baer
  • Hrishikesh M Namboothiripad
  • Hsin-Chia Cheng
  • Hua-Sheng Shao
  • Huanguo Li
  • Huangyu Xiao
  • Huayang Song
  • Huayong Han
  • Hui Zhang
  • Hui-Fang Xue
  • Huifang Lv
  • Huijing Li
  • Hulya Atmacan
  • Humberto Gilmer
  • Hyejung Stoeckinger-Kim
  • Hyeonja Jhang
  • Hyojoong Kim
  • Hyun Min Lee
  • Iacopo Vivarelli
  • Ian Lewis
  • Igal Arav
  • Ignatios Antoniadis
  • Ilia Gogoladze
  • Imtiaz Khan
  • INDRAJIT SAHA
  • Ingmar Saberi
  • Ipsita Ray
  • Ipsita Saha
  • Ishank Tiwari
  • Ivan Lepetic
  • Ivonne Zavala
  • Jacinto Paulo Neto
  • Jacob Leedom
  • Jacob Linacre
  • Jaewon Song
  • Jahed Abedi
  • James Li
  • James Unwin
  • Jan Eysermans
  • Jan Henryk Kalinowski
  • Jared Fier
  • Jason Kumar
  • Javier Montejo Berlingen
  • Jay Chan
  • Jeff Dandoy
  • Jeff Kost
  • Jeff Shahinian
  • Jehanzeb Waqar
  • Jelin Raphael
  • Jennifer Kile
  • Jeong Han Kim
  • Jessie Shelton
  • Ji-Seon Song
  • Jia Liu
  • Jia-Shu Niu
  • Jia-Xi Feng
  • Jiajun Liao
  • Jiajun Wu
  • Jianbo Lu
  • Jianfeng Tu
  • Jianming Qian
  • Jianxin Lu
  • Jiayin Gu
  • Jibo He
  • Jie Feng
  • Jiheng Guo
  • Jihwan Oh
  • Jim Halverson
  • Jin Min Yang
  • Jin Sun
  • Jin Wang
  • Jing Liu
  • Jing Ren
  • Jing Shu
  • Jing Wang
  • Jingwei Lian
  • Jingya Zhu
  • Jingyu Luo
  • Jinhan Liang
  • Jinmian Li
  • Jittapan Ineead
  • Jiwei Li
  • Joao Barreiro Guimaraes Da Costa
  • Joaquin Hoya
  • John Dixon
  • John Hiller
  • John Paul Chou
  • John Titor
  • Jonas Wittbrodt
  • Jonathan Long
  • Jonathan Shlomi
  • Jordi Folch
  • Jorge Carmona
  • Jorge VELASCO-GONZALEZ
  • Jorinde van de Vis
  • Jose Agustin Lozano Torres
  • Jose Luis Carrasco Huillca
  • Joshua Foster
  • José WF Valle
  • Joy Ganguly
  • Judita Mamuzic
  • Juhi Dutta
  • Jukfai Sing
  • Julia Lynne Gonski
  • Julian Heeck
  • Jun Tao
  • Jun-Bao Wu
  • Junchao Zong
  • Junjie Cao
  • Junle Pei
  • Junmou Chen Chen
  • Junquan Tao
  • Junsong Cang
  • Juntaro Wada
  • Juraj Klaric
  • K Lee
  • K.C. Kong
  • kadota kenji
  • Kai Hong Law
  • Kaigo Hirao
  • Kaishu Saito
  • Kaitlin Salyer
  • Kaiwen Sun
  • Kaladi Babu
  • Kamran Rasheed
  • Kamrul Ome
  • Kanade Nishikawa
  • Kanak Sharma
  • Kang Sin Choi
  • Kare Fridell
  • Karishma Moorthy
  • Kartik Bhide
  • Kazuki Todome
  • Ke-Pan Xie
  • Kechen(科臣) Wang(王)
  • Kei Yamamoto
  • Keisho Hidaka
  • Keisuke Inomata
  • Keisuke Yoshihara
  • Keita Takizawa
  • Keith A. Olive
  • Keith Dienes
  • Keiya Ishiguro
  • Kelly Stelle
  • Ken Kikuchi
  • Kendra Engstrom
  • Kent Yagi
  • Kentarou Mawatari
  • Kento Asai
  • Keping Xie
  • Kerim Guseinov
  • Ketan Patel
  • Kevin Toner
  • Kevin Urquía
  • Keyun Wu
  • Khwaja Idrees Hassan
  • Ki-Hong Lee
  • Ki-ichiro Sato
  • Kimiko Yamashita
  • Kimmo Kainulainen
  • Kimver Louie Nunez
  • Kimyeong Lee
  • Kingman Cheung
  • Kiril Hristov
  • Kirtiman ghosh
  • Kiwoon Choi
  • Kodai Sakurai
  • Koichi Hirano
  • Koji Ishiwata
  • Konstantin Matchev
  • Koushik Mandal
  • Krishnanand K Nair
  • Krzysztof Jodlowski
  • Krzysztof Mekala
  • Kun Wang
  • Kunio Kaneta
  • Kuo-Hsing Tsao
  • Kuver Sinha
  • Lailin Xu
  • Lakhdar Sek
  • Lakshita Bageja
  • lan yang
  • Lara Mason
  • Lei Meng
  • Lei Ming
  • Lei Yin
  • Lei Zhang
  • Lei ZhenYu
  • Lenka Doležalová
  • Li Qing
  • Li Zejun
  • Li-Sheng Geng
  • Liang Li
  • Liangliang Shang
  • Liangliang Su
  • Liantao Wang
  • Ligong Bian
  • Lijing Shao
  • Lin Zhu
  • Lina Wu
  • Ling Lin
  • Ling-Xiao Xu
  • LINGFENG LI
  • Lingxiao Bai
  • Linshuo Yang
  • Lipika Kolay
  • Litu Rout
  • Liu Jing
  • Liu Yu
  • Lopamudra Mukherjee
  • Lorenzo Calibbi
  • Lorenzo Feligioni
  • Lorenzo Massa
  • Lorenzo Rossini
  • Lu Feng
  • Lubos Bician
  • Luc Schnell
  • Luchang Jin
  • Lucien Heurtier
  • Luigi Delle Rose
  • Luigi Longo
  • Lukas Fritz
  • Macarena Lagos
  • MADHU MISHRA
  • Magdalena Waleska Aldana Segura
  • Malak Ait Tamlihat
  • Man Yuan
  • Mandeep Kaur
  • Manimala Chakraborti
  • Manqi RUAN
  • MANSOOR UR REHMAN
  • Manuel Drees
  • Manuel Eduardo Barredo Alamilla
  • Mar Ciscar
  • Marc Besancon
  • Marc Sher
  • Marcel Golz
  • Marcel Vos
  • Marcela Garcia Hernandez
  • Marco Fedele
  • Marco Frasca
  • Marco Pieri
  • Marcos Crichigno
  • Marcos Flores
  • Marek Lewicki
  • Margarete Mühlleitner
  • Maria Mehmood
  • Maria Olalla Olea Romacho
  • Maria Smizanska
  • Mariangela Lisanti
  • Mariano Quiros
  • Marie-Cécile Piro
  • Marija Glisic
  • Mario Reig
  • Mark Hodgkinson
  • Martin Errenst
  • Martin Gabelmann
  • Marvin Flores
  • María Luisa López Ibáñez
  • María Teresa Núñez Pardo de Vera
  • Masahito OGATA
  • Masahito Yamazaki
  • Masaki Yamada
  • Masaki Yang
  • Masamichi Sato
  • Masato Arai
  • Mathew Thomas
  • Mathias Becker
  • Mathis Gerdes
  • Matthew Smylie
  • Mattia Cielo
  • Maurizio Giannotti
  • Meer Ashwinkumar
  • Megumi Endo
  • Mehedi Masud
  • Mehmet Demirci
  • Meisam Ghasemi Bostanabad
  • Melike Erdi
  • Melissa van Beekveld
  • Meng Lei
  • Meng-Xiang Lin
  • mengchao zhang
  • Merlin Reichard
  • Miao Hu
  • Michael Fedderke
  • MIchael Gutperle
  • Michael Holzbock
  • Michael Schmidt
  • Michael Spira
  • Michal Malinský
  • Michał Iglicki
  • Michele Cicoli
  • Michiyasu Nagasawa
  • Miguel Ramos Pernas
  • Miguel Villaplana
  • Mihoko Nojiri
  • Mikael Berggren
  • minglun tian
  • Mingxia Huang
  • Mingxuan Du
  • Miriam Lucio Martinez
  • MITESH BEHERA
  • Mitsuru Kakizaki
  • Mitsuyo Suzuki
  • Mohamed Amine Boussejra
  • Mohamed Younes Sassi
  • Mohammad Arshad
  • Mohammed Boukidi
  • Mohd Shahalam
  • Moinul Hossain Rahat
  • Monoranjan Guchait
  • Morimitsu Tanimoto
  • Motoi Endo
  • Motoo Suzuki
  • Mritunjoy Das
  • Mrunal Korwar
  • Mudassar Sabir
  • Mudit Rai
  • Muhammad Ali Shahbaz
  • Muhammad Atif Masoud
  • Muhammad Danish Aslam
  • Muhammad Farooq
  • Muhammad MOOSA
  • Muhammad Nadeem Ahmad
  • Muhammad Saqlain
  • MuHua Zhang
  • Mukesh Kumar
  • Mulham Hijazi
  • Munera alrashed
  • Murat Abdughani
  • Mustafa Tabet
  • Myeonghun Park
  • Myungbo Shim
  • Nadia Kausar
  • Nadia Pastrone
  • Nan Zhang
  • Naoki Yamatsu
  • Nathaniel Craig
  • Natsumi Nagata
  • Nazila Mahmoudi
  • Neda Darvishi
  • Neetesh Mudgal
  • Neil Barrie
  • Niamat Ullah Khan
  • Niayesh Afshordi
  • Nicholas Orlofsky
  • Nick Houston
  • Nicko Angelo Rabang
  • Nicolas Fernandez
  • Nicolas Yunes
  • Nicolás Bernal
  • Nikolay Bobev
  • Nils Siemonsen
  • NING CHEN
  • Ning Zhou
  • Nischal Shrestha
  • NISHA M
  • Nitika Sachdeva
  • Nizar Ezroura
  • Nobuchika Okada
  • Nobuhito Maru
  • Noemi Palmeri
  • Oleksii Matsedonskyi
  • Oleksii Potiienko
  • Olena Karacheban
  • Olexiy Dvornikov
  • Orcun Kolay
  • Osamu Seto
  • Oscar Manuel Vives Garcia
  • Pablo Candia da Silva
  • Pablo Soler
  • Paolo Giacomelli
  • Papia Panda
  • Parthiv Haldar
  • Patricia Rebello Teles
  • Paul Asmuss
  • Paul Gessinger
  • Paul Jackson
  • Pawel Guzowski
  • Pedro Klaus Schwaller
  • Peera Simakachorn
  • Pei-Hong Gu
  • Peihe Yang
  • Peisi Huang
  • Pekka Sinervo
  • Peng Hui
  • penglong zhang
  • Pengxuan Zhu
  • Pengyuan Gao
  • Percy Cáceres
  • Peter Athron
  • Pierre Sikivie
  • Pietro Longhi
  • Pietro Slavich
  • Piyush Kalambkar
  • Piyush Kalambkar
  • Prabhat Singh
  • Prabhat Solanki
  • Pramod Sharma
  • Pran Nath
  • Prasanth Shyamsundar
  • Pratik Kafle
  • Priya Mishra
  • Priyadarshini Pandit
  • Priyanka Lamba
  • priyanka sarmah
  • Priyotosh Bandyopadhyay
  • Prudhvi Bhattiprolu
  • Puja Das
  • PURUSOTTAM GHOSH
  • Pushparaj Adhikari
  • Puxun Wu
  • Pyungwon Ko
  • Qaisar Shafi
  • Qi Chen
  • Qiang Li
  • Qiang Yuan
  • Qiaoli Yang
  • Qiaoli Yang
  • Qiaomu Peng
  • Qiaoyi Wen
  • Qilong Guo
  • Qing Liu
  • qing wang
  • Qing-Hong Cao
  • QiShu Yan
  • Qiwei Hu
  • Quentin Bonnefoy
  • Rachid Mazini
  • Rafael Aoude
  • Rafael Coelho Lopes De Sa
  • Rafiqul Rahaman
  • Rahool Barman
  • Rameswar Sahu
  • Ramón Ruiz
  • Ranjan Laha
  • Raymond Co
  • Raza Syed
  • Reham Aly
  • Rehan Naqvi
  • Ren Jiale
  • Renata Kallosh
  • Renato Fonseca
  • Rhitaja Sengupta
  • Ria Sain
  • Ribhu Paul
  • Ricardo Caroca
  • Ricardo Caroca
  • Richard Eager
  • Richard Huang
  • Ricky Wu
  • Rigo Bause
  • RINKU MAJI
  • Rinto Kuramochi
  • Robert Brandenberger
  • Robert McGehee
  • Robert Wiley Deal
  • Robert Ziegler
  • Robin Erbacher
  • rohini godbole
  • ROJALIN PADHAN
  • Roland Allen
  • Rong-Jia Yang
  • Roshan Mammen Abraham
  • Rourou Ma
  • Rouzbeh Allahverdi
  • Ruben Campos Delgado
  • Rudhresh Manoharan
  • RUDRA MAJHI
  • Rui Pan
  • Rui Sun
  • Rui Wang
  • Rui-Yun Guo
  • Ruidong Zhu
  • Ruixiang Shi
  • Rukmani Mohanta
  • Runchao Huang
  • Ruoquan Wang
  • Ruoxi Wu
  • Rusa Mandal
  • Ruying Tang
  • Ryo Nagai
  • Ryusuke Jinno
  • s ohkubo
  • Saarik Kalia
  • Sabine Kraml
  • Sabya Sachi Chatterjee
  • Sachiko Kuroyanagi
  • Sadman Rahman
  • Sagar Kumar Maity
  • Sai Wang
  • Saikat Karmakar
  • Saira Yasmeen
  • Saiyad Ashanujjaman
  • SAJID ISRAR
  • Sajid Rana
  • Sam Carey
  • Samadrita Mukherjee
  • Samireh Jokar
  • Samuel Homiller
  • Samuel Lane
  • Samuel Wong
  • Sandeepan Sahoo
  • Sandra Robles
  • Sanjoy Biswas
  • Sanjoy Mandal
  • Santhiya P S
  • Santosh Rai
  • Sara Alderweireldt
  • Sara Maggio
  • Sarah Alanazi
  • Sarah Williams
  • Sarunas Verner
  • Sascha Dreyer
  • Satoshi Mishima
  • Satsuki Nishimura
  • SATYABRATA MAHAPATRA
  • Saunak Dutta
  • Saurabh Kumar Shukla
  • Saurabh Natu
  • Saurabh Niyogi
  • Scott Watson
  • Sebastian Baum
  • Sebastian Trojanowski
  • Sebastian Urrutia-Quiroga
  • Sef Altakarli
  • Seokhoon Yun
  • Serge Rudaz
  • Seungho Choe
  • Seyda Ipek
  • Sezen Sekmen
  • Shabbar Raza
  • Shabeeb Alalawi
  • Shafeeq Rahman Thottoli
  • shaikh saad
  • ShanPing Wu
  • shao longqi
  • Shao-Jiang Wang
  • Shao-Jiang Wang
  • Shao-Long Chen
  • Shaoqi Hou
  • Shaoyang Qin
  • Sharon Siby
  • Sheridan Lloyd
  • Sheryl Melara
  • Shi Pi
  • Shigenori Nakatsuka
  • Shihwen Hor
  • SHILPA JANGID
  • Shinji Mukohyama
  • Shinji Tsujikawa
  • Shinsuke Kawai
  • Shion Chen
  • shiqin dong
  • Shiuli Chatterjee
  • Shivam Raj
  • Shivam Verma
  • Shivang Mathur
  • SHIVARAMAKRISHNA SINGIRALA
  • shiyi liang
  • Sho Egusa
  • Shoichi Kawamoto
  • Shota Nakagawa
  • Shu Li
  • shu min zhao
  • Shuang-Yi Li
  • Shuang-Yong Zhou
  • Shufang Su
  • Shuhui Huang
  • Shuiting Xin
  • Shun Zhou
  • Shuo Han
  • Shuo Yang
  • Shyamashish Dey
  • Si Wang
  • Siavash Neshatpour
  • Sichun Sun
  • Siddharth Dwivedi
  • Siddharth Prasad Maharathy
  • Siddhesh Sawant
  • Silvia Nagy
  • Simone Giacomelli
  • Simone Pagan Griso
  • Sitian Qian
  • Snehashis Parashar
  • Sophie Williamson
  • Sota Nakajima
  • Sotirios Karamitsos
  • SOUAD SEMLALI
  • Soumita Pramanick
  • Soumya Adhikari
  • soumya bonthu
  • SOUMYA MUKHERJEE
  • Sreekanth Harikumar
  • Sreemanti Chakraborti
  • Sri Aditya Gadam
  • Stefan Guindon
  • Stefano Frixione
  • Stefano Giagu
  • Stephanie Yuen
  • Stephen Martin
  • Steve King
  • Steven Paasch
  • Stuart Raby
  • Subhadip Bisal
  • Subhadip Mitra
  • Subhojit Roy
  • Subrabalan Murugesan
  • Subramanya Hegde
  • Suchismita Sahoo
  • Sudhir Vempati
  • SUDIPTA SHOW
  • Sujoy Poddar
  • Sumit Ghosh
  • Sung-Won Lee
  • Sunghyun Kang
  • Sungjoon Kim
  • Surabhi Gupta
  • Surya Raghavendran
  • Sushil Chauhan
  • Suvadeep Roy
  • Sven Heinemeyer
  • Syed Faheem Andrabi
  • Syed Muhammad Tanzeel Sajjad
  • Sylvie Braibant
  • Tadahito Nakajima
  • Tae Geun Kim
  • Takaaki Nomura
  • Takahiro Kubota
  • Takahiro Terada
  • Takahiro Yoshida
  • Takashi Toma
  • Takuya Okuda
  • Takuya Takahashi
  • Takuya Yoda
  • Tan Liu
  • tang jie
  • Tanmay Kumar Poddar
  • Tanmay Kushwaha
  • Tao Han
  • Taoli Liu
  • Tarak Nath Maity
  • Taylor Murphy
  • Teng Ma
  • Terrance Figy
  • Teruki Kamon
  • Tetsutaro Higaki
  • Tevfik Kaplanoglu
  • Thanh Tien Dat Nguyen
  • Theodore Sung
  • Thi Nhung Dao
  • Thomas Biekoetter
  • Thomas Markus Konstandin
  • Thomas Mckelvey
  • Ti Gong
  • Tianheng Wang
  • Tianjun Li
  • Tianyi Yang
  • Tilman Plehn
  • Tim Höhne
  • Timm Wrase
  • Tina Potter
  • Tirtha Sankar Ray
  • Tisa Biswas
  • Tobias Striegl
  • Tolga Domurcukgul
  • Tom Steudtner
  • Tom Tong
  • Tomas Gonzalo
  • Tomasz Krajewski
  • Tomi Nikolla
  • Tomohiro Abe
  • Tong Li
  • Tonnis ter Veldhuis
  • Toshihiko Ota
  • Toshiyuki Iwamoto
  • Tousik Samui
  • Tracey Berry
  • tres herrera
  • Tribeni Mishra
  • Tzu Chiang Yuan
  • Uladzimir Khasianevich
  • Umer Zubair
  • Vahid Kamali
  • Vaibhav Sharma
  • Vaishnav V Prem
  • Vaishnavi Kawale
  • Valentina Dutta
  • VASHAANTH GOWRI-KRISZYK
  • Vasiliki Mitsou
  • Vasja Susič
  • Vernon Barger
  • Veronica Pasquarella
  • Victor Baules
  • Vinay Hegde
  • Vindhyawasini Prasad
  • Viola Gattus
  • Vishal Kumar
  • Vishal Ngairangbam
  • Vishnu Padmanabhan Kovilakam
  • Vishwas Gaur
  • Vivek Banerjee
  • Vladimir Pastushenko
  • Volodymyr Takhistov
  • Wafia Bensalem
  • Wajid Farooq
  • Waleed Abdallah
  • Wan-Zhe Feng
  • Wang Rui
  • Wang Yufan
  • WAQAS AHMAD
  • Waqas Ahmed
  • Warsimakram I K
  • We-Fu Chang
  • Wei Guo
  • Wei Liu
  • Wei Liu
  • wei su
  • Wen Yin
  • Wenbin Qian
  • Wenbin Yan
  • Wenbin Zhao
  • Wenjie He
  • WenJun Li
  • Wentao Cui
  • Wenxing Zhang
  • Wenyu Wang
  • William Balunas
  • Wojciech Kotlarski
  • Wolfgang Waltenberger
  • Wooyoung Jang
  • Wu-Long Xu
  • Xerxes Tata
  • Xi Cheng
  • Xi-Er Du
  • Xian Chen
  • Xiang Song
  • xianglong wu
  • Xiangwei Yin
  • Xiangwen Guan
  • xiangyu chen
  • Xianming Liu
  • Xiao Liu
  • Xiao Wang
  • Xiao Xue
  • Xiao-Chuan Wang
  • Xiao-yue Sun
  • Xiaobin Li
  • Xiaodi Li
  • Xiaokang Du
  • Xiaoran Zhao
  • Xin Gao
  • Xin Wang
  • Xin Wang
  • Xin Zhang
  • Xin-Kai Wen
  • Xin-Qiang Li
  • Xinhe Meng
  • XinXin Qi
  • Xinyi Zhang
  • Xinyu Zhang
  • xinyue yin
  • Xiu-Fei Li
  • Xu Li
  • Xu-Xiang Li
  • Xuai Zhuang
  • Xudong Lyu
  • Xuewen Liu
  • Xun Xue
  • Xun-Jie XU
  • Ya-Juan Zheng
  • Yahya Tayalati
  • Yahya younesizadeh
  • Yakefu Reyimuaji
  • Yan Lyu
  • Yanbin SUN
  • Yandong Liu
  • Yang Bai
  • Yang Liu
  • Yang Ma
  • Yang Wang
  • Yang Zhang
  • Yang Zhang
  • Yangjie Liu
  • Yann Gouttenoire
  • Yannis Georis
  • Yaoduo Wang
  • Yaquan Fang
  • Yashashwini T A
  • Yasuhito Sakaki
  • ye xu
  • Ye-Ling Zhou
  • yeji park
  • Yermek Aldabergenov
  • yeuk-kwan edna cheung
  • Yi Chung
  • Yi Liu
  • Yi Yu
  • Yi Zhu
  • Yi-Jun He
  • Yi-Lei Tang
  • Yiding Jia
  • Yifan Chen
  • Yifan Wang
  • Yihe Cao
  • Yildiray Komurcu
  • Yinan Wang
  • Ying Li
  • Ying-Hua Deng
  • Ying-nan Mao
  • Yingli Zhang
  • Yingxuan Xu
  • Yirui Yang
  • Yisong Lu
  • Yiwen Pan
  • yixiong zang
  • Yiyu Zhang
  • Yo Sato
  • YOGESH CHAVAN
  • Yong Tang
  • Yong Xu
  • YONGCHENG WU
  • Yongjian Wei
  • Yongsoo Jho
  • Yoshihiko Abe
  • Yoshihiro Gunji
  • Yoshihiro SHIGEKAMI
  • Yoshiki Kanazawa
  • Yosuke Takubo
  • younes younesizadeh
  • Youngjoon Kwon
  • Yoxara Sánchez Villamizar
  • Yu Gao
  • Yu Hang Ng
  • Yu Meng
  • Yu Zhang
  • Yu-Dai Tsai
  • Yu-Gen Lin
  • Yu-Qi Xiao
  • Yu-Ting Zhou
  • Yu-Xiao Liu
  • Yu-Xuan Zhang
  • Yuan Chen
  • Yuan Meng
  • Yuanang Li
  • Yuanfang Yue
  • YuanHe Zou
  • Yuanzhang Cui
  • Yuchao Gu
  • Yuchen Cai
  • Yuchen Huang
  • Yucheng Qiu
  • Yue-Liang Wu
  • Yuehong Xie
  • Yufeng Li
  • Yuichiro Nakai
  • Yujin Park
  • Yuki Sakakihara
  • Yuming Wang
  • Yun Jiang
  • Yun Jiang
  • Yun-Long Zhang
  • Yungui Gong
  • Yunqi Liu
  • Yuqi Chen
  • yusi Pan
  • Yuta Hamada
  • Yuta Okazaki
  • Yutaka Ookouchi
  • Yutong Liu
  • Yuzhi Shang
  • Zachary Johnson
  • Zafer Acar
  • Zeren Simon Wang
  • Zeynep Demiragli
  • Zhan-Feng Mai
  • Zhang Borui
  • zhang yingkai
  • zhaofeng kang
  • Zhe Guan
  • zhen li
  • Zhen-hua Zhao
  • Zheng Sun
  • Zhengwen Liu
  • Zhi Hu
  • Zhi-zhong Xing
  • Zhijie Zhao
  • zhizhang peng
  • Zhu Yi
  • Zhu-Yao Wang
  • Zi-Chao Lin
  • Zifeng Xu
  • Zihao Wu
  • Zihui Wang
  • Ziyu Dong
  • Zizheng Zhou
  • Zonglin Mo
  • Zurab Tavartkiladze
  • Zuzana Kucerova
  • Álvaro Jesus
  • 乔 杨
  • 依伦 薛
  • 兴隆 贾
  • 凯 孙
  • 天昊 吴
  • 尚书 李
  • 志扬 包
  • 想 李
  • 敏 周
  • 智明 蔡
  • 正伟 程
  • 深伸 杨
  • 贺 麟云
  • 贾 利俊
  • 静儿 吴
  • 鹏飞 易
    • Opening Remarks Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Tianjun Li (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 1
        Opening remarks I
        Speaker: Rong-Gen Cai
      • 2
        Opening remarks II
        Speaker: Pran Nath
      • 3
        Picture taking
    • Plenary: I Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Chao-Hsi Chang
    • 10:05
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Stefania Gori (UC Santa Cruz)
      • 8
        The SBC Liquid Argon Bubble Chamber for Dark Matter and CEvNS from reactors

        The SBC Collaboration is constructing a 10-kg liquid argon bubble chamber with scintillation readouts. The goal is to achieve 100 eV nuclear recoils detection with near-complete discrimination against electron recoil events. In addition to a dark matter search, SBC targets a CEvNS measurement of MeV-scale neutrinos from nuclear reactors. A high-statistics, high signal-to-background detection would enable precision searches for physics beyond the standard model. In this talk, I will present the physics reach of the SBC detectors and the advantages of using such technology. I will also discuss the progress towards the construction at Fermilab to test the sub-keV threshold performance and at SNOLAB for the search of dark matter.

        Speaker: Marie-Cécile Piro (University of Alberta)
      • 9
        Cogeneration of Baryons and Twin Quark Dark Matter

        The dark sector may be as rich and varied as the standard model. Twin Higgs models, which explain the little hierarchy problem, provide a compelling and predictive realization of such a dark sector, where the standard model field content is copied in a hidden sector. I show how spontaneously breaking the twin color can naturally lead to asymmetric dark matter and baryogenesis in addition to solving the hierarchy problem. I outline how this scenario can be tested at the LHC and future colliders.

        Speaker: Christopher Verhaaren (Brigham Young University)
      • 10
        Primordial black holes as a natural dark matter candidate in supersymmetry

        Primordial black holes (PBH) are a natural and generic dark matter candidate in supersymmetry. In the early universe, the flat directions of supersymmetry form scalar condensates with large expectation values. These condensates can subsequently fragment into non-topological solitons, SUSY Q-balls, which become the building blocks of PBHs. The PBH masses resulting from supersymmetry naturally fall into the sublunar mass window, where the PBHs can account for all dark matter. We will discuss two scenarios which result in the formation of PBHs. First, if the SUSY Q-balls dominate the energy density of the universe then statistical fluctuations and gravitational forces allow for the formation of PBHs in this intermediate matter-dominated era. Second, SUSY Q-balls may interact via a light scalar mediator. This attractive force allows for the formation of structure even in the radiation dominated era, while simultaneously removing energy and angular momentum from the systems of solitons by means of scalar radiation. These mechanisms are able to explain the present-day dark matter abundance in addition to potential candidate events observed with lensing experiments.

        Speaker: Marcos Flores (UCLA)
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Ying Li (Yantai University, China)
      • 11
        Results and Prospects of Radiative and Electroweak Penguin Decays at Belle II

        In the recent years, several measurements of $B$-decays with flavor changing neutral currents, i.e. $b\to s$ transitions hint at deviations from the Standard Model (SM) predictions. These decays are forbidden at tree-level in the SM and can only proceed via suppressed loop level or box diagrams. Rare decays of $B$ mesons are an ideal probe to search for phenomena beyond the SM, since contributions from new particles can affect the decays on the same level as SM particles.

        The Belle II experiment is a substantial upgrade of the Belle detector and operates at the SuperKEKB energy-asymmetric $e^+ e^-$ collider. Radiative $b\to s \gamma$ decays is already been observed and inclusive photon spectra is also obtained with only a small dataset of Belle II. Early measurements related to the electro-weak penguin $b\to s \ell\ell$ and $b\to s \nu\bar\nu$ decays has also been performed. We will discuss the results obtained with the current dataset along with the prospects for the searches of these radiative and electroweak penguin decays with the expected $50~ab^{-1}$ full dataset of Belle II.

        Speaker: Yo Sato (KEK IPNS)
      • 12
        Imprint of SUSY in radiative B-meson decays

        We study the supersymmetric (SUSY) effects on $C_7(\mu_b)$ and $C'_7(\mu_b)$
        which are the Wilson coefficients (WC) for $b \to s \gamma$ at b quark
        mass scale $\mu_b$ and are closely related to radiative B meson decays.
        The SUSY-loop contributions to $C_7(\mu_b)$ and $C'_7(\mu_b)$ are calculated
        at leading order (LO) in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) with
        general quark flavor violation (QFV). For the first time we perform a systematic
        MSSM parameter scan for the WCs $C_7(\mu_b)$ and $C'_7(\mu_b)$ respecting all
        the relevant constraints, i.e. the theoretical constraints from vacuum stability
        conditions and the experimental constraints, such as those from $K$- and
        $B$-meson data and electroweak precision data, as well as recent limits on SUSY
        particle masses and the 125 GeV Higgs boson data from LHC experiments.
        From the parameter scan, we find the following:
        (1) The MSSM contribution to Re($C_7(\mu_b)$) can be as large as $\sim \pm 0.05$
        which could correspond to about 3$\sigma$ significance of New Physics (NP)
        signal in the future LHCb-Upgrade and Belle II experiments.
        (2) The MSSM contribution to Re($C'_7(\mu_b)$) can be as large as $\sim -0.08$
        which could correspond to about 4$\sigma$ significance of NP signal
        in the future LHCb-Upgrade and Belle II experiments.
        (3) These large MSSM contributions to the WCs are mainly
        due to (i) large scharm-stop mixing and large scharm/stop involved
        trilinear couplings $T_{U23}$, $T_{U32}$ and $T_{U33}$, (ii) large
        sstrange-sbottom mixing and large sstrange-sbottom involved
        trilinear couplings $T_{D23}$, $T_{D32}$ and $T_{D33}$ and
        (iii) large bottom Yukawa coupling $Y_b$ for large $\tan\beta$
        and large top Yukawa coupling $Y_t$.
        In case such large NP contributions to the WCs are really observed
        in the future experiments at Belle II and LHCb-Upgrade, this could
        be the imprint of QFV SUSY (the MSSM with general QFV) and would
        encourage to perform further studies of the WCs $C'_7(\mu_b)$ and
        $C_7^{MSSM}(\mu_b)$ at higher order (NLO/NNLO) level in this model.

        Note: This work is based on collaboration with Helmut Eberl, Elena Ginina
        (HEPHY, Vienna) and Akimasa Ishikawa (Belle II, KEK).
        Reference: arXiv:2106.15228 [hep-ph] (under submission to a journal)

        Speaker: Prof. Keisho Hidaka (Tokyo Gakugei University)
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Yungui Gong (Huazhong University of Science and Technology)
      • 13
        Primordial gravitational waves and primordial black holes

        Primordial gravitational waves (GWs) can be generated during different eras of early cosmic evolution, including inflation, cosmic phase transition, reheating/preheating, and so on. In this talk, I will first introduce the amplified GWs through parametric resonance during inflation in the Cherns-Simons gravity. Then, I will introduce the scalar induced GWs accompanied with the production of primordial black holes. Two different theoretical models how to enhance the curvature perturbations will be discussed.

        Speaker: Wu Puxun
      • 14
        Detecting primordial black hole as dark matter by induced gravitational waves

        Primordial black holes (PBHs) may form when the high peaks of the primordial density perturbation re-enter the Hubble horizon, while at the same time gravitational waves induced by the density perturbation at second order are generated. Currently observational constraints make it possible for asteroid-mass PBHs to be all dark matter, whose concomitant induced GWs are in the millihertz band. I will show that if all or a large portion of the PBHs are composed of dark matter, the corresponding induced gravitational wave energy spectrum must be detectable by space-borne interferometers like LISA, irrespective of linear local non-Gaussianity of the scalar perturbation.

        Speaker: Shi Pi (ITP, CAS)
      • 15
        Primordial black holes and gravitational waves

        I will report the current progress in our works on the detection of primordial black holes (PBHs) with gravitational waves, including the transients and the stochastic background of gravitational waves (SGWB). The observations of gravitational waves by LIGO open a new window to probe the PBHs, which could be a viable candidate of cold dark matter. We find that the scenario of PBHs can explain the merger rates of GW200105 and GW200115, which were claimed to be neutron star-black hole binaries. As a second observational window, SGWB can be also capable of constraining the abundance of PBHs through observations of SGWBs from the coalescing binaries and the enhanced curvature perturbations.

        Speaker: Sai Wang (IHEP, CAS)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Huajia Wang
      • 16
        Sequestered Inflation

        I describe the Sequestered Inflation as presented in the recent works with M. Gunaydin, A. Linde, Y. Yamada and T. Wrase in 2008.01494, 2108.08491, 2108.08492. We construct supergravity models allowing to sequester the phenomenology of inflation from the Planckian energy scale physics. The procedure consists of two steps: At Step I we study supergravity models associated with string theory or M-theory and find supersymmetric Minkowski vacua with flat directions. The corresponding massless Goldstone supermultiplets are related to the symmetries of flux superpotentials. At Step II we uplift these flat directions to inflationary plateau potentials using the nilpotent multiplet. The sequestered models include seven hyperbolic disks. Their predictions are among the main B-mode targets for future CMB experiments.

        Speaker: Renata Kallosh (Stanford university)
      • 17
        Scattering amplitudes of massive spin-2 particles in Extra Dimensional theories

        We describe the computation of the scattering amplitudes of massive spin-2 Kaluza-Klein excitations in a gravitational theory with a single compact extra dimension, whether flat or warped. These scattering amplitudes are characterized by intricate cancellations between different contributions: although individual contributions may grow as fast as O(s^5), the full results grow only as O(s). We demonstrate that the cancellations persist for all incoming and outgoing particle helicities and examine how truncating the computation to only include a finite number of intermediate states impacts the accuracy of the results. We also carefully assess the range of validity of the low energy effective Kaluza-Klein theory. In particular, for the warped case we demonstrate directly how an emergent low energy scale controls the size of the scattering amplitude, as conjectured by the AdS/CFT correspondence

        Speaker: Dr DIPAN SENGUPTA (UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, San Diego)
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Zhaofeng Kang
      • 18
        Search for new physics with unconventional signatures in CMS

        Many extensions of the standard model predict new particles with long lifetimes or other properties, that give rise to non-conventional signatures in the detector. We present recent results of searches for new physics from such non-conventional signatures obtained using data recorded by the CMS experiment using the full Run-II LHC data-set.

        Speaker: John Paul Chou (Rutgers State Univ. of New Jersey (US))
      • 19
        Uncovering quirk signal with energy loss inside tracker

        A quirk propagating through a detector is subject to the Lorentz force, a new confining gauge force, and the frictional force from ionization energy loss. At the LHC, it was found that the monojet search and the coplanar search were able to constrain such a quirk signal. Inspired by the coplanar search proposed by S. Knapen et. al, we develop a new search that also utilizes the information of the relatively large ionization energy loss inside tracker. Our algorithm has improved efficiency in finding quirk signals with a wide oscillation amplitude. Because of our trigger strategy, the $Z(\to \nu\nu)+$jets process overlaid by pileup events is the dominant background. We find that the $\sim 100$ fb$^{-1}$ dataset at the LHC will be able to probe the colored fermion (scalar) quirks with masses up to {2.1 (1.1) TeV}, and the color neutral fermion (scalar) quirks with masses up to {450 (150) GeV}, respectively.

        Speaker: Junle Pei (Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 20
        Machine Learning the Higgs-top CP Measurement

        We explore the direct Higgs-top CP structure via the $pp \to t\bar{t}h$ channel with machine learning techniques, considering the clean $h \to \gamma\gamma$ final state at the high luminosity LHC~(HL-LHC). We show that a combination of a comprehensive set of observables, that include the $t\bar{t}$ spin-correlations, with mass minimization strategies to reconstruct the $t\bar{t}$ rest frame provide large CP-sensitivity.

        Speaker: Rahool Barman (Oklahoma State University)
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Carlos E.M. Wagner (University of Chicago)
      • 21
        Natural SUSY emergent from the landscape

        We explain how the landscape can make predictions for Higgs and sparticle masses.
        A power-law draw to large soft terms coupled with the ABDS anthropic condition that he derived weak scale be within a factor of a few of our measured value leads to m(h)~125 GeV with sparticles above present LHC limits. The spectra that emerges is that of radiatively driven natural SUSY. We show why such natural models are much more likely from the landscape than finetuned SUSY models.

        Speaker: Howard Baer (University of Oklahoma)
      • 22
        Diluting SUSY flavour problem on the Landscape

        We consider an explicit effective field theory example based on the Bousso-Polchinski framework with a large number N of hidden sectors contributing to supersymmetry breaking. Each contribution comes from four form quantized fluxes, multiplied by random couplings. The soft terms in the observable sector in this case become random variables, with mean values and standard deviations which are computable. We show that this setup naturally leads to a solution of the flavor problem in low-energy supersymmetry if N is sufficiently large. We investigate the consequences for flavor violating processes at low-energy and for dark matter.

        Speaker: Priyanka Lamba (Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru 560012, India)
      • 23
        Linking the Supersymmetric Standard Model to the Cosmological Constant

        String theory has no parameter except the string scale $M_S$, so the Planck scale $M_\text{Pl}$, the supersymmetry-breaking scale $m_{\rm susy}$, the electroweak scale $m_\text{EW}$ as well as the vacuum energy density (cosmological constant) $\Lambda$ are to be determined dynamically at any local minimum solution in the string theory landscape. Here we consider a model that links the supersymmetric electroweak phenomenology (bottom up) to the string theory motivated flux compactification approach (top down). In this model, supersymmetry is broken by a combination of the racetrack K\"ahler uplift mechanism, which naturally allows an exponentially small positive $\Lambda$ in a local minimum, and the anti-D3-brane in the KKLT scenario. In the absence of the Higgs doublets from the supersymmetric standard model, one has either a small $\Lambda$ or a big enough $m_{\rm susy}$, but not both. The introduction of the Higgs fields (with their soft terms) allows a small $\Lambda$ and a big enough $m_{\rm susy}$ simultaneously. Since an exponentially small $\Lambda$ is statistically preferred (as the properly normalized probability distribution $P(\Lambda)$ diverges at $\Lambda=0^{+}$), identifying the observed $\Lambda_{\rm obs}$ to the median value $\Lambda_{50\%}$ yields $m_{\text{EW}} \sim 100$ GeV. We also find that the warped anti-D3-brane tension has a SUSY-breaking scale $M_{\rm susy}\sim 100 \, m_{\text{EW}}$ while the SUSY-breaking scale that directly correlates with the Higgs fields in the visible sector is $m_{\rm susy} \simeq m_{\text{EW}}$.

        Speaker: Yucheng QIU (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)
    • 11:35
      Lunch
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Stefania Gori (UC Santa Cruz)
      • 24
        Searching for Solar KDAR with DUNE

        The observation of 236 MeV muon neutrinos from kaon-decay-at-rest (KDAR) originating in the core of the Sun would provide a unique signature of dark matter annihilation. Since excellent angle and energy reconstruction are necessary to detect this monoenergetic, directional neutrino flux, DUNE with its vast volume and reconstruction capabilities, is a promising candidate for a KDAR neutrino search. In this talk, we evaluate the proposed KDAR neutrino search strategies by realistically modeling both neutrino-nucleus interactions and the response of DUNE. We find that, although reconstruction of the neutrino energy and direction is difficult with current techniques in the relevant energy range, the superb energy resolution, angular resolution, and particle identification offered by DUNE can still permit great signal/background discrimination. Moreover, there are non-standard scenarios in which searches at DUNE for KDAR in the Sun can probe dark matter interactions.

        Speaker: Olexiy Dvornikov (University of Hawai'i at Manoa (US))
      • 25
        Gamma-ray signatures of velocity-dependent dark matter annihilation

        If the dark matter annihilation cross-section is velocity-dependent, then gamma-ray signals from astrophysical targets depend non-trivially on the dark matter velocity distribution. Since different targets can have different characteristic velocity scales, analyses of ensembles of targets can potentially find evidence for particular scenarios of dark matter microphysics. We discuss recent work on the prospects for future observations of dwarf spheroidal galaxies and galactic subhalos to not only detect evidence of dark matter annihilation, but also to determine the velocity dependence.

        Speaker: Jason Kumar
      • 26
        Cancellation in Dark Matter-Nucleon Interactions: the Role of Non-Standard-Model-like Yukawa Couplings

        Extensive searches to probe the particle nature of dark matter (DM) have been going on for some decades now but, so far, no conclusive evidence has been found. Among various options, the Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMP) remains one of the prime
        possibilities as candidates for DM near the TeV scale. Taking a phenomenological view, such null results may be explained for a generic WIMP in a Higgs-portal scenario if we allow the light-quark Yukawa couplings to assume non-Standard Model (non-SM)-like values. This follows from a cancellation among different terms in the DM-nucleon scattering which can, in turn, lead to a vanishingly small direct-detection cross section. It might also lead to isospin violation in the DM-nucleon scattering. Such non-SM values of light-quark Yukawa couplings may be probed in the high luminosity run of the LHC.

        Speaker: Mr Bibhabasu De (IOP Bhubaneswar)
      • 27
        Early kinetic decoupling and Higgs invisible decay in simple dark matter models

        We revisit the Higgs-invisible decay branching ratio in Higgs-portal dark matter models.
        If the mass of the dark matter is slightly below the half of the mass of the Higgs boson, then pairs of the DM particles annihilate into the SM particles efficiently thanks to the Higgs resonance. The DM-Higgs coupling is required to be small to obtain the right amount of the dark matter relic abundance. As a result, the DM-nucleon scattering is highly suppressed and can explain the current null result of the dark matter signal at the direct detection experiments such as the XENON1T experiment. Another consequence of the tiny coupling is that the kinetic decoupling of dark matter from the thermal plasma in the early Universe may happen earlier. This implies that the standard calculation of the relic abundance may not be justified. We reevaluate the DM relic abundance with the evolution of the DM temperature. We show that the DM-Higgs coupling was underestimated in the literatures. Therefore, the Higgs invisible decay branching ratio is larger than previously expected, and the future collider experiments, such as the ILC experiment, can probe larger parameter space.

        Speaker: Tomohiro Abe (Tokyo University of Science)
      • 28
        Wino dark matter searches with dwarf spheroidal galaxies

        We study observable signals from dark matter that self-annihilates via Sommerfeld effect in dwarf spheroidal galaxies (dSphs). Since the effect of the Sommerfeld enhancement depends on the velocity of dark matter, it is crucial to determine the profile of dSphs to compute the J-factor, i.e., the line-of-sight integral of density squared. In our study we use the prior distributions of the parameters for satellite density profiles in order to determine the J-factor, making most out of the recent developments in the N-body simulations and semi-analytical modeling for the structure formation. As concrete model, we analyze fermionic dark matter that annihilates via a light scalar and Wino dark matter in supersymmetric models. We find that, with the more realistic prior distributions that we adopt in this study, the J-factor of the most promising dwarf galaxies is decreased by a factor of a few, compared with earlier estimates based on non-informative priors. Nevertheless, the Cherenkov Telescope Array should be able to detect thermal Wino dark matter by pointing it toward best classical or ultrafaint dwarf galaxies for 500 hours.

        Speaker: Koji Ishiwata (Kanazawa University)
      • 29
        A probe into leptophilic scalar dark matter

        We revisit the scalar singlet dark matter (DM) accompanied by vectorlike dark leptons in two scenarios: in case I, the dark sector consists of a Dirac fermionic doublet; while in case II, a doublet fermion and a singlet. In both cases, the dark leptons couple with other dark sector particles and the Standard Model (SM) via gauge and Yukawa interactions. As a result, (i) new DM annihilation processes, including pair annihilation and coannihilation channels emerge, and (ii) new production channels for leptonic final states giving much enhancement in cross sections open up for DM searches in the LHC. In the former case, the mass splitting between the dark leptons is loop induced at best makes the distinction of the dark sector particles of different isospins a challenging task.

        In the latter case, we alleviate the said limitation by introducing an extra singlet leptonic dark sector field. The "singlet-doublet mixing" produces an arbitrary mass splitting between the two components of the doublet in a gauge-invariant way, as well as provides a useful handle to distinguish between the dark sector particles of different isospins. As the dark leptons coannihilate non-trivially, the mixing effectively enhances the viable parameter space for the relic density constraint. In a low DM mass regime, with a non-zero mixing, it is possible to relax the existing indirect search bounds on the upper limit of the DM-SM coupling. From the analysis of the $3\tau + E_T^\mathrm{miss}$ and $\ell\tau + E_T^\mathrm{miss}$ channels for LHC at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV, one ensures the presence of the mixing parameter between the dark sector particles of the theory by looking at the distinct peak and tail positions of the kinematic distributions, which remains a constant feature of the model. While both the channels present us the opportunity to detect the mixing signature at the LHC/HL-LHC, the former gives better results in terms of a larger region of mixing parameter. From the fiducial cross section, the projected statistical significance for the integrated luminosity, $\mathcal{L} = 3 ab^{-1}$, are shown for a combined parameter region obeying all the existing constraints, where there is the best possibility to detect such a signature.

        Speaker: Sreemanti Chakraborti (Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati, India)
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Sugumi Kanno
      • 30
        From the merger rate of Primordial Black Hole Binaries to the Primordial Power Spectrum of curvature perturbation on small scales

        The properties of primordial curvature perturbations on small scales are still unknown while those on large scales have been well probed by the observations of the cosmic microwave background anisotropies and the large scale structure. We propose the reconstruction method of primordial curvature perturbations on small scales through the merger rate of binary primordial black holes, which could form from large primordial curvature perturbation on small scales.

        Speaker: Prof. Zhang Ying-li
      • 31
        Fast Gravitational Wave Burst from Axion Clumps

        The axion objects such as axion mini-clusters and axion clouds around spinning black holes induce parametric resonances of electromagnetic waves through the axion-photon interaction. In particular, it has been known that the resonances from the axion with the mass around mueV may explain the observed fast radio bursts (FRBs). Here we argue that similar bursts of high frequency gravitational waves, which we call the fast gravitational wave bursts (FGBs), are generated from axion clumps with the presence of gravitational Chern-Simons (CS) coupling. The typical frequency is half of the axion mass, which in general can range from kHz to GHz. We also discuss the secondary gravitational wave production associated with FRB, as well as the possible host objects of the axion clouds, such as primordial black holes. Future detections of FGBs together with the observed FRBs are expected to provide more evidence for the axion.

        Speaker: Dr Yun-Long Zhang (NAOC, Beijing)
      • 32
        Search for ultralight dark matter and cosmological phase transition using pulsar timing arrays

        Pulsar timing arrays record the arrival time of radio pulses from dozens of millisecond pulsars. The pulsars of different sky locations construct a network that is sensitive to gravitational waves and dark matter signals. There are three Pulsar timing arrays in the world, PPTA, EPTA and NANOGrav, that are actively gathering pulsar timing data with very high precision. In this talk, we use the recent PPTA data to search for ultralight dark photon dark matter signal and the phase transition gravitational wave background signal. We find that in both cases, the sensitivity of the current PPTA data exceeds the current limit in the low-frequency range, and a fair amount of parameter space can therefore be probed.

        Speaker: Prof. Qiang Yuan (Purple Mountain Observatory, CAS)
      • 33
        Testing the dispersion of gravitational waves using b-EMRI systems

        Binary extreme-mass-ratio inspiral (b-EMRIs) consists of a stellar-mass binary black hole orbiting around a supermassive massive black hole. Such a three-body system emits simultaneously low-frequency (milli-Hertz) gravitational waves and high-frequency (hundred Hertz) ones. Therefore, it is ideal for testing the dispersion of gravitational waves. In this talk, I will show how such systems could be produced naturally in astrophysical environments, via the processes of either tidal capture or planetary-like migration. By coordinating ground-based and future space-borne gravitational-wave observatories, we could constrain the dispersion of gravitational waves, and hence the mass of gravitons, to a precision that is ten times better than the current limit.

        Speaker: Xian Chen
      • 34
        Towards the precise prediction of the phase transition gravitational wave

        After the discovery of Higgs boson and gravitational wave (GW), the phase transition GW becomes a new and realistic approach to explore new physics and the fundamental physics. However, current predictions on the phase transition GW have large uncertainties from energy budget, bubble
        wall velocity and so on. We study how to obtain more precise phase transitional GW

        Speaker: Prof. Fa Huang Huang (SunYat-Sen university)
      • 35
        Probing GHz gravitational waves with magnons

        In the era of gravitational wave astronomy/cosmology, it is important not only to improve the sensitivity of existing detectors but also to extend detectable frequency range with novel methods. We show that gravitational waves can induce resonant spin precessions of electrons (magnon) in the presence of an external magnetic field. This phenomenon, we call it graviton-magnon resonance, enables us to probe gravitational waves in the GHz frequency range. Furthermore, we give upper limits on GHz gravitational waves by utilizing measurements of resonance fluorescence of magnons.

        Speaker: Asuka Ito (Tokyo institute of technology)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Yang Zhou
      • 36
        A Penrose limit for type IIB  AdS_6 solutions

        In this talk I review recent work on constructing a Penrose limit for the warped type IIB $AdS_6\times S^2\times \Sigma_2$ solutions and determining the spectrum of the Green-Schwarz string in the background.

        Speaker: Michael Gutperle (UCLA)
      • 37
        Superconformal approach to N=4 supergravity

        In this talk I will start with a brief introduction of N=4 supergravity and the known results about the anomalies and divergences of N=4 supergravity in the literature. From there I will motivate the necessity for studying N=4 supergravity from the superconformal approach and discuss a systematic way to construct N=4 conformal supergravity. Then I will discuss how to use the superconformal results in the construction of N=4 Poincare supergravity with higher derivative corrections which would be relevant from the point of view of the above mentioned study of anomalies and divergences in N=4 supergravity. I will end with some future directions.

        Speaker: Bindusar Sahoo (IISER, India)
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Shufang Su (University of Arizona)
      • 38
        Possible indications for new Higgs bosons in the reach of the LHC: N2HDM and NMSSM interpretations

        In several searches for additional Higgs bosons at the LHC,
        in particular the CMS search in the·
        $pp \to \phi \to t \bar t$ channel and the ATLAS search in·
        the $pp \to \phi \to \tau^+\tau^-$
        channel, a local excess at
        the level of $3\,\sigma$ or above has been observed·
        at a mass scale of $m_\phi \approx 400$GeV.·
        We investigate to what extent a possible signal in those
        channels could be accommodated in the·
        Next-to-Two-Higgs-Doublet Model (N2HDM) or the Next-to Minimal
        Supersymmetric Standard Model (NMSSM).
        In a second step we furthermore analyse
        whether such a model could be compatible with both a signal at·
        $\approx 400$GeV and at $\approx 96$GeV, where the latter possibility is
        motivated by observed excesses in searches for the $b \bar b$ final state at·
        LEP and the di-photon final state at CMS.
        The analysis for the N2HDM reveals that the
        observed excesses at $\approx 400$GeV in the
        $pp \to \phi \to t \bar t$ and
        $pp \to \phi \to \tau^+\tau^-$ channels point
        towards different regions of the parameter space, while one such excess and an
        additional Higgs boson at $\approx 96$GeV could simultaneously be
        accommodated. In the context of the NMSSM·
        an experimental confirmation of a signal in the·
        $t \bar t$ final state would favour·
        the alignment-without-decoupling limit of the model,
        where the Higgs boson at $\approx 125$GeV could be essentially
        indistinguishable from the Higgs boson of the SM.·
        In contrast,·
        a signal in the $\tau^+\tau^-$ channel would be correlated with significant
        deviations of the properties of the Higgs boson at $\approx 125$GeV·
        from the ones of a SM Higgs boson that could be detected with high-precision
        coupling measurements.

        Speaker: Thomas Biekoetter (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
      • 39
        A 96 GeV Higgs boson in the 2HDMS

        We discuss a ∼ 3 σ signal (local) in the light Higgs-boson search in the diphoton decay mode at ∼ 96 GeV as reported by CMS, together with a ∼ 2 σ excess (local) in the b̄b final state at LEP in the same mass range. We interpret this possible signal as a Higgs boson in the 2 Higgs Doublet Model with an additional complex Higgs singlet (2HDMS). We find that the lightest CP-even Higgs boson of the 2HDMS type II can perfectly fit both excesses simultaneously, while the second lightest state is in full agreement with the Higgs-boson measurements at 125 GeV, and the full Higgs-boson sector is in agreement with all Higgs exclusion bounds from LEP, the Tevatron and the LHC as well as other theoretical and experimental constraints. We derive bounds on the 2HDMS Higgs sector from a fit to both excesses and describe how this signal can be further analyzed at the LHC and at future e⁺e⁻ colliders, such as the ILC or CEPC. We analyze in detail the anticipated precision of the coupling measurements of the 96 GeV Higgs boson at the ILC.

        Speaker: Cheng Li (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
      • 40
        The forgotten channels: charged Higgs boson decays to a W± and a non-SM-like Higgs boson

        The presence of charged Higgs bosons is a generic prediction of multiplet extensions of the Standard Model (SM) Higgs sector. Focusing on the Two-Higgs-Doublet-Model (2HDM), we discuss the charged Higgs boson collider phenomenology in the theoretically and experimentally viable parameter space. While almost all existing experimental searches at the LHC target the fermionic decays of charged Higgs bosons, we point out that the bosonic decay channels --- especially the decay into a non-SM-like Higgs boson and a W boson --- often dominate over the fermionic channels. We propose several benchmark scenarios with distinct phenomenological features in order to facilitate the design of dedicated LHC searches for charged Higgs bosons decaying into a W boson and a non-SM-like Higgs boson.

        Speaker: Jonas Wittbrodt (Lund University)
      • 41
        Displaced Higgs production in Type-III Seesaw at the LHC/FCC, MATHUSLA and Muon collider

        We explore the possibility of displaced Higgs production from the decays of the heavy fermions in the Type-III seesaw extension of the Standard Model at the LHC/FCC and the muon collider. The displaced heavy fermions and the Higgs boson can be traced back by measuring the displaced charged tracks of the charged leptons along with the $b$-jets. The prospects of the transverse and longitudinal displaced decay lengths are extensively studied in the context of the boost at the LHC/FCC. Due to the parton distribution function, the longitudinal boosts leads to larger displacement compared to the transverse one, which can reach MATHUSLA and beyond. Such measurements are indeed possible by the fully visible finalstate, which captures the complete information about the longitudinal momenta. The comparative studies are made at the LHC/FCC with the centreof mass energies of 14, 27 and 100 TeV, respectively. . A futuristic study of the muon colliderwhere the collision happen in the centre of mass frame is analysed for centre of mass energiesof 3.5, 14 and 30 TeV. Contrary to LHC/FCC, here the transverse momentum diverges,however, the maximum reach in both the direction are identical due to the constant total momentum in each collision. The reach of the Yukawa couplings and fermion masses areappraised for both the colliders.

        Speaker: Chandrima Sen (Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad)
      • 42
        Searches for heavy resonances decaying into Z, W, and Higgs bosons at CMS

        We present a summary of searches for new heavy resonances decaying into pairs or triplets of bosons, performed on proton-proton collision data collected with the CMS detector at the CERN LHC at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. A common feature of these analyses is the boosted topology, namely the decay products of the considered bosons (both electroweak W, Z bosons and the Higgs boson) are expected to be highly energetic and close in angle, leading to a non-trivial identification of the quarks and leptons in the final state. The exploitation of jet substructure techniques allows to increase the sensitivity of the searches where at least one boson decays hadronically. Various background estimation techniques are adopted, based on data-MC hybrid approaches or relying only in control regions in data. Results are interpreted in the context of multiple scenarios beyond the standard model.

        Speaker: Qilong Guo (Peking University (CN))
    • 15:30
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Wenyu Wang (Beijing University of Technology)
      • 43
        Interplay Between Dark Matter Freeze Out/In and Primordial Black Hole Evaporation

        In this talk, I will present the phenomenology of dark-matter production in the case where it is both produced by a freeze-out or freeze-in mechanism and by the evaporation of primordial black holes. I will show that the presence of a vector mediator between the hidden and the visible sector affects the production of dark-matter particles as well as its phase space distribution. I will also show that the population of DM particles produced by evaporation may be warm enough to re-thermalize with the pre-existing DM relic abundance, leading to non-trivial imprints on the value of the relic abundance at later time.

        Speaker: Dr Lucien Heurtier (IPPP, Durham, England)
      • 44
        Direct detection of non-galactic light dark matter

        A fraction of the dark matter in the solar neighborhood might be composed of non-galactic particles with speeds larger than the escape velocity of the Milky Way. The non-galactic dark matter flux would enhance the sensitivity of direct detection experiments, due to the larger momentum transfer to the target. In this note, we calculate the impact of the dark matter flux from the Local Group and the Virgo Supercluster diffuse components in nuclear and electron recoil experiments. The enhancement in the signal rate can be very significant, especially for experiments searching for dark matter induced electron recoils.

        Speaker: Gonzalo Herrera (Technical University of Munich, Max Planck Institute for Physic)
      • 45
        Dark-sector physics at Belle II

        The Belle II experiment at the asymmetric $e^+e^-$ collider, SuperKEKB, is a substantial upgrade of the Belle/KEKB experiment. Belle II aims to record 50 ab$^{-1}$ of data over the course of the project. During the first physics runs in 2018-2020, around 100 fb$^{-1}$ of data were collected. These early data include specifically-designed low-multiplicity triggers which allow a variety of searches for light dark matter and dark-sector mediators in the GeV mass range.

        This talk will present the very first world-leading physics results from Belle II: searches for the invisible decays of a new vector Z’, and visible decays of an axion-like particle; as well as the near-term prospects for other dark-sector searches. Many of these searches are competitive with the data already collected or the data expected in the next few years of operation.

        Speaker: Sascha Simon Dreyer (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
      • 46
        Thermal WIMPs and the scale of new physics

        The non-observation of conclusive WIMP signals raises the question whether WIMPs can still account for the dark matter of the universe. In this talk I will present results from a global analysis of effective field theory operators describing the interactions between WIMPs and Standard Model particles. In this bottom-up approach, the global fitting framework GAMBIT is used to simultaneously vary the coefficients of 14 such operators, along with the WIMP mass, the scale of new physics and several nuisance parameters. The likelihood functions include the latest data from Planck, direct and indirect detection experiments, and the LHC. Although the observed relic density can be reproduced in large regions of parameter space, there cannot be a large hierarchy between the WIMP mass and the scale of new physics, which raises concerns about the validity of the effective field theory. I will discuss possible ways to address this issue in order to consistently interpret the latest results from WIMP searches at the LHC.

        Speaker: Dr Tomas Gonzalo (RWTH Aachen)
      • 47
        Lower Mass Bounds on Freeze-in Dark Matter

        Feebly Interacting Massive Particles (FIMPs) are dark matter candidates that never thermalize in the early universe and whose production takes place via decays and/or scatterings of thermal bath particles. If FIMPs interactions with the thermal bath are renormalizable, a scenario which is known as freeze-in, production is most efficient at temperatures around the mass of the bath particles and insensitive to unknown physics at high temperatures. Working in a model-independent fashion, we consider three different production mechanisms: two-body decays, three-body decays, and binary collisions. We compute the FIMP phase space distribution and matter power spectrum, and we investigate the suppression of cosmological structures at small scales. Our results are lower bounds on the FIMP mass. Finally, we study how to relax these constraints in scenarios where FIMPs provide a sub-dominant dark matter component.

        Speaker: Alessandro Lenoci (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
      • 48
        Dark matter phenomenology in two higgs doublet model with complex scalar singlet

        Extensions of the two higgs doublet models with a singlet scalar can easily accommodate all current experi-
        mental constraints and are highly motivated candidates for Beyond Standard Model Physics. It can success-
        fully provide a dark matter candidate, explain baryogenesis and provide gravitational wave signals. In this
        work, we focus on the dark matter phenomenology of the two higgs doublet model extended with a complex
        scalar singlet which serves as the dark matter candidate. We study the variations of the dark matter observ-
        ables, i.e relic density and direct detection cross-section, with respect to the model parameters. We obtain a
        few benchmark points in the light and heavy dark matter mass region. We are also currently studying possi-
        ble signatures of this model at current and future colliders and the possibility to distinguish this model from
        other new physics scenarios.

        Speaker: Juhi Dutta (University of Hamburg)
    • Early Universe Cosmology ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Yeuk Kwan Edna Cheung (Nanjing University)
      • 49
        Messenger inflation in gauge mediation and superWIMP dark matter

        We discuss phenomenological viability of a novel inflationary model in the minimal gauge mediated supersymmetry breaking scenario. In this model, cosmic inflation is realized in the flat direction along the messenger supermultiplets and a natural dark matter candidate is the gravitino from the out-of-equilibrium decay of the bino-like neutralino at late times, which is called the superWIMP scenario. The produced gravitino is warmish and can have a large free-streaming length; thus the cusp anomaly in the small scale structure formation may be mitigated. We show that the requirement of the Standard Model Higgs boson mass to be $m_{h^0}=125.1$ GeV gives a relation between the spectrum of the cosmic microwave background and the messenger mass $M$. We find, for the e-folding number $N_e=60$, the Planck 2018 constraints (TT, TE, EE+lowE+lensing+BK15+BAO, 68% confidence level) give $M > 3.64\times 10^7$ GeV. The gravitino dark matter mass is $m_{3/2} < 5.8$ GeV and the supersymmetry breaking scale $\Lambda$ is found to be in the range $(1.28-1.33)\times 10^6$ GeV. Future CMB observation is expected to give tighter constraints on these parameters.

        Speaker: Shinsuke Kawai (Sungkyunkwan University)
      • 50
        A new approach to t-channel singularities in cosmology

        A $t$-channel singularity of a cross section occurs in a $2\to 2$ process when the mediator is allowed to be on-shell, i.e. when the process can be treated as a sequence of a $1\to 2$ decay and a $2\to 1$ inverse decay. If, moreover, the mediator is stable, this singularity cannot be regularized within the common Breit-Wigner approach.

        In this talk I will discuss the conditions for the singularity to occur and briefly summarize attempts (proposed in literature) to regularize it in case of collider physics and cosmological considerations of a thermal medium of particles. After showing that none of previously proposed ways to solve the problem is satisfactory in the cosmological case, I will present a natural solution developed within the Keldysch-Schwinger formalism: a non-zero imaginary part of the mediator's self-energy that appears as a consequence of interactions between the mediator and the thermal medium. Consequently, the mediator acquires a non-zero effective decay width and the cross section becomes finite.

        Speaker: Michał Iglicki (University of Warsaw)
      • 51
        Initial conditions of pre-inflation in LQC

        We discuss the preinflationary dynamics of the spatially flat FLRW universe filled with a single scalar field that has the generic potentials, in the framework of loop quantum cosmology. The evolution can be divided into two different classes, one is dominated initially (at the quantum bounce) by the kinetic energy of the scalar field, and one is not. In both cases, we identify numerically the physically viable initial conditions that lead to not only a slow-roll inflationary phase, but also enough e-folds to be consistent with observations, and find that the output of such a viable slow-roll inflationary phase is generic. In addition, we also show that in the case when the evolution of the universe is dominated initially by the kinetic energy of the scalar field, the evolution before reheating is always divided into three different phases: bouncing, transition and slow-roll inflation.

        Speaker: Mohd Shahalam (Zhejiang University of Technology)
      • 52
        Classical gravitational scattering from a gauge-invariant double copy

        The Gravity effects play an important role both in the black hole scattering and early universe inflation. On the other hand, extremely heavy dynamic systems, e.x. The black hole and early universe, provide a natural environment for detecting classical and quantum gravitational effects. In this talk, we majorly focus on the theoretical part of the gravity effects. We propose a systematic framework to obtain the classical and quantum gravity effect on the two-body scattering bending angle. The framework is based on the heavy-mass effective field theory approach to general relativity. The amplitudes in this effective field theory are constructed using a recently proposed novel color-kinematic/double copy duality, where the duality numerators are gauge invariant and local concerning the massless gravitons. We provide the explicit result on two body bending angles to the third post-Minkowskian order for the classical part and the one-loop order for the quantum part.

        Speaker: Gang Chen (Queen Mary University of London)
      • 53
        Yangian bootstrap in three-body effective potential in general relativity
        Speaker: Tianheng Wang
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Yungui Gong (Huazhong University of Science and Technology)
      • 54
        Gravity and cosmology beyond general relativity and gravitational waves

        After motivating gravity and cosmology beyond general relativity, I will review some theories and their phenomenologies, inclucing gravitational wave physics.

        Speaker: Shinji Mukohyama
      • 55
        Testing gravitational theories with broken Lorentz symmetry by gravitational wave observations

        Lorentz symmetry is the cornerstone of modern physics, and is consistent with all experiments carried out so far. However, due to various motivations, gravitational theories with Lorentz symmetry breaking have been proposed, and one of the examples is the Horava-Lifshitz theory, motivated by the quantization of gravity. Another example is the Einstein-aether (æ-) theory, which is a vector-tensor theory with the vector (aether) field being always timelike and unity. The æ-theory is self-consistent (such as free of ghosts and instability), and satisfies all the experimental tests carried out so far. Its Cauchy problem is well-posed, and energy is always positive (at least as far as the hypersurface-orthogonal aether field is concerned). In addition, black holes exist and can be formed from gravitational collapse of realistic matter.

        In this talk, we shall present our recent studies of gravitational waves (GWs) produced by massive and compact objects in æ-theory, including their waveforms, polarizations, response function, its Fourier transform, and energy loss rate through three different channels of radiation, the scalar, vector and tensor modes. Combination of such theoretical predictions with observations of GWs can bring severe constraints on the theory.

        Speaker: Dr Chao Zhang (Zhejiang University of Technology)
      • 56
        Probing beyond standard model physics from gravitational waves

        The orbital period loss of Hulse-Taylor binary system was the first indirect evidence of gravitational wave (GW) which confirms Einstein's general theory of relativity to a very good extent. However the uncertainty in the measurement of GW from observation and GR prediction allows us to probe physics beyond the standard picture. In this talk I will discuss about probing beyond standard model physics from GW observation and some other astrophysical phenomena.

        Speaker: Tanmay Kumar Poddar (Physical Research Laboratory)
      • 57
        Primordial gravitational waves revealed by a spinning axion

        A fast-spinning axion can dominate the Universe at early times and generates the so-called kination era. The presence of kination imprints a smoking-gun spectral enhancement in the primordial gravitational-wave (GW) background. Current and future-planned GW observatories could constrain particle theories that generate the kination phase. Surprisingly, the viable parameter space allows for a kination era at the PeV-EeV scale and generates a peaked spectrum of GW from either cosmic strings or primordial inflation, which lies inside ET and CE windows.

        Speaker: Peera Simakachorn (Universität Hamburg and DESY)
      • 58
        Renormalization group analysis of the self-interacting axion cloud

        There are strong interests in considering ultra-light scalar fields (especially axion) around a rapidly rotating black hole because of the possibility of observing gravitational waves from axion condensate (axion cloud) around black holes. Motivated by this consideration, we propose a new method to study the dynamics of an ultra-light scalar field with self-interaction around a rapidly rotating black hole, which uses the dynamical renormalization group method. We find that for relativistic clouds, a saturation of the superradiant instability by the scattering of the axion due to the self-interaction does not occur in the weakly non-linear regime when we consider the adiabatic growth of the cloud from a single superradiant mode. This may suggest that an explosive phenomenon called the Bosenova may inevitably happen for relativistic axion clouds, at least once in its evolutionary history.

        Speaker: Hidetoshi Omiya (Kyoto University)
      • 59
        Universal $10^{20}$ Hz stochastic gravitational waves from photon spheres of black holes

        We show that photon spheres of supermassive black holes generate high-frequency stochastic gravitational waves through
        the photon-graviton conversion.
        Remarkably, the frequency is universally determined as $m_e\sqrt{m_e /m_p} \simeq 10^{20} \text{Hz}$ in terms of the proton mass $m_p$ and the electron mass $m_e$.
        It turns out that the density parameter of the stochastic gravitational waves $ \Omega_{ \text{gw}}$ could be $ 10^{-12}$.
        Since the existence of the gravitational waves from photon spheres is robust,
        it is worth seeking methods of detecting high-frequency gravitational waves around $10^{20}$Hz.

        Speaker: Kaishu Saito (Kobe University)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Yang Zhou
      • 60
        Geometry and physics on the boundary of the supergravity landscape

        The landscape of supergravity theories arising from string compactifications is highly constrained by the internal geometry. In this talk, I will argue that, rather than being a limitation of string model building, these geometric constraints reflect physical consistency conditions that delineate the landscape from the swampland. I will focus on constructions of 8d and 6d supergravity theories via F-theory, and discuss geometric restrictions on the possible gauge symmetries, including the global structure of the gauge group. As I will explain in the talk, the corresponding physical consistency conditions are related to (generalized) global symmetries.

        Speaker: Ling Lin (CERN)
      • 61
        de Sitter, supergravity and the Swampland

        I will discuss recent progress in finding and classifying de Sitter vacua in supergravity. I will also comment on the evidence that models with de Sitter vacua with massless gravitini in the swampland.

        Speaker: Gianguido Dall'Agata (Padua U)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Yu Gao (Institute of High Energy Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 62
        Status of physics studies at the CEPC

        The Circular Electron Positron Collider is designed to deliver 1 M Higgs boson, 100 M W boson, 1 Tera Z boson in roughly 10 years of data taking. It is not only a machine for precision measurement but also a Discovery machine. To quantify its physics potential and comparative advantages compared to other facilities, intensive physics studies have been performed, aiming at CEPC physics white papers in a few years.

         This report will briefly introduce the status and highlights of recent CEPC physics studies.
        
        Speaker: Manqi Ruan (Chinese Academy of Sciences (CN))
      • 63
        Status of the CEPC Project

        The discovery of the Higgs boson marked the beginning of a new era in HEP. Precision measurement of the Higgs boson properties and exploring new physics beyond the Standard Model using Higgs as a tool become a natural next step beyond the LHC. Among the proposed Higgs factories worldwide, the Circular Electron Positron Collider (CEPC) is proposed by the Chinese HEP community and to be hosted in China. The CEPC will be located in a tunnel with 100km circumference. It will operate at CME of 240 GeV as a Higgs factory. It can also operate at lower energy as W and Z boson factory. In this talk, the recent progress about CEPC accelerator and detector R&D, and study of physics potential will be presented.

        Speaker: Haijun Yang (Shanghai Jiao Tong University (CN))
      • 64
        Towards a Muon Collider

        After the recent update of the European Strategy an International Muon Collider Collaboration is forming. The talk will give an overview of the project and the plans of the collaboration. It will highlight some of the challenges and the technologies to address them.

        Speaker: Elias Metral (CERN)
      • 65
        Muon Colliders Physics Potential Overview

        The talk will summarise the status of the muon collider physics potential assessment

        Speaker: Dario Buttazzo
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Xin Gao (Sichuan University)
      • 66
        Searches for leptoquarks with the ATLAS detector

        Leptoquarks (LQ) are predicted by many new physics theories to describe the similarities between the lepton and quark sectors of the Standard Model and offer an attractive potential explanation for the lepton flavour anomalies observed at LHCb and flavour factories. The ATLAS experiment has a broad program of direct searches for leptoquarks, coupling to the first-, second- or third-generation particles. This talk will present the most recent 13 TeV results on the searches for leptoquarks and contact interactions with the ATLAS detector, covering flavour-diagonal and cross-generational final states.

        Speaker: Alexander Mann (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (DE))
      • 67
        Search for new resonances coupling to third generation quarks at CMS

        We present an overview of searches for new physics with top and bottom quarks in the final state, using proton-proton collision data collected with the CMS detector at the CERN LHC at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. The results cover non-SUSY based extensions of the SM, including heavy gauge bosons or excited third generation quarks. Decay channels to vector-like top partner quarks are also considered. We explore the use of jet substructure techniques to reconstruct highly boosted objects in events, enhancing the sensitivity of these searches

        Speaker: Andrea Piccinelli (Universita e INFN, Perugia (IT))
      • 68
        Missing Transverse Momentum Recontruction in ATLAS

        Missing transverse momentum (MET) is a critical observable for physics searches in proton-proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider. This talk describes these various novel approaches and their performance. ATLAS employs a suite of working points for missing transverse momentum (MET) reconstruction, and each is optimal for different event topologies. A new neural network can exploit various event properties to pick the optimal working point on an event-by-event basis and also combine complementary information from each of the working points. The resulting regressed "METNet" offers improved resolution and pileup resistance across a number of different topologies compared to the current MET working points. Additionally, image-based de-noising neural network techniques are studied; these also provide significant resolution improvements and pileup resistance.

        Speaker: Holly Pacey (University of Cambridge (GB))
      • 69
        On the feasibility of Bell Inequality violation at ATLAS experiment with flavor entanglement of B meson pairs from proton-proton collisions

        The Bell inequality is a principal touchstone of testing the local realism posited by Einstein at the time of the formation of quantum theory. The violations of the Bell inequality have been found with the measured system of photons, electrons or nucleons at low energies, which reject local realism. Extending to systems with higher energies will be important for establishing the nonlocal nature universally.

        This talk will present a simulation study on the feasibility of the Bell test by means of flavor entanglement of a pair of B mesons in the ATLAS experiment at CERN. Our results show that it is capable to find the maximal violation of the Bell inequality at the time difference of 1.5 ps in the decays of the two entangled B mesons, rejecting yet again the local realism at the highest energy scale 14 TeV ever. This will be the first case of Bell inequality violation in particle physics experiment, given that the earlier analysis with the Belle experiment was found to be inconclusive, due primarily to the lack of selection process of spacelike events and the inability of independent identification of the decay times.

        Speaker: Yosuke Takubo (High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (JP))
      • 70
        Hadronic Reconstruction Techniques at ATLAS

        The reconstruction and calibration of hadronic final states is an extremely challenging experimental aspect of measurements and searches at the LHC. This talk summarizes the latest results from ATLAS for jet reconstruction and calibration. New approaches to jet inputs better utilize relationships between calorimeter and tracking information to significantly improve the reconstruction of jet substructure. Additionally, a full suite of in-situ measurements of the jet energy scale and jet energy resolution for ATLAS's new particle flow jets yield the lowest uncertainties yet in the high pileup conditions of the LHC Run 2. Finally, new machine learning approaches for various aspects of reconstruction will be discussed.

        Speaker: Mark Hodgkinson (University of Sheffield (GB))
      • 71
        Higgs as a probe of beyond the Standard Model physics

        The minimal U$(1)_𝑋$ extension of the Standard Model (SM) is a simple and well-motivated extension of the SM, which supplements the SM with the seesaw mechanism for naturally generating the light neutrino masses and offers various interesting phenomenologies.In the model, the U$(1)_𝑋$ charge of each SM field is characterized by the U$(1)_𝑋$ charge of the SM Higgs doublet with a free parameter $x_𝐻$ and $𝑥_\Phi$. Due to the U$(1)_𝑋$ charge of the Higgs doublet, the Higgs boson has a trilinear coupling with the $𝑍$ and the U$(1)_𝑋$ gauge boson $(𝑍^\prime)$ due to $𝑥_𝐻 \neq 0$. With this coupling, a new process for the associated Higgs boson production with $𝑍$ boson arises through a $𝑍^\prime$ boson in the $𝑠$-channel at high energy colliders. In this paper, we calculate the associated Higgs boson production at high energy colliders and show the interesting effects of the new $𝑍^\prime$ boson mediated process, which can be tested in the future. Such models contains three SM singlet RHNs which generate the light neutrino mass through the seesaw mechanism after the U$(1)_𝑋$ breaking. We will also study the prospect of such RHN productions through the Higgs boson at the colliders which can probe a suitable neutrino mass generation mechanism.

        Speaker: Arindam Das (Hokkaido University)
    • Split SUSY and High-Scale SUSY ZR8A

      ZR8A

      Conveners: Chun Liu (Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shabbar Raza (Federal Urdu University of Arts, Science and Technology, Karach)
      • 72
        Probing the Supersymmetric Grand Unified Theories at the Future Proton-Proton Colliders and Hyper-Kamiokande Experiment

        Gauge coupling unification in the Supersymmetric Standard Models strongly implies the
        Grand Unified Theories (GUTs). With the grand desert hypothesis, we show that
        the supersymmetric GUTs can be probed at the future proton-proton (pp) colliders and
        Hyper-Kamiokande experiment. For the GUTs with the GUT scale $M_{GUT} \le 1.0\times 10^{16}$~GeV,
        we can probe the dimension-six proton decay via heavy gauge boson exchange
        at the Hyper-Kamiokande experiment. Moreover, for the GUTs with
        $M_{GUT} \ge 1.0\times 10^{16}$~GeV, we for the first time study the upper bounds
        on the gaugino and sfermion masses. We show that the GUTs with anomaly and
        gauge mediated supersymmetry breakings are well within the reaches of
        the future 100 TeV pp colliders such as the ${\rm FCC}_{\rm hh}$ and SppC,
        and the supersymmetric GUTs with gravity mediated supersymmetry breaking
        can be probed at the future 160 TeV pp collider.

        Speaker: Dr Shabbar Raza (Federal Urdu University of Arts, Science and Technology, Karach)
      • 73
        Radiative Gravitino Production from Inflaton Decay

        In high-scale supersymmetry where all sparticles, except gravitino, are heavier than inflaton, an EeV-scale gravitino is suited for dark matter. Gravitino may be produced not only from scatterings of thermal particles but also from radiative decay of inflaton even when there is no direct coupling between the two. I will argue that in a viable inflation model based on no-scale supergravity, the latter can be a non-negligible contribution.

        Speaker: Kunio Kaneta (KIAS)
      • 74
        How Heavy can Neutralino Dark Matter be?

        What is the upper limit of the mass of the neutralino dark matter whose thermal relic is consistent with the observation? If the neutralino dark matter and colored sparticles are extremely degenerated in mass, with a mass difference less than the QCD scale, the dark matter annihilation is significantly increased and enjoys the "second freeze-out" after the QCD phase transition. In this case, the neutralino dark matter with a mass much greater than 100 TeV can realize the correct dark matter abundance. We study the dark matter abundance and its detection in the case of such highly degenerated mass spectrum of the neutralino dark matter and colored supersymmetric particles.

        Speaker: Hajime Fukuda (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
      • 75
        A Minimal Supersymmetric SU(5) Missing-Partner Model

        We explore a missing-partner model based on the minimal SU(5) gauge group with 75, 50 and 50 Higgs representations, assuming a super-GUT CMSSM scenario in which soft supersymmetry-breaking parameters are universal at some high scale above the GUT scale. We identify regions of parameter space that are consistent with the cosmological dark matter density, the measured Higgs mass and the experimental lower limit on proton lifetime. These constraints can be satisfied simultaneously along stop coannihilation strips. We find that the lifetime of the proton decay into K+ and neutrino is less than 3 x 10^{34} years throughout the allowed range of parameter space, within the range of the next generation of searches with the JUNO, DUNE and Hyper-Kamiokande experiments.

        Speaker: Natsumi Nagata (University of Tokyo)
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Jia Liu (Peking University)
      • 76
        Vacuum (meta-)stability in the $\mu\nu$SSM

        We perform an analysis of the vacuum stability of the neutral scalar potential of the $\mu$-from-$\nu$ Supersymmetric Standard Model ($\mu\nu$SSM). As an example scenario, we discuss the alignment without decoupling limit of the $\mu\nu$SSM. We demonstrate that in this limit large parts of the parameter space feature unphysical minima that are deeper than the electroweak minimum. In order to estimate the lifetime of the electroweak vacuum, we calculate the decay rates for the tunneling process into each unphysical minimum. We find that in many cases the resulting lifetime is longer than the age of the universe, such that the considered parameter region is not excluded. On the other hand, we also find parameter regions in which the EW vacuum is short-lived, and we demonstrate how these regions are related to the presence of light right-handed sneutrinos.

        Speaker: Thomas Biekoetter (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
      • 77
        Phenomenological Study of the Semi-constrained NMSSM

        Based on 3 papers: arXiv:2002.05554, 2003.01662, 2011.12848
        1.“A Novel Scenario in the Semi-constrained NMSSM,” JHEP 06, 078 (2020)
        2.“Funnel annihilations of light dark matter and the invisible decay of the Higgs boson,”Phys. Rev. D 101, no.9, 095028 (2020)
        3. “Higgsino Asymmetry and Direct-Detection Constraints of Light Dark Matter in the NMSSM with Non-Universal Higgs Masses,” Chin. Phys. C 45, no. 4, 041003 (2021)

        The fully constrained NMSSM is in tension with current experimental constraints. Therefore, we focuses on a simple and elegant supersymmetric model: semi-constrained NMSSM (scNMSSM).

        In order to better explore the parameter space of scNMSSM, we have developed a new search algorithm: the Heuristically Search (HS) and the Generative Adversarial Network (GAN).
        We applied this very effective search algorithm to the parameter space of scNMSSM. For the first time (according to the current understanding), we successfully found a parameter space that satisfies all the theoretical and experimental constraints, and then we made analysis of the Higgs and dark matter properties.

        We carefully studied the Higgs and dark matter LSP scenario in the scNMSSM. We found that in scNMSSM, there can be four funnel-annihilation mechanisms for the LSP in scNMSSM, which are the $h_2$, $Z$, $h_1$ and $a_1$ funnel. We also verified that the spin-dependent cross section is proportional to the square of higgsino asymmetry. And the higgsino-mass parameter $\mu$ is smaller than about $335 $ GeV in the scNMSSM due to the current muon g-2 constraint.

        Speaker: Dr Kun Wang (University of Shanghai for Science and Technology)
      • 78
        Proton Lifetime in Minimal SU(5)

        We will consider the proton decay in a class of minimal SU(5) GUTs mediated by color-triplets Higgsinos. Even though their masses are comparable with the GUT scale, they can still yield a shorter lifetime for the proton, especially in the low tan beta region. In this work, we consider several threshold effects from Planck-suppressed operators, which lead to heavier triplet Higgsinos as well as correcting the wrong fermion mass relations realized in SU(5) GUTs.

        Speaker: Cem Salih Un (Bursa Uludag University)
      • 79
        Searches for supersymmetry in hadronic final states with the CMS detector

        Results from the CMS experiment are presented for searches for strong supersymmetric with decays to hadronic final states. The searches use proton-proton collision data with luminosity up to 137 fb-1 recorded by the CMS detector at center of mass energy 13 TeV during the LHC Run 2.

        Speaker: Koushik Mandal (Eotvos Lorand University (HU))
      • 80
        Searches for strong production of supersymmetric particles with the ATLAS detector

        Despite the absence of experimental evidence, weak-scale supersymmetry remains one of the best motivated and studied Standard Model extensions. This talk summarizes recent ATLAS results on inclusive searches for supersymmetric squarks of the first two generations and gluinos, focusing on decay modes in which R-parity is conserved and therefore the lightest SUSY particle is a stable dark matter candidate. The searches target final states including jets, leptons, photons, and missing transverse momentum.

        Speaker: Kazuki Todome (Universita e INFN, Bologna (IT))
    • Plenary: II Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Chun Liu (Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 81
        Challenges in supersymmetric cosmology
        Speaker: Ignatios Antoniadis (LPTHE, Paris)
      • 82
        Aspects of Higgs and EW physics in SUSY: light LSP and Heavy Higgs

        In this talk I will discuss the case of a light LSP (lighter than half the Higgs mass) in pMSSM, NMSSM as well as both these models extended with a right handed sneutrino. In addition I will point out some new strategies for heavy higgs searches in electroweakino final states as well as remind us of the importance of the precision calculations in the Higgs sector for the phenomenology.

        Speaker: Rohini Godbole (Centre for High Energy Physics, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, India)
      • 83
        Particle-Antiparticle Oscillations and Baryogenesis in SUSY
        Speaker: Seyda Ipek
      • 84
        Grand Unified Theories

        I shall review the motivations for grand unification and summarize recent progress in this field.

        Speaker: Kaladi Babu (Oklahoma State U)
      • 85
        SUSY Predictions from the String Landscape and the Naturalness
        Speaker: Howard Baer (University of Oklahoma)
    • 22:05
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Wenyu Wang (Beijing University of Technology)
      • 86
        Re-analysis of 3.5 keV line

        I describe a reanalysis of data sets that have previously been found to harbor evidence for an unidentified X-ray line at 3.5 keV in order to quantify the robustness of earlier results that found significant evidence for a new X-ray line at this energy. The 3.5 keV line is intriguing in part because of possible connections to dark matter. We analyze observations from the XMM-Newton and Chandra telescopes. We investigate the robustness of the evidence for the 3.5 keV line to variations in the analysis framework and also to numerical error in the chi-square minimization process. For example, we consider narrowing the energy band for the analysis in order to minimize mismodeling effects. The results of our analyses indicate that many of the original 3.5 keV studies (i) did not have fully converged statistical analyses, and (ii) were subject to large systematic uncertainties from background mismodeling. Accounting for these issues we find no statistically significant evidence for a 3.5 keV line in any X-ray data set.

        Speaker: Yujin Park (University of California, Berkeley)
      • 87
        Improving the sensitivity to light dark matter with the Migdal effect

        The search for dark matter (DM) weakly interacting massive particles with noble elements has probed masses down and below a GeV/c^2. The ultimate limit is represented by the experimental threshold on the energy transfer to the nuclear recoil. Currently, the experimental sensitivity has reached a threshold equivalent to a few ionization electrons. In these conditions, the contribution of a Bremsstrahlung photon or a so-called Migdal electron due to the sudden acceleration of a nucleus after a collision might be sizeable. We present a recent work where, using a Bayesian approach, we studied how these effects can be exploited in experiments based on liquid argon detectors. In particular we develop a simulated experiment to show how the Migdal electron and the Bremsstrahlung photon allow to push the experimental sensitivity down to masses of 0.1 GeV/c^2, extending the search region for dark matter particles of previous results. For these masses we estimate the effect of the Earth shielding that, for strongly interacting dark matter, makes any detector blind. Finally, given the relevance of the Migdal electrons to the search for low mass DM, we discuss some new ideas on how to possibly measure such an effect with detectors based on a Time Projection Chamber exposed to an high neutron flux.

        Speaker: Dr Giovanni Grilli di Cortona (University of Sao Paulo)
      • 88
        Self-interacting dark matter, a dark force, and galaxy anomalies

        Abstract: A large amount of data from dwarf galaxies to galaxy clusters appears to indicate that dark matter (DM) acts like a collisional fluid at galaxy scales to a collisionless fluid at the scale of galaxy clusters. We will discuss a particle physics model with the standard model extended with a gauged abelian hidden sector to explain this phenomenon. In this model dark matter consists of fermions of the hidden sector and they have self interactions via exchange of dark photons which constitute
        a new dark force in the model. The analysis involves solutions to Boltzmann equations coupling the visible sector and the hidden sectors at different temperatures, one for each sector. The model produces a velocity - dependent DM cross section where the DM acts like a collisional fluid at small galaxy scales and acts collisionless at large galaxy scales, and we fit the data including those from THINGS, LSB and the Bullet Cluster. The talk is based on the paper Phys. Rev. D 103, 075014 (2021), arXiv: 2008.00529 [hep-ph], by Amin Aboubrahim, Wan-Zhe Feng, Pran Nath, and Zhu-Yao Wang.

        Speaker: Zhu-Yao Wang (Northeastern University)
    • Early Universe Cosmology ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Bhaskar Dutta (Texas A&M University)
      • 89
        Superheavy Dark Matter from String Theory

        I argue that generic features of string compactifications, namely a high scale of supersymmetry breaking and one or more epochs of modulus domination, can accommodate superheavy neutralino dark matter with a mass around 10^10−10^11 GeV. Interestingly, this mass range may also explain the recent detection of ultra-high-energy neutrinos by IceCube and ANITA via dark matter decay.

        Speaker: Rouzbeh Allahverdi (University of New Mexico)
      • 90
        Simplified smooth hybrid inflation in supersymmetric SU(5)

        A scheme of simplified smooth hybrid inflation is realized in the framework of supersymmetric $SU(5)$. The smooth model of hybrid inflation provides a natural solution to the monopole problem that appears in the breaking of $SU(5)$ gauge symmetry. The supergravity corrections with nonminimal Kahler potential are shown to play important role in realizing inflation with a red-tilted scalar spectral index $n_s <1$, within Planck's latest bounds. As compared to shifted model of hybrid inflation, relatively large values of the tensor-to-scalar ratio $r \leq 0.01$ are achieved here, with nonminimal couplings $-0.05 \leq \kappa_S \leq 0.01$ and $-1 \leq \kappa_{SS} \leq 1$ and the gauge symmetry-breaking scale $M \simeq (2.0 - 16.7) \times 10^{16}$ GeV.

        Speaker: Umer Zubair (University of Delaware)
      • 91
        Warming Up Cold Inflation

        The axion is a well-motivated candidate for the inflaton, as the radiative corrections that spoil many single-field models are avoided by virtue of its shift symmetry. However, axions generically couple to gauge sectors. As the axion rolls through its potential, this coupling can result in the production of a co-evolving thermal bath, a situation known as "warm inflation." Inflationary dynamics in this warm regime can be dramatically altered and result in significantly different observable predictions. In this talk, I will show that for large regions of parameter space, axion models once assumed to be safely "cold" are in fact warm, and must be reevaluated in this context.

        Speaker: Saarik Kalia (Stanford University)
      • 92
        Supersymmetric flat directions and formation of primordial black holes

        Supersymmetric flat directions develop large expectation values in the early universe, leading to formation of SUSY Q-balls and ultimately primordial black holes (PBH). This makes PBHs a natural and generic dark matter candidate in supersymmetry. The PBH masses resulting from supersymmetry naturally fall into the sublunar mass window, where the PBHs can account for all dark matter. We will discuss two scenarios which result in the formation of PBHs. First, if the SUSY Q-balls dominate the energy density of the universe then statistical fluctuations and gravitational forces allow for the formation of PBHs in this intermediate matter-dominated era. Second, SUSY Q-balls may interact via a light scalar mediator. This attractive force allows for the formation of structure even in the radiation dominated era, while simultaneously removing energy and angular momentum from the systems of solitons by means of scalar radiation. These mechanisms are able to explain the present-day dark matter abundance in addition to potential candidate events observed with lensing experiments.

        Speaker: Marcos Flores (UCLA)
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Lorenzo Calibbi (Nankai University)
      • 93
        Lattice QCD results on the hadronic contributions to the muon g-2

        Fermilab has just announced a new experimental result for muon g-2. The statistical uncertainty of the new result is similar to the previous BNL result and the central value is consistent. The combined value is now 4.2 standard deviation away from the Standard Model prediction. For the Standard Model prediction, the two hadronic contributions, HVP (hadronic vacuum polarization) and HLbL (hadronic light-by-light) are the dominate sources of uncertainty. I will review the lattice calculations in determining these two hadronic contributions.

        Speaker: Luchang Jin (UCONN / RBRC)
      • 94
        g-2, hadronic vacuum polarization, the electroweak fit and new physics

        Hadronic vacuum polarization is a key ingredient of the SM prediction for g-2. However, it also enters the global EW fit, linking both of them. In this talk I discuss this interplay as well as the possible presence of NP in the EW fit and g-2.

        Speaker: Andreas Crivellin (Universitaet Zuerich (CH))
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Anzhong Wang (Baylor University)
      • 95
        Stochastic Gravitational Waves from String Cosmology

        I will argue that the slope of the spectrum of
        gravitational waves may provide us evidence of
        superstring effects in early universe cosmology. Both
        String Gas Cosmology and the S-Brane Mediated Ekpyrotic
        scenario predict a blue tilt of the tensor spectrum.

        Speaker: Prof. Robert Brandenberger (McGill University)
      • 96
        Gravitational Wave Production right after a Primordial Black Hole Evaporation

        We discuss the footprint of evaporation of primordial black holes (PBHs) on stochastic gravitational waves(GWs) induced by scalar perturbations. We consider the case where PBHs once dominated the Universe but eventually evaporated before the big bang nucleosynthesis. The reheating through the PBH evaporation could end with a sudden change in the equation of state of the Universe compared to the conventional reheating caused by particle decay. We show that this “sudden reheating” by the PBH evaporation enhances the induced GWs, whose amount depends on the length of the PBH-dominated era and the width of the PBH mass function. We also explore the possibility to constrain the primordial abundance of the evaporating PBHs by observing the induced GWs. This presentation will be based on our paper, arXiv:2003.10455.

        Speaker: Keisuke Inomata (University of Chicago)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR8A

      ZR8A

      Convener: Minxin Huang
      • 97
        Higher Derivative 6D Supergravity and Quaternionic Kahler Spaces

        I will describe the construction of a curious 4-derivative extension of 6D, N=(1,0) supergravity coupled to hypermultiplets whose scalar fields parametrize a quaternionic projective space. Surprisingly, we find that the inclusion of the Riemann-squared term is not allowed. Dimensional reduction of Bergshoeff-de Roo heterotic supergravity with Riemann-squared terms, on the other hand, suggests that such an inclusion should be possible if the scalars parametrize a Grassmannian coset. To compare the two cases, I will describe the dimensional reduction of BdR supergravity on 4-torus followed by a consistent truncation to (1,0) supersymmetry. In this case, we can see that the Riemann-squared term and 4-derivative scalar field couplings co-exist, but we also encounter an obstacle due to presence of certain terms in the fermionic sector that break the expected SO(4)xSO(4) composite local symmetry down to its diagonal SO(4) subgroup.

        Speaker: Ergin Sezgin (Texas A & M University)
      • 98
        Unimodular vs Nilpotent Superfield Approach to Pure dS Supergravity

        I will present a novel solution to the long-standing issue of obtaining de Sitter spacetimes from a pure Supergravity theory. Our model is based on the first superspace formulation of unimodular gravity, in conjunction with a (super)-Stueckelberg construction. I will then present a comparison between our model and other proposals in the literature, based on constrained superfields. Even through the approaches are very different, I will show that the two proposals converge towards the same theory, thus offering a tantalising glimpse of a more general framework.

        [Based on JHEP 01 (2021) 146 and Proc.Roy.Soc.Lond.A 476 (2020) 2237, 20200035]

        Speaker: Dr Silvia Nagy (University of Nottingham)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Yu Gao (Institute of High Energy Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 99
        An unambiguous test of positivity at lepton colliders

        The diphoton channel at lepton colliders, $e^+e^- (\mu^+\mu^-) \to \gamma \gamma$, has a remarkable feature that the leading new physics contribution comes only from dimension-eight operators. This contribution is subject to a set of positivity bounds, derived from fundamental principles of Quantum Field Theory, such as unitarity, locality, analyticity and Lorentz invariance. These positivity bounds are thus applicable to the most direct observable --- the diphoton cross sections. This unique feature provides a clear, robust, and unambiguous test of these principles. We estimate the capability of various future lepton colliders in probing the dimension-eight operators and testing the positivity bounds in this channel. We show that positivity bounds can lift certain flat directions among the effective operators and significantly change the perspectives of a global analysis. We also perform a combined analysis of the $\gamma\gamma/Z\gamma/ZZ$ processes in the high energy limit and point out the important interplay among them.

        Based on 2011.03055

        Speaker: Jiayin Gu (JGU Mainz)
      • 100
        Probing QFT bedrock principles and the inverse problem @ future lepton colliders

        We consider the positivity bounds on dimension-8 four-electron operators and study two related phenomenological aspects at future lepton colliders. First, if positivity is violated, probing such violations will revolutionize our understanding of the fundamental pillars of quantum field theory and the S-matrix theory. Second, the positive nature of the dimension-8 parameter space allows us to either directly infer the existence of UV-scale particles together with their quantum numbers or exclude them in a model-independent way. We demonstrate with realistic examples how those possibilities can be achieved.

        Speaker: Benjamin Fuks (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Robin Erbacher (University of California Davis (US))
      • 101
        Searches for new physics in events with leptons in the final state in CMS

        Many new physics models, e.g., compositeness, extra dimensions, extended Higgs sectors, supersymmetric theories, and dark sector extensions, are expected to manifest themselves in the final states with leptons and photons. This talk presents searches in CMS for new phenomena in the final states that include leptons and photons, focusing on the recent results obtained using the full Run-II data-set collected at the LHC.

        Speaker: Olena Karacheban (Rutgers State Univ. of New Jersey (US))
      • 102
        Probing MeV-scale Scalar Bosons in association with TeV-scale Vectorlike Fermions in U(1)T3R at the LHC

        Abstract
        Recently, there has been great interest in beyond-the-Standard Model (BSM) physics involving new low-mass matter and mediator particles. One such model, U(1)T3R, proposes a new U(1) gauge symmetry under which only right-handed fermions of the standard model are charged, as well as the addition of new vector-like fermions (e.g., chi_t) and a new dark scalar particle (phi) whose vacuum expectation value breaks the U(1)T3R symmetry. For this work, we perform a feasibility study to
        explore the mass ranges for which these new particles can be probed at the LHC. We consider the interaction pp -> chi_t + t + phi in which the top quark decays purely hadronically, the chi_t decays semileptonically (chi_t -> W + b -> I nu b), and the phi decays to two photons. The proposed search is expected to achieve a discovery reach with signal significance greater than 5sigma for chi_t masses up to 1.8 TeV and phi masses as low as 1 MeV, assuming an integrated luminosity of 3000 fb-1.

        Speaker: Dale Adam Julson (Vanderbilt University (US))
      • 103
        Searches for vector-like quarks with the ATLAS detector

        Vector like quarks appear in many theories beyond the Standard Model as a way to cancel the mass divergence for the Higgs boson. The talk will focus on the most recent results using 13 TeV pp collision data collected by the ATLAS detector. This presentation will address the analysis techniques, in particular the selection criteria, the background modelling and the related experimental uncertainties. The results and the complementarity of the various searches, along with the phenomenological implications, will be discussed.

        Speaker: Pekka Sinervo (University of Toronto (CA))
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Stefan Guindon (CERN)
      • 104
        Searches for direct pair production of third generation squarks with the ATLAS detector

        Naturalness arguments for weak-scale supersymmetry favour supersymmetric partners of the third generation quarks with masses light enough to be produced at the LHC. The ATLAS experiment has a variety of analyses devoted to direct production of stops and sbottoms, exploiting novel reconstruction and analysis techniques. This talk presents recent results from these searches and their interpretation in both supersymmetric models and simplified associated-production dark matter models.

        Speaker: Carlos Moreno Martinez (Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona (ES))
      • 105
        Searches for third generation squarks with the CMS detector

        Results from the CMS experiment are presented for searches for supersymmetric stop and sbottom production. A variety of final state decays are considered with an emphasis on targeting difficult to reach kinematic regions. The searches use proton-proton collision data with luminosity up to 137 fb-1 recorded by the CMS detector at center of mass energy 13 TeV during the LHC Run 2

        Speaker: Caleb James Smith (The University of Kansas (US))
      • 106
        Prospects for Stau Searches and Measurements at the ILC

        The direct pair-production of the tau-lepton super-partner, stau, is one of the most interesting channels to search for SUSY. First of all the stau is with high probability the lightest of the scalar leptons. Secondly the signature of stau pair production signal events is one of the most difficult ones, yielding to the 'worst' and so most global scenario for the searches. The current model-independent stau limits comes from analysis performed at LEP but they suffer from the low energy of this facility. The LHC exclusion reach extends to higher masses for large mass differences, but under strong model assumptions. The ILC, a future electron-positron collider with energy up to 1 TeV, is a promising scenario for SUSY searches. The capability of the ILC for determining exclusion/discovery limits for the stau in a model-independent way is shown in this contribution, together with an overview of the current state-of-the-art. A detailed study of the 'worst' scenario for stau exclusion/discovery taking into account the effect of the stau mixing on stau production cross-section and efficiency is presented. For selected benchmarks, the prospect for measuring masses and polarized cross-sections will be shown. The studies were done using the sgv fast simulation adapted to the ILD detector concept at the ILC.

        Speakers: Mikael Berggren (DESY), Mikael Berggren (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE))
    • Plenary: III Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Chao-Shang Huang
      • 107
        The Foundation of Unification Theory & Gravitational Wave Detections in Space

        In this talk, I will report the recent progresses on the foundation of unification theory and the projects on the space-based gravitation wave detections. I shall briefly outline that the foundation of the hyperunified field theory based on the maximum coherence motion principle and maximum entangled-qubits motion principle as well as gauge and scaling invariance principle enables us to make issues on the long-standing open questions, such as: what is made to be the fundamental building block of nature? What is acted as the fundamental interaction of nature? what brings about the fundamental symmetry of nature? what is the basic structure of spacetime? how many dimensions does spacetime have? what makes time difference from space? why is there only one temporal dimension? why do we live in a universe with only four dimensional spacetime? Why are there leptons and quarks more than one family? why are the existed leptons and quarks the chiral fermions with maximum parity violation? how does the fundamental symmetry govern basic forces? what is the nature of gravity? how does early universe get inflationary expansion? what is a dark matter candidate? what is the nature of dark energy? what is the nature of Higgs boson? how can we understand three families of chiral type leptons and quarks? It is expected that the gravitational wave detections with LISA and Taiji projects in space provide a new window for exploring the gravitational universe and possible new phenomena of unification theory.

        Speaker: Yue-Liang Wu (ITP, Beijing)
      • 108
        Collider Searches, Standard Model Effective Theory
        Speaker: Ian Lewis (The University of Kansas)
      • 109
        Prospects of HL-LHC (ATLAS, CMS, LHCb)
        Speaker: Sezen Sekmen (Kyungpook National University (KR))
      • 110
        EW/Top measurements at ATLAS and CMS
        Speaker: Aleksandra Dimitrievska (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US))
      • 111
        Top Quark Physics
        Speaker: Qing-Hong Cao (Peking University)
    • 10:05
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Yang Bai (University of Wisconsin, Madison)
      • 112
        WimPyDD: a modular and customizable Python code for the calculation of WIMP-nucleon scattering direct detection signals in virtually any scenario

        We introduce WimPyDD, a modular, object–oriented and customizable Python code that calculates accurate predictions for the expected rates in WIMP direct–detection experiments within the framework of Galilean–invariant non–relativistic effective theory in virtually any scenario, including inelastic scattering, an arbitrary WIMP spin and a generic WIMP velocity distribution in the Galactic halo. WimPyDD exploits the factorization of the three main components that enter in the calculation of direct detection signals: i) the Wilson coefficients of the effective theory, that encode the dependence of the signals on the ultraviolet completion of the effective theory; ii) a response function that depends on the nuclear physics and on the features of the experimental detector (acceptance, energy resolution, response to nuclear recoils); iii) a halo function that depends on the WIMP velocity distribution and that encodes the astrophysical inputs. In WimPyDD these three components are calculated and stored separately for later interpolation and combined together only as the last step of the signal evaluation procedure. This makes the phenomenological study of the direct detection scattering rate with WimPyDD transparent and fast also when the parameter space of the WIMP model has a large dimensionality.
        We briefly summarize some of several published results obtained with WimPyDD so far as illustrative examples of its power and flexibility.

        Speaker: Mr Sunghyun Kang (Sogang University)
      • 113
        BSM physics explanations of $a_\mu$ in light of the FNAL muon $g-2$ measurement

        The first results of the Fermilab Muon $g−2$ experiment are in full agreement with the previous BNL measurement and push the world average deviation in $\Delta a_\mu$ from the Standard Model to 4.2 $\sigma$. In this talk I will present an extensive survey of its impact on beyond the Standard Model physics, focusing on simple extensions of the standard model, based on arXiv:2104.03691. In this work we used state-of-the-art calculations and a sophisticated set of tools to make predictions for $a_\mu$, dark matter and LHC searches. We examined a wide range of simple models with up to three new fields which represent some of the few ways that large $\Delta a_\mu$ can be explained. The results show that the new measurement excludes a large number of models and provides crucial constraints on others. Generally, these models provide viable explanations of the $a_\mu$ result only by using rather small masses and/or large couplings with chirality flip enhancements, which can lead to conflicts with limits from LHC and dark matter experiments. I will present results for a range of models extending the standard model by one, two and three new fields including scalar leptoquarks and simple models constructed to explain dark matter and $g-2$ simultaneously.

        Speaker: Douglas Jacob (Monash University)
      • 114
        Pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone Dark Matter Model Inspired by Grand Unification

        A pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone boson (pNGB) is an attractive candidate for dark matter due to the simple evasion of the current severe limits of dark matter direct detection experiments. One of the pNGB dark matter models has been proposed based on a gauged U(1) B−L symmetry. The pNGB has long enough lifetime to be a dark matter and thermal relic abundance can be fit with the observed value against the constraints on the dark matter decays from the cosmic-ray observations. The pNGB dark matter model can be embedded into an SO(10) grand unified theory, whose SO(10) is broken to the Pati-Salam gauge group at the unified scale, and further to the Standard Model gauge group at the intermediate scale. Unlike the previous pNGB dark matter model, the parameters such as the gauge coupling constants and the gauge kinetic mixing are determined by solving the renormalization group equations for gauge coupling constants with appropriate matching conditions. From the constraints of the dark matter lifetime and gamma-ray observations, the pNGB dark matter mass must be less than O(100) GeV. We find that the thermal relic abundance can be consistent with all the constraints when the dark matter mass is close to half of the CP even Higg masses.

        Speaker: Dr Takashi Toma (Kanazawa University)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Song He (ITP, CAS)
      • 115
        Microscopic description of brane gauginos

        Different aspects of explicit dS proposals in string theory have recently come under intense scrutiny. One key ingredient is D7-brane gaugino condensation, which can be straightforwardly treated using effective 4d supergravity. However, it is also desirable to derive the relevant scalar potential directly from a 10d Lagrangian which captures the interactions among the various localized sources and the background fields. While progress in this endeavour has recently been made, issues related to divergences and non-localities related to the quartic gaugino coupling have remained problematic in the available proposals. I will discuss an explicitly local and finite D7-brane quartic gaugino term which reproduces the relevant part of the 4d supergravity action upon dimensional reduction. This is both a step towards a more complete understanding of 10d type-IIB supergravity as well as specifically towards better control of dS constructions in string theory involving gaugino condensation.

        Speaker: Gary Shiu
      • 116
        TBA

        TBA

        Speaker: John Joseph M Carrasco (Northwestern U)
    • Neutrino Physics and Leptons ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Michael Schmidt (UNSW Sydney)
      • 117
        Probing non-standard neutrino interactions with low energy neutrino-electron elastic scattering in reactor experiments

        Reactor experiments provide an excellent platform to investigate the atomic ionization effects induced by the unexplored neutrino interaction channels. Including the atomic effects in our calculations, we study the neutrino-electron scattering by reactor anti-neutrinos in low-energy electron recoil detectors such as Si/Ge in light of neutrino non-standard interactions with leptons. We find that the atomic and crystal effects in Si/Ge yields a sizable suppression to the neutrino-electron scattering rate when compared to the free-electron approximation. We present our sensitivity results for the light vector and scalar mediator case. The explanation of the excess in the recent Xenon1T result can also be investigated at the reactor experiments since the reactors have a similar energy flux profile to solar neutrinos with characteristic neutrino energies <1 MeV.

        Speaker: Ankur Verma (Texas A & M University)
      • 118
        Coherent neutrino scattering and the Migdal effect

        Recent measurements of the germanium quenching factor deviate significantly from the predictions of the standard Lindhard model for nuclear recoil energies below a keV. This departure may be explained by the Migdal effect in neutron scattering on germanium. In this talk, we will discuss the Migdal effect on the quenching factor, We show it can mimic the signal of a light Z′ or light scalar mediator in coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering experiments with reactor antineutrinos. It is imperative that the quenching factor of nuclei with low recoil energy thresholds be precisely measured close to threshold to avoid such confusion. This will also help in experimental searches of light dark matter.

        Speaker: Jiajun Liao (Sun Yat-sen University)
      • 119
        Neutral Current Neutrino Interactions at FASER$\nu$

        The Forward Physics Facility (FPF) at LHC has the potential to explore the far-forward region at LHC. FASER$\nu$ is the dedicated program at FPF to study collider neutrinos. Charged current neutrino interactions have been extensively studied in the context of various experiments, including FASER$\nu$. The presence of a charged lepton in the final state allows for easy identification of candidate signal events and incoming beam energy reconstruction. Neutral current neutrino interaction on the other hand have a neutrino in the final state. This imposes two challenges: a) differentiating signal from background, which is primarily neutral hadron induced in FASER$\nu$ and b) reconstructing incoming beam energy when the final state has missing energy. In this work, we propose to use machine learning tools to identify and reconstruct signal events. We show how a suitable choice of event observables and proper training of the neural network can allow us to constrain NC neutrino cross-section in the 100GeV- a few TeV range. We convert this cross-section sensitivity to limits on neutrino NSI.

        Speaker: Roshan Mammen Abraham (Oklahoma State University)
    • New Developments in Quantum Field Theory ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Yu-tin Huang (National Taiwan University)
      • 120
        To simplify complicated IBP reduction coefficients via improved Leinartas' algorithm

        We introduce improved Leinartas algorithm, to simplify multivariate rational functions via partial fraction decomposition. We use this algorithm to simplify IBP reduction coefficients, dramatically shorten the size of the coefficients. This algorithm can also be used to simply rational functions in other fields of theoretical physics.

        Speaker: Zihao Wu
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Robin Erbacher (University of California Davis (US))
      • 121
        Tumblers: A Novel Collider Signature for Long-Lived Particles

        In this talk, we point out a novel signature of physics beyond the Standard Model which could potentially be observed both at the LHC and at future colliders. This signature, which emerges naturally within many proposed extensions of the Standard Model, results from the multiple displaced vertices associated with the successive decays of unstable, long-lived particles along the same decay chain. We call such a sequence of displaced vertices a "tumbler." We examine the prospects for observing tumblers at the LHC and assess the extent to which tumbler signatures can be distinguished from other signatures of new physics which involve multiple displaced vertices within the same collider event. As part of this analysis, we also develop a procedure for reconstructing the masses and lifetimes of the particles involved in the corresponding decay chains. We find that the prospects for discovering and distinguishing tumblers can be greatly enhanced by exploiting precision timing information — information such as would be provided by the CMS timing layer at the HL-LHC. Our analysis therefore provides strong motivation for continued efforts to improve the timing capabilities of collider detectors at the LHC and beyond.

        Speaker: Prof. Brooks Thomas (Lafayette College)
      • 122
        Triggering long-lived particles in HL-LHC and the challenges in the first stage of the trigger system

        Triggering long-lived particles (LLPs) at the first stage of the trigger system is very crucial in LLP searches to ensure that we do not miss them at the very beginning. The future High Luminosity runs of the Large Hadron Collider will have an increased number of pile-up events per bunch crossing. There will be major upgrades in hardware, firmware and software sides, like tracking at level-1 (L1). The L1 trigger menu will also be modified to cope with pile-up and maintain the sensitivity to physics processes. In our study we found that the usual level-1 triggers, mostly meant for triggering prompt particles, will not be very efficient for LLP searches in the 140 pile-up environment of HL-LHC, thus pointing to the need to include dedicated L1 triggers in the menu for LLPs. We consider the decay of the LLP into jets and develop dedicated jet triggers using the track information at L1 to select LLP events. We show in our work that these triggers give promising results in identifying LLP events with moderate trigger rates.

        Speaker: Prabhat Solanki (Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, India)
      • 123
        Search for long-lived particles in CMS

        This talk discusses new techniques to detect signatures potentially originating from long-lived particles in the CMS detector, presents recent results from such searches in CMS using the full Run-II data-set of the LHC, and discusses prospects for Run-III.

        Speaker: Jingyu Luo (Brown University (US))
    • Split SUSY and High-Scale SUSY ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Keith A. Olive (University of Minnesota (US))
      • 124
        Expectations for SUSY from the landscape

        In a fertile patch of the string landscape with the MSSM as the low energy EFT,
        it is expected that soft terms scan as a power law thus favoring large soft terms.
        This is to be balanced by the ABDS anthropic requirement that the pocket universe weak scale be not too far removed from our measured value. Under such conditions, the landscape predicts a Higgs mass of ~125 gev with sparticles beyond present LHC search limits and a higgsino as the LSP. Dark matter is expected to be mixed axion plus higgsino LSP.

        Speaker: Howard Baer (University of Oklahoma)
      • 125
        The Race to Find Split Higgsino Dark Matter

        Higgsinos are a particularly compelling form of dark matter, and are on the verge of detection by multiple current experimental avenues. They can arise in models with decoupled scalars that enjoy the benefits of depending on very few parameters while still explaining gauge coupling unification, dark matter, and most of the hierarchy between the Planck and electroweak scales, and they remain undetected to past experiments. My talk will cover the reach for current and upcoming electron electric dipole moment experiments as compared to direct and indirect detection as avenues to observe higgsino dark matter models.

        Speaker: Benjamin Sheff
      • 126
        Gravitational Waves from Mini-Split SUSY

        I will show that color-breaking vacua may develop at high temperature in the Mini-Split SUSY scenario. This can lead to a nontrivial cosmological history of the universe, including strong first order phase transitions and domain wall production. Given the typical PeV energy scale associated with Mini-Split SUSY models, a stochastic gravitational wave background at frequencies around 100 Hz is expected. I will discuss the potential for detection of such a signal in future gravitational wave experiments.

        Speaker: Dr Bartosz Fornal (Barry University)
      • 127
        High-Scale Supersymmetry, Inflation, and Leptogenesis

        In this talk, I discuss cosmological models that account for both inflation and the generation of net baryon asymmetry in the context of high-scale supersymmetry. Two different classes of inflationary models can be distinguished in which the gravitino mass is above or below the inflationary scale. When supersymmetry is broken at some high scale, the inflationary potential may be perturbed, which places restrictions on the model of inflation and supersymmetry breaking scale. Finally, I present the mass spectra of the inflationary sector and examine both thermal and non-thermal leptogenesis in high-scale supersymmetry.

        Speaker: Sarunas Verner (University of Minnesota)
    • 11:55
      Lunch
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Pyungwon Ko (Korea Inst. for Advanced Study (KIAS))
      • 128
        Dark Matter and Radiative Neutrino Mass with dark SU(2) gauge symmetry

        We discuss a model with dark sector described by non-Abelian $SU(2)_D$ gauge symmetry where we introduce $SU(2)_L \times SU(2)_D$ bi-doublet vector-like leptons to generate active neutrino masses and kinetic mixing between $SU(2)_D$ and $U(1)_Y$ gauge fields at one-loop level. After spontaneous symmetry breaking of $SU(2)_D$, we have remnant $Z_4$ symmetry guaranteeing stability of dark matter candidates. We formulate neutrino mass matrix and related lepton flavor violating processes and discus dark matter physics estimating relic density. It is found that our model realize multicomponent dark matter scenario due to the $Z_4$ symmetry and relic density can be explained by gauge interactions with kinetic mixing effect.

        Speaker: Takaaki Nomura (Sichuan University)
      • 129
        Probing dark matter and primordial black holes with CMB and 21cm observations

        Radiation produced by decaying/annihilating dark matter (DM) and evaporating primordial black holes (PBH) can ionize and heat up intergalactic medium (IGM) before reionization. Such effects can be efficiently probed using observations of cosmic microwave background (CMB) and 21cm signal of neutral hydrogen. In this talk I will show that CMB data from Planck and 21cm data from EDGES can set some of the most stringent and robust bounds on decay/annihilation rates of DM and abundance of PBH, future CMB missions can improve current Planck limits by up to two orders of magnitudes. This talk is partially based on our work in ArXiv 2002.03380 and 2011.12244.

        Speaker: Junsong Cang (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 130
        On-shell mediator dark matter models and the Xenon1T excess

        We present a dark matter model to explain the excess events in the electron recoil data recently reported by the Xenon1T experiment. In our model, dark matter annihilates into a pair of on-shell particles , which subsequently decay into the final state; interacts with electrons to generate the observed excess events. Because of the mass hierarchy, the velocity of can be rather large and can have an extended distribution, providing a good fit to the electron recoil energy spectrum. We estimate the flux of from dark matter annihilations in the galaxy and further determine the interaction cross section, which is sizable but sufficiently small to allow to penetrate the rocks to reach the underground labs.

        Speaker: Yilun Xue (nanjing university)
      • 131
        Searching for Dark Matter in the Sun and in the Galactic Centre using Hyper-Kamiokande

        We study the prospects for indirect detection of dark matter (DM) in the Sun and in the Galactic halo using the Hyper-Kamiokande (HyperK) neutrino experiment, currently under construction. We undertook a dedicated simulation of the HyperK detector, which we benchmarked against results from the Super-Kamiokande (SuperK) experiment and HyperK physics projections. For DM annihilation to neutrino final states in the Galactic halo, we find that HyperK will be sensitive to thermal annihilation cross-sections for DM with mass around 20-40 MeV, assuming an NFW halo profile. For neutrino signals produced via the annihilation of DM captured in the Sun, we determined the HyperK sensitivity to the DM spin-dependent scattering cross-section for various standard model final states. We find that HyperK will improve upon current SuperK limits by a factor of 2-3, with a further improvement in sensitivity possible if systematic errors can be decreased relative to SuperK.

        Speaker: Dr Sandra Robles (The University of Melbourne)
      • 132
        Constraining Dark Matter interactions with nucleons and electrons using White Dwarfs

        White dwarfs are the most abundant stellar remnants. They provide a promising means of probing dark matter (DM) interactions complimentary to direct searches. The scattering of DM off stellar constituents, ions or degenerate electrons, leads to gravitational capture, with important observational consequences. In particular, white dwarf heating due to the energy transfer in the DM capture and subsequent annihilation can occur in white dwarfs located in DM-rich environments. In this case, the DM-nucleon/electron scattering cross sections can be constrained by comparing the heating rate due to captured DM with observations of cold white dwarfs. We apply this technique to observations of old white dwarfs in the globular cluster Messier 4, which we assume to be formed in a DM subhalo. We consider the capture of DM by scattering off either ions or degenerate electrons. For ions, we account for the stellar structure, the star opacity, realistic nuclear form factors and finite temperature effects relevant to sub-GeV DM. Electrons are treated as relativistic, degenerate targets, with Pauli blocking, finite temperature and multiple scattering effects all taken into account. We also estimate the DM evaporation rate for both targets. For DM-nucleon scattering, we find that white dwarfs can probe the sub-GeV mass range inaccessible to direct detection experiments, with the low mass reach limited only by evaporation, and can be competitive with direct detection in the 1GeV−10TeV range. White dwarf limits on DM-electron scattering are found to outperform current electron recoil experiments over the full mass range considered, and extend well beyond the ~10 GeV mass regime where the sensitivity of electron recoil experiments is reduced.

        Speaker: Dr Sandra Robles (The University of Melbourne)
      • 133
        Lorentz Violation of Cosmic Photons from a Phenomenological Viewpoint

        Cosmic photons from astrophysical sources are ideal for investigating the Lorentz symmetry violation (LV). A series of studies on high energy gamma-ray burst (GRB) photons suggest a light speed variation with linear energy dependence at the Lorentz violation scale of $3.6*10^{17}$ GeV, with subluminal propagation of high energy photons in cosmological space. Constraints on Lorentz violation from recent observation of PeV scale photons from LHAASO collaboration are also discussed.

        Speaker: Bo-Qiang Ma (Peking University)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Kechen Wang (Wuhan University of Technology)
      • 134
        Supersymmetry at the Muon Collider

        The talk will address the potential of the muon collider to probe Supersymmetry and related ideas for physics Beyond the Standard Model.

        Speaker: Nathaniel Craig (UC Santa Barbara)
      • 135
        Prospects for SUSY Searches @ CEPC

        The proposed Circular Electron Positron Collider (CEPC) with a center-of-mass energy √ s = 240 GeV will serve as a Higgs factory, while it can offer good opportunity for new physics search at low energy, which is challenging in hadron colliders but motivated by some theory models such as dark matter. This talk will cover electroweak SUSY and slepton search prospects at CEPC.

        Speaker: Da Xu (IHEP, CAS)
      • 136
        SUSY global fits with future colliders using GAMBIT

        We study the impact of future electron-positron colliders, such as CEPC, ILC and FCC-$ee$, on global fits of the simplest supersymmetric models, such as the CMSSM and pMSSM-7, using GAMBIT and publicly available data published by the GAMBIT Community. From the impact of the additional likelihoods, we discuss the discovery prospects and reaches of future colliders.

        Speaker: yang zhang
      • 137
        Searching for long-lived light neutralinos at future lepton colliders

        Future lepton colliders such as the Circular Electron Positron Collider (CEPC) and FCC (Future Circular Collider)-ee would run as high-luminosity $Z$-boson factories, which offer a unique opportunity to study long-lived particles which couple to $Z$-bosons. We consider the long-lived lightest neutralinos in the R-parity-violating supersymmetry, produced from $Z$-boson decays, and show the sensitivity limits of not only the near detectors at the CEPC and FCC-ee but also proposed far-detector experiments at these colliders. We find the near detectors at the future $Z$-factories can outperform the ATLAS experiment at the high-luminosity Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the proposed LHC experiments with far detectors (AL3X, CODEX-b, FASER, and MATHUSLA), and that new experiments with far detectors at future lepton colliders may extend and complement the sensitivity reaches of the default near detectors.

        Speaker: Zeren Simon Wang (National Tsing Hua University)
    • New Developments in Quantum Field Theory ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Yang Zhang (USTC)
      • 138
        A 3d disordered superconformal fixed point

        We initiate the study of a three dimensional disordered supersymmetric field theory. Specifically, we consider a N = 2 large N Wess-Zumino like model with cubic superpotential involving couplings drawn from a Gaussian random ensemble. Taking inspiration from analyses of lower dimensional SYK like models we demonstrate that the theory flows to a strongly coupled superconformal fixed point in the infra-red. In particular, we obtain leading large N spectral data and operator product coefficients at the critical point. Moreover, the analytic control accorded by the model allows us to compare our results against those derived in the conformal bootstrap program and demonstrate consistency with general expectations.

        Speaker: Cheng Peng
      • 139
        Cluster Algebras for Feynman Integrals

        A wealth of physical information may be inferred from the singularities of scattering amplitudes. For the simplest interacting gauge theory, these singularities have been found to be encoded in beautiful mathematical objects known as cluster algebras. In this talk, I present evidence that cluster algebras may underlie the analytic structure of general quantum field theories. In particular, I show that they describe the singularities of a considerable number of Feynman integrals in dimensional regularization, most notably those governing Higgs plus jet amplitudes in QCD. This opens for the first time the exciting prospect of applications of cluster algebras to future collider physics calculations, for example via novel bootstrap methods that evade the formidable task of direct integration.

        Speaker: Georgios Papathanasiou (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
    • New Tools in New Physics Searches ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Jinmian Li (Sichuan University)
      • 140
        Extracting Invisible Higgs signals at the LHC with Convolutional Neural Networks

        We show that using the full tower information in the form of an image,
        a Convolutional Neural Network(CNN) can efficiently recognise Vector boson fusion(VBF)
        signal from non VBF backgrounds at the Large Hadron Collider(LHC). As a concrete example, we compare with existing state-of-the-art techniques currently in use, we show that deep-learning algorithms like a CNN can significantly improve the bounds on the invisible branching ratio of the recently discovered Higgs boson. This can help constrain many beyond the Standard Model(BSM) theories, which relies on the Higgs decaying to any new stable (or semi stable) particles which do not interact with the known Standard Model particles.

        Speaker: Mr Vishal Singh Ngairangbam (Physical Research Laboratory)
      • 141
        Machine learning Higgs tagger

        Based on the jet image approach, which treats the energy deposition in each calorimeter cell as the pixel intensity, the Convolutional neural network (CNN) method has been found to achieve a sizable improvement in jet tagging compared to the traditional jet substructure analysis.
        In this work, the Mask R-CNN framework is adopted to reconstruct Higgs jets in collider-like events, with the effects of pileup contamination taken into account. This automatic jet reconstruction method achieves higher efficiency of Higgs jet detection and higher accuracy of Higgs boson four-momentum reconstruction than traditional jet clustering and jet substructure tagging methods.
        Moreover, the Mask R-CNN trained on events containing a single Higgs jet is capable of detecting one or more Higgs jets in events of several different processes, without apparent degradation in reconstruction efficiency and accuracy.
        The outputs of the network also serve as new handles for the $t\bar{t}$ background suppression, complementing to traditional jet substructure variables.

        Speaker: Jinmian Li (Sichuan University)
      • 142
        FORESEE: FORward Experiment SEnsitivity Estimator for the LHC and future hadron colliders

        During the upcoming Run 3, a new experimental program will be initiated at the LHC in its far-forward region that will focus on the search for highly-displaced decays of light unstable BSM particles in the FASER detector and on studying interactions of high-energy neutrinos in the FASERnu and SND@LHC experiments. To fully exploit the relevant physics potential, the experimental efforts should be supplemented with a comprehensive program of theoretical and phenomenological studies. To facilitate this, in the talk, we will introduce a numerical package, namely the FORward Experiment SEnsitivity Estimator, or FORESEE, which could be used to obtain the expected sensitivity reach for BSM models in various far-forward experiments. We will also comment on the similar prospects for the far-forward BSM searches in the future HE-LHC, SppC, and FCC-hh hadron colliders.

        Speaker: Sebastian Trojanowski (National Centre for Nuclear Research, Poland)
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Eung Jin Chun (Korea Institute for Advanced Study)
      • 143
        Vector-Like Leptons and Inert Scalar Triplet: Lepton Flavor Violation, g−2 and Collider Searches

        We investigate simplified models involving an inert scalar triplet and vector-like leptons that can account for the muon g−2 anomaly. These simplified scenarios are embedded in a model that features W' and Z' bosons, which are subject to stringent collider bounds. The constraints coming from the muon g−2 anomaly are put into perspective with collider bounds, as well as bounds coming from lepton flavor violation searches. The region of parameter space that explains the g−2 anomaly is shown to be within reach of lepton flavor violation probes and future colliders such as HL-LHC and HE-LHC.

        Speaker: Álvaro Jesus (International Institute of Physics, Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte)
      • 144
        Constraints on the B-anomalies-motivated U1 leptoquark parameters from the LHC data

        The semileptonic B-decay anomalies could be a gateway to new physics. Of the theories and BSM models put forward, the vector charge-2/3 $U_1$ leptoquark (LQ) seems to be the best candidate to explain the anomalies seen in the $R_{D^{(*)}}$ and $R_{K^{(*)}}$ observables. In this talk, I will explore the LHC bounds on the $U_1$ leptoquark model. I will present a list of possible scenarios with different coupling combinations that can contribute to the relevant operators. I will then discuss how the latest dilepton data and the direct search data can either limit or exclude these scenarios. Finally, I would show how an LQ of mass of about 1.5 TeV survives the LHC and other flavour bounds and explain the anomalies simultaneously.

        Speaker: Mr Arvind Bhaskar (International institute of information technology,Hyderabad)
      • 145
        Anomalous magnetic moments from asymptotic safety

        In this talk, we present an extension of the SM featuring vector-like leptons and uncharged scalars in the BSM sector. We show that this theory allows to accommodate for the discrepancies in both the muon and electron anomalous magnetic moments simultaneously, without explicit violation of lepton flavor universality. Moreover, the theory remains physical and predictive until the Planck scale and stabilizes the Higgs potential. We also highlight the most prominent phenomenological implications.

        Speaker: Tom Steudtner (TU Dortmund)
      • 146
        Distinguishing signatures of scalar leptoquarks at the LHC and Muon colliders

        While the hunt for new states beyond the standard model (SM) goes on for various well motivated theories, the leptoquarks are among the most appealing scenarios at recent times due to a series of tensions observed in B−decays. We consider two scalar leptoquarks, one being a singlet and the other a triplet under the electroweak gauge group, and respectively contributes to charged and neutral current B-decays. The final state consisting of a b and τ jets provides highest reach for the singlet leptoquark whereas for the triplet leptoquark 1 − jet + 2μ+ ̸pT topology is the most optimistic signature at the hadron colliders. Various distinguishing signatures are studied which can easily discriminate different components of the triplet leptoquark. Establishing a direct connection with the neutral current B-anomalies, we perform simulations for these leptoquarks at the proposed multi-TeV muon collider where the background free environment can probe O(10−2) value of the leptoquark couplings to fermions up to the 10 TeV leptoquark mass range

        Speaker: Priyotosh Bandyopadhyay (Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad)
      • 147
        A search for the low-lying SUSY spectrum at the LHC consistent with the recent muon g-2 result

        The recent experimental result on the muon g-2 from Fermilab has confirmed the old Brookhaven result and increased the tension with the Standard Model. We investigate the electroweak sector of supersymmetry to explain the muon g-2 anomaly. We perform a scan of the SUGRA parameter space with the help of a neural network to identify the regions consistent with the g-2 anomaly. It is shown that a gluino-driven radiative breaking of the electroweak symmetry is a natural outcome with the sleptons and weakinos being low-lying while the colored sector is heavy. To perform a SUSY search at the LHC using a set of benchmarks, we employ a deep neural network to train the signal and background. We show that benchmarks corresponding to slepton and sneutrino production can be discovered at HL-LHC and HE-LHC.
        The talk is based on arXiv:2104.03839 [hep-ph].

        Speaker: Amin Abou Ibrahim (Institute for theoretical physics, Münster University)
    • 15:30
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Pyungwon Ko (Korea Inst. for Advanced Study (KIAS))
      • 148
        Phenomenological Implications of Non-Perturbative Effects for Colored Dark Sectors

        We demonstrate the impact of non-perturbative effects on the annihilation cross section of DM in a model of simplified t-channel DM. Specifically, we study the case of Majorana fermion DM coupling to the standard model (SM) quarks via a colored scalar.
        For DM masses in the GeV-TeV range, direct detection experiments strongly constrain the DM coupling to the SM quarks. From a cosmological point of view however, a large coupling to the SM is not mandatory if the mass splitting between the colored scalar and the DM candidate is sufficiently small. This region of the parameter space is subject to non-perturbative effects, namely the Sommerfeld effect and bound state formation, which can significantly enhance the effective DM annihilation cross section.
        We present the impact of this effect on current and upcoming collider searches as well as direct detection experiments.

        Speaker: Mathias Becker (Technical University of Munich)
      • 149
        Dark Matter in non-standard cosmologies

        We examine the implications of non-standard cosmologies (NSCs) on Dark Matter. We present a detailed analysis of the impact of NSCs on frozen-in relics and examine their lower allowed mass limit. Moreover, we discuss how the ``natural" axion window can be extended, which can potentially help us to exclude NSCs once the axion is discovered.

        Speaker: Dimitrios Karamitros (NCBJ)
      • 150
        Sensitivity of future e+e- colliders to processes of dark matter production with light mediator exchange

        High energy $e^+e^-$ colliders offer unique possibility for the most general search for dark matter (DM) based on the mono-photon signature. As any $e^+e^-$ collision processmay include hard initial-state photon radiation, analysis of the energy spectrum and angular distributions of observed photons can be used to search for hard processes with an invisible final state.
        We consider production of DM particles at the International Linear Collider (ILC) and Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) experiments via a mediator exchange. Dedicated procedure of merging the matrix element calculations with the lepton ISR structure function was developed to model the Standard Model background processes contributing to mono-photon signature with WHIZARD.
        Detector effects are taken into account within the DELPHES fast simulation framework. Limits on the light DM production cross section in a simplified model are set as a function of the mediator mass and width based on the expected two-dimensional distributions of the reconstructed mono-photon events.
        Limits on the mediator couplings are then presented for a wide range of mediator masses and widths. For light mediators, for masses up to the centre-of-mass energy of the collider, coupling limits derived from the mono-photon analysis are more stringent than those expected from direct resonance searches in decay channels to SM particles.

        Speaker: Jan Henryk Kalinowski (University of Warsaw (PL))
      • 151
        Dark matter and Leptogenesis in Type Ib seesaw model

        We study the connection between neutrino mass and two unsolved cosmological problems: the existence of dark matter (DM) and matter-antimatter asymmetry. To have a testable connection, we consider the low energy type Ib seesaw mechanism instead of the traditional type I seesaw mechanism. In the minimal type Ib seesaw mechanism, the effective neutrino mass operator involves two different Higgs doublets, and two right-handed neutrinos form a (pseudo-) Dirac pair. The DM candidate can be included by adding a neutrino portal with a dark fermion and a dark scalar, while the baryon asymmetry can be approached through resonant leptogenesis in an extended model where the type Ib seesaw mechanism is realised effectively. We explore the parameter space of the models consistent with both oscillation data and observations. Within this framework, we show how DM and leptogenesis can be directly related to laboratory experiments for a heavy Dirac neutrino mass around 1~100 GeV.

        Speaker: Bowen Fu (University of Southampton)
      • 152
        The CYGNO experiment for Dark Matter direct detection

        Innovative experimental techniques are needed to further search for dark matter weakly interacting massive particles. The ultimate limit is represented by the ability to efficiently reconstruct and identify nuclear and electron recoil events at the experimental energy threshold. Gaseous Time Projection Chambers (TPC) with optical readout are very promising candidates thanks to the 3D event reconstruction capability of the TPC technique and the high sensitivity and granularity of last generation scientific light sensors. The Cygno experiment is pursuing this technique by developing a TPC operated with He(Ar)-CF4 gas mixture at atmospheric pressure equipped with a Gas Electron Multipliers (GEM) amplification stage that produces visible light collected by scientific CMOS camera. A fast photodetector is used to measure the drift time of the primary ionisation electrons and thus reconstruct the third coordinate of the ionisation track. Events are then reconstructed with an innovative multi-stage pattern recognition algorithm based on advanced clustering techniques. In this contribution, we present the performances of prototype detectors assessed by exposing them to radioactive sources. We show that good energy and spatial resolution as well as discriminating power between nuclear and electron recoils is achieved in the KeV energy range. Finally, we discuss the plan to build a 1m3 demonstrator expected to be installed and operated at LNGS in 2021/22. This experimental campaign aims at proving the scalability of such a detector concept to a bigger apparatus able to significantly extend our knowledge about DM and neutrinos.

        Speaker: Andrea Messina (Sapienza Universita e INFN, Roma I (IT))
      • 153
        Dark Matter searches in CMS

        Searches in CMS for dark matter particles, mediators, and dark sector extensions will be presented. Various final states, topologies, and kinematic variables are explored utilizing the full Run-II data-set collected at the LHC.

        Speaker: Reham Aly (Bari University - Italy)
    • Early Universe Cosmology ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Michele Cicoli (Università di Bologna)
      • 154
        The primordial black holes and secondary gravitational waves from string inspired general no-scale supergravity

        The formation of primordial black hole (PBH) dark matter and the generation of scalar induced secondary gravitational waves (SIGWs) have been studied in the generic no-scale supergravity inflationary models. By adding an exponential term to the K\"ahler potential, the inflaton experiences a period of ultra-slow-roll and the amplitude of primordial power spectrum is enhanced to $\mathcal{O}(10^{-2})$. The enhanced power spectra of primordial curvature perturbations can have both sharp and broad peaks. A wide mass range of PBH is realized in our model, and the frequencies of the scalar induced gravitational waves are ranged form nHz to Hz. We show three benchmark points where the PBH mass generated during inflation is around $\mathcal{O}(10^{-16}M_{\odot})$, $\mathcal{O}(10^{-12}M_{\odot})$ and $\mathcal{O}(M_{\odot})$. The PBHs with masses around $\mathcal{O}(10^{-16}M_{\odot})$ and $ \mathcal{O}(10^{-12}M_{\odot})$ can make up almost all the dark matter, and the associated SIGWs can be probed by the upcoming space-based gravitational wave (GW) observatory. Also, the wide SIGWs associated with the formation of solar mass PBH can be used to interpret the stochastic GW background in the nHz band, detected by the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves, and can be tested by future interferometer-type GW observations.

        Speaker: Lina Wu (Xi'an Technological University)
      • 155
        Gravitino Cosmology and No-Scale Higgs Inflation

        In this talk I will discuss about Higgs inflation in the framework of a minimal extension of the Standard Model gauge symmetry by a U(1)_B−L factor. Furthermore I will talked about physics related to the nature of gravitino, considering possible scenarios, including that it is the lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) where it can be considered as a DM candidate. The other possibility including the gravitino is not the LSP, then we have a short lived gravitino and a long-lived depending upon the mass range of gravitino.

        Speaker: Waqas Ahmed (Hubei Polytechnic University)
      • 156
        Supergravity Inflation in braneworld

        We discuss supergravity inflation in braneworld cosmology for the class of potentials $V(\phi)=\alpha \phi^n\rm{exp}(-\beta^m \phi^m)$ with $m=1,~2$. These minimal SUGRA models evade the $\eta$ problem due to a broken shift symmetry and can easily accommodate the observational constraints. In the high energy regime $V/\lambda\gg 1$, the numerical predictions and approximate analytic formulas are given for the scalar spectral index $n_s$ and tensor-to-scalar ratio $r$. The models with smaller $n$ are preferred while the models with larger $n$ are out of the $2\sigma$ region. Remarkably, the $\rho^2/\lambda$ correction to the energy density in Friedmann equation results in sub-Planckian inflaton excursions $\Delta\phi <1$.

        Speaker: Mudassar Sabir (China University of Geosciences, Wuhan)
      • 157
        Hybrid Inflation in no-scale supergravity

        We consider Hybrid inflation and Tribrid Inflation models in no-scale supergravity framework. We show that a Starobinsky like inflation can be realized with asymptotically flat potentials. U(1)_R symmetry can be broken on the renormalizable level or by Planck suppressed non-renormalizable operators. A connection to the low energy physics as well as the neutrino masses is addressed.

        Speaker: Ahmad Moursy (Cairo University)
      • 158
        Fate of electroweak symmetry in the early Universe: Non-restoration and trapped vacua in the N2HDM

        Extensions of the Standard Model (SM) Higgs sector allow for a rich cosmological history around the electroweak (EW) scale. In the context of the next-to 2HDM (N2HDM) we analyse the phenomena of EW symmetry non-restoration as well as vacuum trapping. We show that these phenomena can occur in relevant parts of the parameter space. Focusing on the type II N2HDM and taking into account various theoretical and experimental constraints, we demonstrate how these novel finite-temperature effects are related and how they can be used to further constrain the parameter space of the model. In particular, we show that the presence of a global EW minimum at zero temperature might not be a sufficient requirement for the validity of the vacuum configuration.

        Speaker: Maria Olalla Olea Romacho (DESY)
      • 159
        On anomalous production of slow gravitinos in minimal supergravity inflation and its resolution

        In the ''Minimal Supergravity Inflation'', whose only degrees of freedom are the (real) inflaton, gravitino, and graviton, an issue of the catastrophic production of slow gravitinos after inflation has been reported. We will briefly comment on the origin of such catastrophic production and propose an alternative model with the same physical degrees of freedom that is free from the issue.  We utilize a cubic nilpotent superfield to realize it and demonstrate that inflation is possible in this framework.  However, even though there is no issue of gravitino production related to the sound-speed change, the standard gravitino problem turns out to be severe.

        Speaker: Dr Takahiro Terada (Institute for Basic Science)
    • Formal SUSY Theories ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Masahito Yamazaki (University of Tokyo)
      • 160
        Counterexamples to the Nelson-Seiberg theorem

        The Nelson-Seiberg theorem and its extension relate supersymmetry breaking and R-symmetries in Wess-Zumino models, and found applications in phenomenology model building. We show that there are counterexample models with generic superpotential coefficients and non-generic R-charge assignment for fields. These models have more R-charge 2 fields than R-charge 0 fields, but give SUSY vacua with spontaneous R-symmetry breaking. So they are counterexamples to both the Nelson-Seiberg theorem and its extensions. The pattern of R-charge assignment is discussed, and we provide a sufficient condition for counterexamples.

        Speaker: Zheng Sun (Sichuan University)
      • 161
        Higher-order constraints for N=1 and N=2 superfields and non-linear SUSY

        We study real higher-order constraints for ${\cal N}=1$ and ${\cal N}=2$ chiral superfields, which describe spontaneously broken (to ${\cal N}=0$) and non-linearly realized supersymmetry in the presence of a light axion of a spontaneously broken global $U(1)$. For ${\cal N}=1$ the constraint is of third order, while for ${\cal N}=2$ it is of fifth order and can be imposed on abelian vector or tensor (linear) multiplet. In both cases the constraint eliminates a single real scalar (saxion) in terms of goldstino field(s).

        Speaker: Dr Yermek Aldabergenov (Chulalongkorn University)
      • 162
        Supersymmetry and Computational Complexity

        I will discuss various aspects of supersymmetric systems from the point of view of the theory of computational complexity. These include the claim that computing the Witten index of N=2 quantum mechanics is #P-complete and thus intractable. I will also discuss the complexity of finding supersymmetric ground states of local SUSY Hamiltonians and its implications for the problem of computing certain cohomology groups.

        Speaker: Dr Marcos Crichigno (Imperial College London)
      • 163
        4d Chern-Simons Theory as a 3d Toda Theory, and a 3d-2d Correspondence

        We show that the four-dimensional Chern-Simons theory studied by Costello, Witten and Yamazaki, is, with Nahm pole-type boundary conditions, dual to a boundary theory that is a three-dimensional analogue of Toda theory with a novel 3d W-algebra symmetry. By embedding four-dimensional Chern-Simons theory in a partial twist of the five-dimensional maximally supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory on a manifold with corners, we argue that this three-dimensional Toda theory is dual to a two-dimensional topological sigma model with A-branes on the moduli space of solutions to the Bogomolny equations. This furnishes a novel 3d-2d correspondence, which, among other mathematical implications, also reveals that modules of the 3d W-algebra are modules for the quantized algebra of certain holomorphic functions on the Bogomolny moduli space.

        Speaker: Meer Ashwinkumar (The University of Tokyo (Kavli IPMU))
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Sugumi Kanno
      • 164
        Stochastic GWs from cosmological phase transitions

        I will discuss the current status of the production of stochastic GW backgrounds by cosmological phase transitions. Main focus will be the differences between fully hydrodynamic simulations and the recently presented hybrid approach. I will also touch on recent results on the energy budget of the phase transition and the LISA sensitivity forecasts using likelihood sampling.

        Based on arXiv: 2004.06995, 2010.00971, 2107.06275.

        Speaker: Thomas Markus Konstandin
      • 165
        Gravitational waves from bubble collisions in first order phase transitions

        We will discuss energy budget of first order phase transitions and identify models capable of supporting extreme supercooling necessary to feature bubble collisions as the main source of gravitational waves. We will also review the new semi-analytical calculation of the spectrum appropriate in such strong transitions.

        Speaker: Marek Lewicki (University of Warsaw)
      • 166
        Gravitational waves from first-order phase transitions: A hybrid simulation, and signal enhancement from density perturbations

        Over the next few decades, we will have an exciting opportunity to detect GWs from the early Universe with space interferometers. In this talk, we first propose an efficient numerical scheme to calculate GWs from sound waves in first-order phase transitions, which reveals more detailed structure of the spectrum. Based on this simulation, we next discuss the possibility of the enhancement of the GW signal in the presence of density perturbations. The first part is based on 2010.00971 with T. Konstandin and H.Rubira (DESY), while the second part is based on an ongoing work with T. Konstandin, H. Rubira, and J. van de Vis (DESY).

        Speaker: Dr Ryusuke Jinno (DESY)
      • 167
        Finding sound shells in LISA mock data using likelihood sampling

        I discuss to what extend LISA can observe features of gravitational wave spectra originating from cosmological first-order phase transitions. I focus on spectra which are of the form of double-broken power laws. These spectra are predicted by hydrodynamic simulations and also analytical models such as the sound shell model. I argue that the ratio of the two break frequencies is an interesting observable since it can be related to the wall velocity while overall amplitude and frequency range are often degenerate for the numerous characteristics of the phase transition. The analysis uses mock data obtained from the power spectra predicted by the simplified simulations and the sound shell model and analyzes the detection prospects using chi^2 -minimization and likelihood sampling. I point out that the prospects of observing two break frequencies from the electroweak phase transition is hindered by a shift of the spectrum to smaller frequencies for strong phase transitions. Finally, I also highlight some differences between signals from the sound shell model compared to simulations.

        Speaker: Jorinde van de Vis (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
      • 168
        Baryogenesis and gravity waves from a UV-completed electroweak phase transition

        We study gravity wave production and baryogenesis at the electroweak phase transition in a real singlet scalar extension of the Standard Model, including vectorlike top partners, to generate the CP violation needed for electroweak baryogenesis (EWBG). The singlet makes the phase transition strongly first order through its coupling to the Higgs boson, and it spontaneously breaks CP invariance through a dimension-five contribution to the top quark mass term, generated by integrating out the heavy top quark partners. We improve on previous studies by incorporating updated transport equations, compatible with large bubble wall velocities. The wall speed and thickness are computed directly from the microphysical parameters rather than treating them as free parameters, allowing for a first-principles computation of the baryon asymmetry. The size of the CP-violating dimension-five operator needed for EWBG is constrained by collider, electroweak precision, and renormalization group running constraints. We identify regions of parameter space that can produce the observed baryon asymmetry or observable gravitational wave (GW) signals. Contrary to standard lore, we find that for strong deflagrations, the efficiencies of large baryon asymmetry production and strong GW signals can be positively correlated. However, we find the overall likelihood of observably large GW signals to be smaller than estimated in previous studies. In particular, only detonation-type transitions are predicted to produce observably large gravitational waves.

        Speaker: Kimmo Juhani Kainulainen (University of Jyvaskyla (FI))
      • 169
        Gravitational Wave Echo of Relaxion Trapping

        In order to solve the hierarchy problem, the relaxion must remain trapped in the correct minimum, even if the electroweak symmetry is restored after reheating. In this scenario, the relaxion starts rolling again until the back-reaction potential, with its set of local minima, reappears. Depending on the time of barrier-reappearance, Hubble friction alone may be insufficient to re-trap the relaxion in a large portion of the parameter space. Thus, an additional source of friction is required, which might be provided by coupling to a dark photon. The dark photon experiences a tachyonic instability as the relaxion rolls, which slows down the relaxion by backreacting to its motion, and efficiently creates anisotropies in the dark photon energy-momentum tensor, sourcing gravitational waves. We calculate the spectrum of the resulting gravitational wave background from this new mechanism, and evaluate its observability by current and future experiments. We further investigate the possibility that the coherently oscillating relaxion constitutes dark matter and present the corresponding constraints from gravitational waves.

        Speaker: Dr Eric Madge (Weizmann Institute of Science)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Runqiu Yang (Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Science)
      • 170
        Kaluza-Klein spectrometry for supergravity

        I review new tools for the computation of Kaluza-Klein mass spectra associated with compactifications around various background geometries relevant for string theory. This includes geometries with little to no remaining symmetries, hardly accessible to standard methods. The new tools build on exceptional field theory, the duality covariant formulation of supergravity. Applications include the identification of non-supersymmetric AdS4 vacua which are perturbatively stable at all Kaluza-Klein levels.

        Speaker: Henning Samtleben (ENS Lyon)
      • 171
        The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Higher-Derivative Supergravity in AdS_4 Holography

        I will describe the four-derivative corrections to four-dimensional N=2 minimal gauged supergravity and show that they are controlled by two constants. Interestingly, the solutions of the equations of motion in the two-derivative theory are not modified by the higher-derivative corrections. I will use this to arrive at a general formula for the regularized on-shell action for any asymptotically locally AdS_4 solution of the theory and show how the higher-derivative corrections affect black hole thermodynamic quantities in a universal way. I will employ these results in the context of holography to derive new explicit results for the subleading corrections in the large N expansion of supersymmetric partition functions on various compact manifolds for a large class of three-dimensional SCFTs arising from M2-branes. I will also briefly discuss possible extensions and generalizations of these results.

        Speaker: Nikolay Bobev (KU Leuven Association)
      • 172
        Branes Wrapped on Spindles

        We discuss supergravity solutions that are holographically dual to supersymmetric CFTs that arise when various branes wrap a spindle. A spindle is a specific two dimensional orbifold: a two sphere with quantised conical deficits at each of the poles. We construct solutions describing the wrapped branes in gauged supergravity and then uplift them to D=10 and D=11 supergravity. Remarkably, in some cases the higher dimensional solutions are free from all orbifold singularities. For the case of D3 and M5 branes wrapping spindles we can calculate the central charge of the CFT that arises both from the gravity solution and from a field theory computation and find exact agreement. For the case of M2 branes there is an interesting connection with D=4 accelerating black holes.

        Speaker: Jerome Gauntlett (Imperial College London)
    • Neutrino Physics and Leptons ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Toshihiko Ota (Universidad Autonoma de Madrid)
      • 173
        A systematic approach to neutrino masses and their phenomenology

        We propose a model-independent framework to classify and study neutrino mass models and their phenomenology. The idea is to introduce one particle beyond the Standard Model which couples to leptons and carries lepton number together with an operator which violates lepton number by two units and contains this particle. This allows to study processes which do not violate lepton number, while still working with an effective field theory. The contribution to neutrino masses translates to a robust upper bound on the mass of the new particle. We compare it to the stronger but less robust upper bound from Higgs naturalness and discuss several lower bounds.

        Speaker: Michael Schmidt (UNSW Sydney)
      • 174
        Radiative neutrino masses, lepton flavor mixing and muon g − 2 in a leptoquark model

        We propose a leptoquark model with two scalar leptoquarks $S^{}_1 \left( \bar{3},1,\frac{1}{3} \right)$ and $\widetilde{R}^{}_2 \left(3,2,\frac{1}{6} \right)$ to give a combined explanation of neutrino masses, lepton flavor mixing and the anomaly of muon $g-2$, satisfying the constraints from the radiative decays of charged leptons. The neutrino masses are generated via one-loop corrections resulting from a mixing between $S^{}_1$ and $\widetilde{R}^{}_2$. With a set of specific textures for the leptoquark Yukawa coupling matrices, the neutrino mass matrix possesses an approximate $\mu$-$\tau$ reflection symmetry with $\left( M^{}_\nu \right)^{}_{ee} = 0$ only in favor of the normal neutrino mass ordering. We show that this model can successfully explain the anomaly of muon $g-2$ and current experimental neutrino oscillation data under the constraints from the radiative decays of charged leptons.

        Speaker: di zhang
      • 175
        Diagonal reflection symmetries and universal four-zero texture

        In this seminar, we consider a set of new symmetries in the SM: {\it diagonal reflection} symmetries $R \, m_{u,\nu}^{*} \, R = m_{u,\nu}, ~ m_{d,e}^{*} = m_{d,e}$ with $R =$ diag $(-1,1,1)$. These generalized $CP$ symmetries predict the Majorana phases to be $\alpha_{2,3} /2 \sim 0$ or $\pi /2$.

        By combining the symmetries with the four-zero texture, the mass eigenvalues and mixing matrices of quarks and leptons are reproduced well.
        This scheme predicts the normal hierarchy, the Dirac phase $\delta_{CP} \simeq 203^{\circ},$ and $|m_{1}| \simeq 2.5$ or $6.2 \, $[meV].

        In this scheme, the type-I seesaw mechanism and a given neutrino Yukawa matrix $Y_{\nu}$ completely determine the structure of the right-handed neutrino mass $M_{R}$. A $u-\nu$ unification predicts the mass eigenvalues to be $ (M_{R1} \, , M_{R2} \, , M_{R3}) = (O (10^{5}) \, , O (10^{9}) \, , O (10^{14})) \, $[GeV].

        Speaker: Masaki Yang (Saitama University)
      • 176
        Realistic neutrino mixing in a scotogenic model using S3 symmetry

        [This is talk will be on Phys.Rev. D100 (2019) no.3, 035009 by Soumita Pramanick]

        Using $S3\times Z_2$ symmetry a scotogenic model for realistic neutrino mixing
        at one-loop level will be discussed. In this model, there are two right-handed neutrinos.
        It was found when these two right-handed neutrinos are mixed maximally one can obtain the
        form of the left-handed Majorana neutrino mass matrix with $\theta_{13}=0$, $\theta_{23}=\pi/4$
        and the solar mixing $\theta_{12}$ can have any value like that of Tribimaximal (TBM), Bimaximal (BM) and Golden Ratio (GR) or any other mixing scenario.
        A little shift from the maximal mixing between the two right-handed neutrino states can yield the
        realistic neutrino mixing angles i.e., non-zero $\theta_{13}$, deviation of $\theta_{23}$ from $\pi/4$
        and small corrections to $\theta_{12}$.
        Thus this scotogenic mechanism at one-loop level produces non-zero $\theta_{13}$ by shifting from maximal
        mixing between the two-right handed neutrinos. The model also has two inert $SU(2)_L$ doublet scalars odd under $Z_2$, the lightest among which can become a dark matter.

        Speaker: Dr Soumita Pramanick (National Centre for Nuclear Research (NCBJ), Warsaw, Poland)
      • 177
        Explicit Perturbations to the Stabilizer \tau = {\rm i} of Modular A^\prime_5 Symmetry and Leptonic CP Violation

        The finite modular symmetry provides us with an attractive and novel way to understand lepton flavor mixing, and has recently attracted a lot of attention. In a class of neutrino mass models with modular flavor symmetries, it has been observed that CP symmetry is preserved at the stabilizer of the modulus parameter $\tau = {\rm i}$, whereas significant CP violation emerges within the neighbourhood of this stabilizer. In this work, we first construct a viable model with the modular $A^\prime_5$ symmetry, and explore the phenomenological implications for lepton masses and flavor mixing. Then, we introduce explicit perturbations to the stabilizer at $\tau = {\rm i}$, and present both numerical and analytical results to understand why a small deviation from the stabilizer leads to large CP violation. As low-energy observables are very sensitive to the perturbations to model parameters, we further demonstrate that the renormalization-group running effects play an important role in confronting theoretical predictions at the high-energy scale with experimental measurements at the low-energy scale.

        Speaker: Xin Wang (Institute of High Energy Physics)
      • 178
        Inverse Seesaw Model with a Modular $S^{}_4$ Symmetry: Lepton Flavor Mixing and Warm Dark Matter

        We present a systematic investigation on simple inverse seesaw models for neutrino masses and flavor mixing based on the modular $S^{}_4$ symmetry. Two right-handed neutrinos and three extra fermion singlets are introduced to account for light neutrino masses through the inverse seesaw mechanism and to provide a keV-mass sterile neutrino as the candidate for warm dark matter in our Universe. Considering all possible modular forms with weights no larger than four, we obtain twelve models, among which we find one is in excellent agreement with the observed lepton mass spectra and flavor mixing. Moreover, we explore the allowed range of the sterile neutrino mass and mixing angles, by taking into account the direct search of $X$-ray line and the Lyman-$\alpha$ observations. The model predictions for neutrino mixing parameters and the dark matter abundance will be readily testable in future neutrino oscillation experiments and cosmological observations.

        Speaker: Dr Xinyi Zhang (Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Xiaoping Wang (Beihang University)
      • 179
        Two-Loop ${\cal O\left(\alpha_t+\alpha_\lambda+\alpha_\kappa\right)^2}$ Corrections to the Higgs Boson Masses in the CP-Violating NMSSM

        The Higgs boson mass has turned into a precision observable with an uncertainty of a few hundred MeV at the LHC and provides an important constraint on the parameter space of supersymmetric models. To have sensible limits, the experimental accuracy has to be matched by the precision of the theory predictions. Consequently, a tremendous effort has been put in the computation of the higher-order corrections to supersymmetric Higgs boson masses.

        In this talk, we report about our computation of the ${\cal O\left(\alpha_t+\alpha_\lambda+\alpha_\kappa\right)^2}$ two-loop corrections to the Higgs boson masses of the CP-violating Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (NMSSM) using the Feynman-diagrammatic approach. We discuss the renormalization schemes used for the Higgs sector and the top/stop sector, together with the treatment of the infrared divergences which appear in the gaugeless and zero momentum approximation. We present the numerical impact of the new corrections and their dependence on the renormalization scheme and the renormalization scale. Our new corrections have been implemented in the Fortran code ${\bf NMSSMCALC}$ that computes the Higgs mass spectrum of the CP-conserving and CP-violating NMSSM as well as the partial decay widths of the Higgs bosons including the state-of-the-art higher-order corrections. Our results mark another step forward in the program of increasing the precision in the NMSSM Higgs boson observables.

        Speaker: Dr Thi Nhung Dao (ICISE)
      • 180
        Loop-corrected Higgs Masses in the NMSSM with Inverse Seesaw Mechanism

        The Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model (NMSSM) including additionally six leptonic singlet superfields can explain the small active neutrinos masses via the inverse seesaw mechanism (ISS), while it still allows for large values of the neutrino Yukawa couplings with a mass scale of sterile neutrinos of order TeV. While $R$-parity is conserved in this model, lepton number is explicitly violated. The extended (s)neutrino sector therefore can affect the Higgs sector and the lepton flavor-violating observables through radiative corrections. We investigated these impacts by computing the complete one-loop corrections with full momentum dependence and consistently combined them with the dominant two-loop corrections at $ \mathcal{O}(\alpha_s\alpha_t + \alpha_t^2) $ to the Higgs boson masses and their mixings. We further computed the radiative decays $ l_i \to l_j + \gamma $, and the oblique parameters $ S,T,U$ at one-loop level. In our numerical study, we showed that these impacts can be significant depending on the parameter space. We take into account the constraints from the Higgs data, the neutrino oscillation data, the lepton flavor-violating decays, and the oblique parameters to have a realizable analysis. Our computations have been implemented in the public Fortran code $ \mathtt{NMSSMCALC}$-$\mathtt{nuSS} $ that computes the Higgs mass spectrum as well as the Higgs boson decay widths including the state-of-the-art higher-order corrections.

        Speaker: Anh Vu Phan (ICISE)
      • 181
        Full NLO corrections to charged Higgs boson decays in the NMSSM

        In light of the current situation that no direct sign of new particles has been observed so far,indirect searches of new particles become increasingly important.
        Accurate theoretical predictions are inevitable in order to be able to indirectly find new physics and - in case of discovery - to identify the underlying model.
        In this study, we calculated the full one-loop corrections to the decay widths of charged Higgs boson decays in the framework of the Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Model (NMSSM) with CP violation.
        In this talk, we discuss the impact of the NLO corrections on the charged Higgs branching ratios in a wide range of parameter space that is compatible with the experimental constraints.

        Speaker: Kodai Sakurai (Tohoku University)
      • 182
        Maximally Symmetric Three Higgs Doublet Model

        I discuss the general Three-Higgs Doublet Model (3HDM) and identify all limits that lead to exact SM alignment. I focus on the most economic setting, called here the Maximally Symmetric Three-Higgs Doublet Model (MS-3HDM). The potential of the MS-3HDM obeys an Sp(6) symmetry, softly broken by bilinear masses and explicitly by hypercharge and Yukawa couplings through renormalisation-group effects, whilst the theory allows for quartic coupling unification up to the Planck scale. Besides the two ratios of vacuum expectation values, $\tan\beta_{1,2}$, the MS-3HDM is predominantly governed by only three input parameters: the masses of the two charged Higgs bosons and their mixing angle σ. Most remarkably, with these input parameters, we obtain definite predictions for the entire scalar mass spectrum of the theory, as well as for the SM-like Higgs-boson couplings to the gauge bosons and fermions. The predicted deviations of these couplings from their SM values might be probed at future precision high-energy colliders.

        Speaker: Neda Darvishi (University of Warsaw)
      • 183
        Searches for charginos and neutralinos with the ATLAS detector

        Charginos and neutralinos are often the lightest new particles predicted by a wide range of supersymmetry models, and the lightest neutralino is a well motivated and studied candidate for dark matter in models with R-parity conservation. The small direct production cross sections of electroweakinos leads to difficult searches, despite relatively clean final states. This talk will highlight the most recent results of searches performed by the ATLAS experiment for charginos and neutralinos, covering a variety of model parameters and final states.

        Speaker: Sara Alderweireldt (The University of Edinburgh (GB))
      • 184
        Precise Higgs mass predictions for multi-scale hierarchies with FeynHiggs

        In this talk, I will give an overview of the status and recent developments of FeynHiggs. Focusing on the calculation of the SM-like Higgs boson mass in the MSSM, I will highlight some of the recent improvements in the effective field theory calculation that are relevant for multi-scale hierarchies. I.e., I will discuss the case of a heavy gluino as well as the case of light non-SM-like Higgs bosons (discussing also the effect of CP-violating phases).

        Speaker: Henning Bahl (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Yang Bai (University of Wisconsin, Madison)
      • 185
        Neutrino as the Dark Force

        We point out a novel role for the Standard Model neutrino in dark matter phenomenology where the exchange of neutrinos generates a long-range potential between dark matter particles. The resulting dark matter self interaction could be sufficiently strong to impact small-scale structure formation, without the need of any dark force carrier. This is a generic feature of theories where dark matter couples to the visible sector through the neutrino portal. It is highly testable with improved decay rate measurements at future Z, Higgs, and τ factories, as well as precision cosmology.

        Speaker: Dr Nicholas Orlofsky (Carleton University)
      • 186
        Status of DEAP-3600

        DEAP-3600 is a dark matter direct detection experiment running at the SNOLAB in Sudbury, Canada. The spherical detector is situated 2 km below the earth's surface with a low cosmic muon background environment consisting of 3.3 tonnes of liquid argon target surrounded by an array of 255 photomultiplier tubes. The major backgrounds for DEAP-3600 come from alpha particles induced by dust particles present inside the detector and detector components, from external neutrons, and from Argon-39 beta decays. In this talk, the latest results from DEAP-3600 and effort for the detailed background model, pulse-shape discrimination, and sensitivity of the dark matter will be presented. In addition, I will review ongoing R&D projects for hardware upgrades.

        Speaker: Dr Pushparaj Adhikari (Carleton University)
      • 187
        Higgs-portal dark matter in brane world cosmology

        I will discuss the Higgs-portal dark matter scenario in the 5-dimensional brane world cosmology, such as Randall-Sundrum cosmology and Gauss-Bonnet cosmology.

        Speaker: Taoli Liu (The University of Alabama)
      • 188
        Asteroid g-2 experiments: new fifth force and ultralight dark sector tests

        We study for the first time the possibility of probing long-range fifth forces utilizing asteroid astrometric data, via the fifth force-induced orbital precession. We examine nine Near-Earth Object (NEO) asteroids whose orbital trajectories are accurately determined via optical and radar astrometry. Focusing on a Yukawa-type potential mediated by a new gauge field (dark photon) or a baryon-coupled scalar, we estimate the sensitivity reach for the fifth-force coupling strength and mediator mass in the mass range $m \simeq 10^{-21}-10^{-15}\,{\rm eV}$. Our estimated sensitivity is comparable to leading limits from torsion balance experiments, potentially exceeding these in a specific mass range. The fifth forced-induced precession increases with the orbital semi-major axis in the small $m$ limit, motivating the study of objects further away from the Sun. We discuss future exciting prospects for extending our study to more than a million asteroids (including NEOs, main-belt asteroids, Hildas, and Jupiter Trojans), as well as trans-Neptunian objects and exoplanets.

        This talk is based on https://arxiv.org/abs/2107.04038.

        Speaker: Dr Yu-Dai Tsai (Fermilab)
      • 189
        Multi-component multiscatter capture of Dark Matter

        In recent years, the usefulness of astrophysical objects as Dark Matter (DM) probes has become more and more evident, especially in view of null results from direct detection and particle production experiments. The potentially observable signatures of DM gravitationally trapped inside a star, or another compact astrophysical object, have been used to forecast stringent constraints on the nucleon-Dark Matter interaction cross section. Currently, the probes of interest are: at high red-shifts, Population III stars that form in isolation, or in small numbers, in very dense DM minihalos at $z\sim 15-40$, and, in our own Milky Way, neutron stars, white dwarfs, brown dwarfs, exoplanets, etc. Of those, only neutron stars are single-component objects, and, as such, they are the only objects for which the common assumption made in the literature of single-component capture, i.e. capture of DM by multiple scatterings with one single type of nucleus inside the object, is valid. In this paper, we present an extension of this formalism to multi-component objects and apply it to Pop III stars, thereby investigating the role of He on the capture rates of Pop III stars. As expected, we find that the inclusion of the heavier He nuclei leads to an enhancement of the overall capture rates, further improving the potential of Pop III stars as Dark Matter probes.

        Speaker: Caleb Levy (Colgate)
      • 190
        Gravitational Microlensing by Dark Matter Subhalos and Boson Stars

        Multiple microlensing surveys have been conducted to place limits on primordial black holes in nearby dark matter halos. We show that these existing limits on PBHs can be recast to constrain dark matter lenses that are more spatially extended than PBHs. As two representative cases, we examine NFW subhalos and boson stars, which are predicted in many models such as axion miniclusters and axion stars. For the Subaru-HSC survey, the finite size of the source stars must also be considered. we find that the survey can probe NFW subhalos up to O(100) solar radii and boson stars up to O(1000) solar radii.

        Speaker: Zihui Wang (NYU)
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Robert Ziegler (KIT - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (DE))
      • 191
        Systematic approach to g-2, B-anomalies and Dark Matter

        We discuss a systematic classification of the models with the minimal field content to account for, at the same time, the g-2 anomaly, the ones emerging in decays of B-mesons and, finally, a viable thermal Dark Matter. We will illustrate, in some specific examples, the strong complementarity among flavor and Dark Matter observables.

        Speaker: Giorgio Arcadi
      • 192
        Sub-GeV dark matter model: $U(1)_{T3R}$ extension of SM

        Scenarios in which right-handed light Standard Model fermions couple to a new gauge group, $U(1)_{T3R}$ can naturally generate a sub-GeV dark matter candidate. But such models necessarily have large couplings to the Standard Model, generally yielding tight experimental constraints.
        We show that the contributions to $g_\mu-2$ from the dark photon and dark Higgs largely cancel out in the narrow window where all the experimental constraints are satisfied, leaving a net correction which is consistent with recent measurements from Fermilab.
        These models inherently violate lepton universality, and UV completions of these models can include quark flavor violation which can explain $R_{K^{(\ast)}}$ anomalies as observed at the LHCb experiment after satisfying constraints on $Br(B_s\rightarrow\mu^+\mu^-)$ and various other constraints in the allowed parameter space of the model.
        This scenario can be probed by FASER, SeaQuest, SHiP, LHCb, Belle, etc.

        Speaker: Sumit Ghosh (Texas A & M University)
      • 193
        Renormalizable models of flavor-specific scalars

        New light singlet scalars with flavor-specific couplings represent a phenomenologically distinctive and flavor-safe alternative to the well-studied possibility of Higgs-portal scalars. However, in contrast to the Higgs portal, flavor-specific couplings require an ultraviolet completion involving new heavy states charged under the Standard Model gauge symmetries, leading to a host of additional novel phenomena. Focusing for concreteness on a scenario with up quark-specific couplings, we investigate two simple renormalizable completions, one with an additional vector-like quark and another featuring an extra scalar doublet. We consider the implications of naturalness, flavor- and CP-violation, electroweak precision observables, and direct searches for the new states at the LHC. These bounds, while being model-dependent, are shown to probe interesting regions in the parameter space of the scalar mass and its low-energy effective coupling, complementing the essential phenomenology of the low-energy effective theory at a variety of low and medium energy experiments.

        Speaker: Mudit Rai (University of Pittsburgh)
      • 194
        Implications of the Muon g-2 in flavour models

        The confirmation of the discrepancy between the Muon g-2 experiment at Fermilab and the Standard Model prediction points to New Physics not far above the TeV scale. Flavour symmetries broken at low energies can account for it, although relevant constraints then arise from flavour-violating observables. Here I discuss the profound implications of this result over the structure of the charged-lepton mass matrix and apply these ideas to several discrete flavour groups popular in the lepton sector.

        Speaker: María Luisa López Ibáñez
      • 195
        Complementarity of muon charged lepton flavour violating processes in the MRSSM

        The Minimal R-symmetric Supersymmetric Standard Model possesses interesting features, which makes it an attractive alternative to the MSSM. Some of them can be observed in and are reflected by the lepton flavour violation processes. Notably, there is no $\tan\beta$-enhancement for $g-2$ of the muon and other dipole operators, resulting in very different predictions for lepton observables compared to the MSSM.

        In the view of forthcoming experiments the bounds obtained from muon $g-2$ and flavour violating observables on the model parameter regions are studied. In particular, we consider the influence of Yukawa-like lambda parameters of the superpotential and the off-diagonal entries of slepton mass matrices. Different scenarios are discussed, depending also on the mass spectra of the model and additional restrictions, imposed by the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. We focus on the interplay between $\mu\to e\gamma$, $\mu\to e$ conversion and $\mu\to 3e$ and $g-2$ of the muon and show that all of these observables are important to constrain the parameter space.

        Speaker: Uladzimir Khasianevich (TU Dresden)
      • 196
        Implications of the Muon Anomalous Magnetic Moment for 3-3-1 Models

        We explore the implications of g-2 new result to five models based on the SU(3)C×SU(3)L×U(1)N gauge symmetry and put our conclusions into perspective with LHC bounds. We show that previous conclusions found in the context of such models change if there are more than one heavy particle running in the loop. Moreover, having in mind the projected precision aimed by the g-2 experiment at FERMILAB, we place lower mass bounds on the particles that contribute to muon anomalous magnetic moment assuming the anomaly is resolved otherwise. Lastly, we discuss how these models could accommodate such anomaly in agreement with existing bounds.

        Speaker: Yoxara Sánchez Villamizar (IIP & DFTE - Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte (UFRN))
    • Formal SUSY Theories ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Masahito Yamazaki (University of Tokyo)
      • 197
        G_2 instantons in twisted M-theory

        Computing Donaldson-Thomas partition function of a G2 manifold has been a long standing problem. The key step for the problem is to understand the G2 instanton moduli space. I will discuss a string theory way to study the G2 instanton moduli space and explain how to compute the instanton partition function for a certain G2 manifold. An important insight comes from the twisted M-theory on the G2 manifold. This talk is based on a work in progress with Michele del Zotto and Yehao Zhou.

        Speaker: Jihwan Oh (University of Oxford)
      • 198
        Twisting perturbative supergravity via pure spinor superfields

        Pure spinor superfields provide a clean and powerful way of constructing and understanding supermultiplets, in any dimension and with any amount of supersymmetry, by using the algebraic geometry of the variety of square-zero elements in the corresponding supersymmetry algebra. This variety also classifies the possible twists of a supermultiplet. As such, it is natural to try and compute twists directly in a pure spinor superfield description. We show that this gives a general way of understanding the form of the twisted multiplets, which is related to the local geometry of the space of square-zero elements in the neighborhood of the twisting supercharge: in other words, the space of possible deformations of the selected twist to a further twist. The technique is efficient and requires essentially no detailed computations. Applications include new computations of the holomorphic twists of the eleven-dimensional and type IIB supergravity multiplets, verifying conjectures of Costello and Li.

        Speaker: Ingmar Saberi
    • Grand Unified Theories ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Nobuchika Okada (University of Alabama)
      • 199
        Minimal SU(5) Unification

        A minimal model of $SU(5)$ Grand Unification is proposed. The model is entirely built out of the first five lowest dimensional $SU(5)$ representations. Charged and neutral fermion mass generation mechanisms are non-trivially linked together. The main predictions of the model are that $(i)$ the neutrinos are Majorana particles, $(ii)$ one neutrino is massless, $(iii)$ the neutrinos have normal mass ordering, and $(iv)$ there are four new scalar multiplets at or below a $120$TeV mass scale. An improvement of the current $p \rightarrow \pi^0 e^+$ lifetime limit by a factor of $2$, $15$, and $96$ would require these four scalar multiplets to reside at or below the $100$ TeV, $10$ TeV, and $1$ TeV mass scales, respectively.

        Speaker: shaikh saad (University of Basel)
      • 200
        $SU(5) \times U(1)_{PQ}$ Majoron-axion model

        We propose a $SU(5) \times U(1)_{PQ}$ Majoron-axion model free of the axion domain wall, axion dark matter isocurvature, and $SU(5)$ monopole problems. The vectorlike fermions in the model are essential to achieving successful unification of the SM gauge couplings as well as the viability of the inflation scenarios. The $SU(5)$ symmetry is broken at $M_{GUT} \simeq (4-7)\times 10^{15}$ GeV and the proton lifetime $\tau_p$ is estimated to be well within the expected sensitivity of the future Hyper-Kamiokande experiment, $\tau_p \lesssim 1.3 \times 10^{35}$ years. Meanwhile, the CASPEr experiment can search for the axion.

        Speaker: Digesh Raut (University of Delaware)
      • 201
        An asymptotically safe SU(5) GUT

        Abstract: In this talk I will present a model in which we minimally extend the Standard Model field content by adding new vector-like fermions at the TeV scale to allow gauge coupling unification at a realistic scale. We embed the model into a SU(5) GUT that is asymptotically safe and features an interacting fixed point for the gauge coupling. There are no Landau poles of the U(1) gauge and Higgs couplings. Gauge, Yukawa and Higgs couplings are retraced from the fixed point and matched at the GUT scale to those of the Standard Model rescaled up to the same energy. All couplings, their fixed point values and critical exponents always remain in the perturbative regime.

        Speaker: Dr Alberto Tonero (Carleton University)
      • 202
        Light Pseudo-Goldstone Higgs from SUSY SO(10) GUT

        A new mechanism for the Higgs doublet being the light pseudo-Goldstone mode within SUSY SO(10) GUT will be presented.
        Considered model exploits additional symmetries, which guarantee desirable symmetry breaking and natural all-order hierarchy. Some phenomenology, including a realistic fermion pattern, nucleon stability and gauge coupling unification, will be also discussed.

        Speaker: Zurab Tavartkiladze (Ilia State University)
      • 203
        Viable Full Unification of the Standard Model into $E_8$

        A 10 dimensional model with $\mathcal{N}=1$ SUSY and $E_8$ as a gauge symmetry will be presented. It will be shown that through the orbifold $\mathbb{𝑇}^6/(\mathbb{Z}_3\times\mathbb{z}_3$, only the Standard Model remains after compactification, with feasible Yukawa couplings. Gauge coupling unification can be achieved at energies as low as $M_{GUT}=10^7 GeV$ with a viable proton lifetime. Therefore the highly predictive extra dimensional GUT model can be within reach of near future experiments.

        Speaker: Francisco J. de Anda N.
      • 204
        Nucleon decay fingerprints from SUSY GUT models (using SusyTCProton)

        Ratios of nucleon decay rates between different channels can provide rich information about the specific GUT model realization in nature. To investigate this fingerprint in the context of SUSY GUTs and D=5 proton decay, we developed the software package SusyTCProton, which is an extension of the module SusyTC, itself to be used as a package of REAP. It takes the effective dimension 5 operators in the superpotential at the GUT scale as input, and assuming MSSM below the unification scale, computes the proton (neutron) partial decay rates into 7 (5) different decay channels.

        We demonstrate the utility of this software on a pair of toy SUSY GUT models with different flavor structures. Performing a numerical fit and a subsequent MCMC analysis, we find that both models provide an equally good fit to the low energy data, while they differ in their prediction for nucleon decay fingerprints, making it possible, at least in principle, to experimentally distinguish between them.

        The talk is based on 2011.15026 [hep-ph].

        Speaker: Dr Vasja Susič (University of Basel)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Jiaju Zhang
      • 205
        Uses and Limitations of Supergravities with "New Fayet-Iliopoulos" and "Liberated" Terms

        This talk reviews recent work done in collaboration with H. Jang on recently discovered new supergravity actions. Besides the standard ones, they contain new terms that become singular when auxiliary fields vanish. Constraints on the magnitude of such new terms are found by standard low-energy effective field theory consistency checks. After discussing those constraints I will present a realization of supergravity inflation that uses the new Kaehler-invariant Fayet-Iliopoulos term recently introduced by Antoniadis, Chatrabhuti, Isono and Knoops.

        Speaker: Massimo Porrati (NYU)
      • 206
        (Supergravity) Anomalies as Obstructions

        In the first part of the talk I will review the relation between the anomalies in six dimensions and the Chern-Simons couplings in five. These determine in particular the central charges of string-like BPS objects that cannot be consistently decoupled from gravity, a.k.a. supergravity strings. In the second part of the talk I will review how requiring that the worldsheet theory of the supergravity strings imposes bounds on the admissible theories of quantum gravity.

        Speaker: Ruben Minasian (Saclay, SPhT)
      • 207
        The anomaly that was not meant IIB

        Type IIB supergravity famously has a discrete duality group, which is an exact symmetry of the full type IIB string theory. This symmetry has potential quantum anomalies, which could render the theory inconsistent. In this talk I will describe how we computed these anomalies in recent work, and show they are nonvanishing, but remarkably, they can be cancelled by a subtle modification of the IIB Chern-Simons term in what amounts to a new variant of the Green-Schwarz mechanism. This can only happen because of some "miraculous cancellations" that depend on the details of the IIB supergravity spectrum. I will also describe alternative ways to cancel this anomaly, presenting variant versions of IIB string theory which have the same IIB supergravity as the low-energy limit, but which differ at the nonperturbative level. These theories may or may not be in the Swampland.

        Speaker: Miguel Montero (Harvard U)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Gauthier Durieux (CERN)
      • 208
        Higgs measurement at the Future Circular Colliders

        Precision measurements and searches for new phenomena in the Higgs sector are among the most important goals in particle physics. Experiments at the Future Circular Colliders (FCC) are ideal to study these questions. Electron-positron collisions (FCC-ee) up to an energy of 365 GeV provide the ultimate precision with studies of Higgs boson couplings, mass, total width, and CP parameters, as well as searches for exotic and invisible decays. Very high energy proton-proton collision (up to 100 TeV) provided by the FCC-hh will allow studying the Higgs self-coupling. There is a remarkable complementarity of the FCC-ee and FCC-hh colliders, which in combination offer the best possible overall study of the Higgs boson properties.

        Speaker: Sylvie Braibant
      • 209
        Higgs Precision at CEPC

        As Higgs factory, Higgs study is one of the main physics goal at the CEPC. This presentation will present the latest Higgs results at CDR and new updates afterwards. In addition, the impact of 360 GeV run on CEPC Higgs physics will be addressed as well. Finally, some comparison with other colliders on physics will be discussed.

        Speaker: Yaquan Fang (Chinese Academy of Sciences (CN))
      • 210
        Deeply Learned Preselection of Dijet Higgs Decays at Future Lepton Colliders

        We propose a method to improve the efficiency of preselection in Higgs signal searches at CEPC.
        For this propose we developed three machine learning algorithms including boosted decision tree algorithm, fully-connected neural networks and convolutional neural networks.
        Among all these algorithms, we found the fully-connected neural networks gives the best prediction on Higgs signals.
        Using such algorithms, we improve the signal strength of s-tagging events from cut-based result, $\mu_{ss} \sim 100$, to FCNN result $\mu_{ss} \sim 10$.

        Speaker: Wenxing Zhang
    • New Developments in Quantum Field Theory ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Jacob Bourjaily (Penn State University)
      • 211
        Nonperturbative Negative Geometries: From the Amplituhedron to AdS

        We consider scattering amplitudes in N=4 super Yang-Mills theory. Apart from any physics motivation about the exponentiation of infrared divergences, purely from the positive geometry of the loop Amplituhedron, we find that the logarithm of the amplitude appears as a natural object to look at. Thinking about `negative geometries' gives a useful decomposition of the latter, different from usual Feynman diagrams. We define a new observable that can be defined directly in terms of negative geometries, and integrated directly in four dimensions. Purely from the perspective of the geometry, there is a clear separation in the complexity of different contributions. We compute analytically a particular class of terms to all loop orders, and extract their contribution to the cusp anomalous dimension. We find that our analytic result reproduces several qualitative features of the full answer.

        Speaker: Johannes Henn
      • 212
        Fermi-gas correlators of ADHM theory and triality symmetry

        We analytically study the Fermi-gas formulation of sphere correlation functions of the Coulomb branch operators for 3d $\mathcal{N} = 4$ ADHM theory with a gauge group $U(N)$, an adjoint hypermultiplet and $l$ hypermultiplets which can describe a stack of $N$ M2-branes at $A_{l−1}$ singularities. We find that the leading coefficients of the perturbative grand canonical correlation functions are invariant under a hidden triality symmetry conjectured from the twisted M-theory. The triality symmetry also helps us to fix the next-to-leading corrections analytically.

        Speaker: Tadashi Okazaki
      • 213
        New Developments for the Momentum Amplituhedron

        In the past decade our understanding of scattering amplitudes in maximally supersymmetric Yang Mills theory has increased dramatically. This enhanced understanding has led to a formulation of color-ordered scattering amplitudes as logarithmic differential forms on particular geometries, called positive geometries. In particular, the momentum amplituhedron is the geometry governing the tree-level amplitudes in spinor helicity space, and it allows for considering different orderings. In this talk, I will review the construction of the momentum amplituhedron as well as discuss
        some surprising recent results regarding how the Kleiss-Kuijf
        relations arise geometrically in this framework.

        Speaker: David Damgaard (LMU Munich)
      • 214
        Geometrizing Fermionic QFTs via Supermanifolds

        We always have the freedom to reparametrize any QFT without affecting the underlying physics, but this freedom is not always manifest in the way we write it down. Vilkovisky demonstrated that the standard definition of the effective action yields different off-shell results for different parametrizations of the same theory. This issue is neatly resolved through the covariant Vilkovisky-De Witt (VDW) formalism, which offers a geometric interpretation of a QFT as a (pseudo)Riemannian manifold, in which the fields take on the role of coordinates. Reparametrizations are therefore realized through diffeomorphisms in this field-space manifold, which leave the physics manifestly invariant. However, the application of this covariant formalism to fermionic degrees of freedom and the proper definition of the fermionic field space metric have been elusive. In this talk, I will demonstrate how the VDW formalism can be extended to take into account both scalar and fermion fields. This is made possible by promoting the field space manifold to a supermanifold, which is equipped with a supermetric. In this way, the space of QFTs becomes fully geometrized, and every theory can be written in a manifestly reparametrization-invariant manner.

        Speaker: Dr Sotirios Karamitsos (University of Pisa)
      • 215
        Exact solution studies of local and non-local Yang-Mills theories

        Local exact solutions for the scalar field theory, both for the classical and the quantum case have been recently obtained [1{3] by a technique devised by Bender, Savage and Milton [4]. This permits to derive the set of Dyson-Schwinger equations in a fully differential form. These methods can be applied also to the exact solution of the Yang-Mills theory [5] and corresponding confinement studies [6]. It is also possible to get a significant agreement for the spectrum of the theory [7] and to prove confinement in 2+1 dimensions [8].

        Non-local quantum field theories have been studied recently as a promising approach to go beyond the Standard Model (e.g. see [9-11]). This approach is motivated by p-adic string field theory [12-14]. These theories have the properties of UV-completeness and have been proposed as a direction of UV-completion the non-local inifinte-derivative theories, and are ghost-free, re-normalizable and predicts conformal invariance at the quantum level [10, 15]. They are able to rescue dark matter models [11], move trans-planckian processes to sub-planckian [16] and improve inflationary behaviour of the Higgs field [17]. Along these same research avenues, we consider an infinite derivative non-local Yang-Mills theory and we show and we derive the set of Dyson-Schwinger equations in differential form till the 2P-correlation functions. Then, we provide a method to solve them, assuming that non-local effects are small at low-energies and taking into account only the leading order solutions [19] as we already show for the scalar field case [18]. The argument about confinement, put forward in [6], is then extended to this non local case [20]. It is seen that UV-limit is never reached in this case and the theory confines in the IR, the coupling running to infinity, without the appearance of a Landau pole. In these studies, we just assume that one has a proper local solutions to start from to get the corrections due to the non-locality. An immediate consequence of this approach is that the a mass gap is obtained and the spectrum of the theory becomes accessible analytically. In any case, the mass gap is diluted in the UV.

        References

        [1] M. Frasca, J. Nonlin. Math. Phys. 18, no.2, 291-297 (2011) [arXiv:0907.4053 [math-ph]].
        [2] M. Frasca, Eur. Phys. J. C 74, 2929 (2014) [arXiv:1306.6530 [hep-ph]].
        [3] M. Frasca, Eur. Phys. J. Plus 131, no.6, 199 (2016) [arXiv:1504.02299 [hep-ph]].
        [4] C. M. Bender, K. A. Milton and V. M. Savage, Phys. Rev. D 62, 085001 (2000) [hep-th/9907045].
        [5] M. Frasca, Eur. Phys. J. Plus 132, no.1, 38 (2017) [erratum: Eur. Phys. J. Plus 132, no.5, 242 (2017)] [arXiv:1509.05292
        [math-ph]].
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        th]].
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        [hep-ph]].
        [8] M. Frasca, Eur. Phys. J. C 77, no.4, 255 (2017) doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-017-4824-7 [arXiv:1611.08182 [hep-th]].
        [9] T. Biswas and N. Okada, Nucl. Phys. B 898, 113-131 (2015) [arXiv:1407.3331 [hep-ph]].
        [10] A. Ghoshal, A. Mazumdar, N. Okada and D. Villalba, Phys. Rev. D 97, no.7, 076011 (2018) [arXiv:1709.09222 [hep-th]].
        [11] A. Ghoshal, Int. J. Mod. Phys. A 34, no.24, 1950130 (2019) [arXiv:1812.02314 [hep-ph]].
        [12] E. Witten, Nucl.Phys. B268, p. 253, (1986).
        [13] V. A. Kostelecky and S. Samuel, Nucl.Phys. B336, p. 263, (1990).
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        [hep-th]].
        [17] A. S. Koshelev and A. Tokareva, [arXiv:2006.06641 [hep-th]].
        [18] M. Frasca and A. Ghoshal, [arXiv:2011.10586 [hep-th]], to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravity.
        [19] M. Frasca and A. Ghoshal, [arXiv:2102.10665 [hep-th]], to appear in Journal of High-Energy Physics.
        [20] M. Frasca, A. Ghoshal and N. Okada, [arXiv:2106.07629 [hep-th]].

        Speaker: Dr Marco Frasca
    • 22:00
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Wenyu Wang (Beijing University of Technology)
      • 216
        Roads for Right-handed Neutrino Dark Matter: Relentless, Standard Freeze-out, and Early Matter Domination

        Right-handed neutrinos appear in several extensions beyond the Standard Model, specially in connection to neutrino masses. Weak scale right-handed neutrino dark matter constructions are typically rather constrained by data. In this work, we carry out the dark matter phenomenology of a weak scale right-handed neutrino dark matter, within a type I seesaw model, in the presence of a fast early expansion of the universe (relentless production), and early matter-domination before or during dark matter freeze-out. We compute the dark matter relic density, the non-conventional direct detection rate featuring a spin-independent but velocity suppressed operator, and the existing collider bounds.

        Speaker: Jacinto Paulo Neto (Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte)
      • 217
        White Dwarfs as Axion Probes

        Axions, if they exist, can be produced efficiently in white dwarfs, free-stream out of the star due to their weak interactions with matter, and then be converted to a photon in the stellar magnetosphere. X-ray telescope observations of these stars can provide strong constraints on the coupling to electromagnetism and matter. I discuss the results of the first dedicated observation of a magnetic white dwarf in hard X-rays, and what it tells us about axions.

        Speaker: Christopher Dessert (University of Michigan)
      • 218
        Asymmetric Dark Matter and Baryons from Dark Phase Transitions

        We present several models of asymmetric dark matter (ADM) and baryons coming from dark phase transitions and unique complementary signals. One achieves both baryogenesis and ADM in a minimal "mirror" sector, while another adds (heavy) ADM to any standard baryogenesis scenario. Yet another uses the most minimal dark sector to achieve baryogenesis alone. Thanks to the necessity of the vector and neutrino portals, discoverable signals include nuclear/electron recoils in direct detection experiments, visibly decaying dark photons, exotic Higgs and Z decays, extra relativistic degrees of freedom, and gravitational waves from the dark phase transition.

        Speaker: Robert McGehee (University of Michigan)
    • Formal SUSY Theories ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Masahito Yamazaki (University of Tokyo)
      • 219
        Maximally twisted eleven-dimensional supergravity

        We perform the maximal twist of eleven-dimensional supergravity. This twist is partially topological and exists on manifolds of G2 × SU(2) holonomy. Our derivation starts with an explicit description of the Batalin-Vilkovisky complex associated to the three-form multiplet in the pure spinor superfield formalism. We then determine the L∞ module structure of the supersymmetry algebra on the component fields. We twist the theory by modifying the differential of the Batalin-Vilkovisky complex to incorporate the action of a scalar supercharge. We find that the resulting free twisted theory is given by the tensor product of the de Rham and Dolbeault complexes of the respective G2 and SU(2) holonomy manifolds as conjectured by Costello.

        Speaker: Richard Eager
      • 220
        Maximally twisted eleven-dimensional supergravity

        In this talk I explain how the maximal twist of eleven-dimensional supergravity in the free perturbative limit can be computed directly in the BV formalism. The maximal twist exists on manifolds of $G_2 \times SU(2)$ holonomy and is partially topological. After a short introduction to the BV formalism and twisting, I describe the $L_\infty$ action of the supersymmetry algebra on the component fields of the supergravity multiplet. Decomposing these transformations and the BV differential under $G_2 \times SU(2)$, the twisted theory can be identified. The result takes a simple form as conjectured by Costello. The talk is based on arxiv:2106.15640.

        Speaker: Fabian Hahner (Universität Heidelberg)
    • Grand Unified Theories ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Ilia Gogoladze (University of Delaware)
      • 221
        Pseudo-Goldstone Dark Matter in SO(10)

        We propose a pseudo-Goldstone boson dark matter (pGDM) particle in $SO(10)$ grand unified theory (GUT). Due to its Goldstone nature, this pGDM evades the direct DM detection experiments which, otherwise, severely constrain the parameter space of DM models. In $SO(10)$, the pGDM is embedded as a linear combination of the Standard Model (SM) singlet scalars in ${\bf 16_H}$ and ${\bf 126_H}$ representations. We consider two scenarios for the intermediate route of $SO(10)$ symmetry breaking (SB) to the SM: $SU(5) \times U(1)_X$ and Pati-Salam the $SU(4)_c \times SU(2)_L \times SU(2)_R$ gauge groups. The vacuum expectation value of ${\bf 126_H}$, which triggers the breaking of $U(1)_X$ and 4-2-2 symmetry in the two scenarios, respectively, determines the pGDM lifetime whose astrophysical lower bound provides one of the most stringent constraints. The proton lifetime in the $SU(5)$ case is predicted to be $4.53 \times 10^{34}$ years, which lies well within the sensitivity reach of the Hyper-Kamiokande experiment.

        Speaker: Digesh Raut (University of Delaware)
      • 222
        Supersymmetric grand unified theories with Higgsino-like neutralino dark matter and its implication to the proton decay search at the Hyper-Kamiokande

        Imposing the gauge coupling unification and the Higgsino-like neutralino dark matter in our Universe, we perform a parameter scan for a simple parameter set in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, namely, the universal sfermion mass ($m_0$) and the universal gaugino mass at the GUT scale ($M$). We find that sparticle masses in the range of 10-100 TeV result in the lifetime of proton decay mediated by the GUT gauge bosons that can be tested in the Hyper-Kamiokande experiment in the near future.

        Speaker: Nobuchika Okada (University of Alabama)
      • 223
        The Standard Model and Dark Matter in Structures of Generalised Proper Time

        Attempts to account for the elementary properties of matter through a structure of extra spatial dimensions date from the theory of Kaluza 100 years ago. In more recent years, while there is still no clear evidence that extra dimensions of space exist, the origin of the structure of the Standard Model has become a central question in fundamental particle physics. We describe how a new approach, with a further generalisation from the local 4-dimensional spacetime geometry to a general form for proper time, leads directly and efficiently to Standard Model structures. This generalisation naturally makes use of unique mathematical structures involving the octonion algebra and the exceptional Lie groups that are also seen in some SUSY models. As an additional feature of the theory a natural candidate for dark matter, itself a further major mystery in physics, can also be directly identified.

        Speaker: Dr David Jackson
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Yungui Gong (Huazhong University of Science and Technology)
      • 224
        What are gravitational waves telling us about fundamental physics?

        The recent gravitational wave observations of the collision of black holes and neutron stars have allowed us to pierce into the extreme gravity regime, where gravity is simultaneously unfathomably large and wildly dynamical. These waves encode a trove of information about physics that is prime for the taking, including potential revelations about the validity of Einstein's theory and possible string-inspired extensions. In this talk, I will describe some of the physics inferences we have made from gravitational wave observations, and the future inferences that will comes next.

        Speaker: Prof. Nicolas Yunes (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
      • 225
        Gravitational waves produced by astrophysical sources and propagation through cosmic distances in inhomogeneous universe

        Gravitational waves produced by astrophysical sources and propagation through cosmic distances in inhomogeneous universe

        In this talk, we shall present our recent studies of gravitational waves (GWs) first produced by remote compact astrophysical sources and then propagating in our inhomogeneous universe through cosmic distances, before arriving at detectors. To describe such GWs properly, we first introduce three scales,
        $\lambda, \; L_c$ and $L$, denoting, respectively, the typical wavelength of GWs, the scale of the cosmological perturbations, and the size of the observable universe. For GWs to be detected by the current and foreseeable detectors, the condition $\lambda \ll L_c \ll L$ holds. Then, such GWs can be approximated as high-frequency GWs and be well separated from the background $\gamma_{\mu\nu}$ by averaging the spacetime curvatures over a scale $\ell$, where $\lambda \ll \ell \ll L_c $, and $g_{\mu\nu} = \gamma_{\mu\nu} + \epsilon h_{\mu\nu}$ with $\epsilon \simeq {\cal{O}}(\lambda/L)$, and $h_{\mu\nu}$ denotes the GWs. In order for the backreaction of the GWs to the background spacetimes to be negligible, we must assume that $\left|h_{\mu\nu}\right| \ll 1$, in addition to the condition $\epsilon \ll 1$, which are also the conditions for the linearized Einstein field equations for $h_{\mu\nu}$ to be valid. Such studies can be significantly simplified by properly choosing gauges, such as the spatial ($\chi_{0\mu} = 0$), traceless ($\gamma^{\mu\nu}\chi_{\mu\nu} = 0$), and Lorentz ($\nabla^{\nu}\chi_{\mu\nu} = 0$) gauges, where $\chi_{\mu\nu} \equiv h_{\mu\nu} - h\gamma_{\mu\nu}/2$, and $\nabla^{\nu}$ denotes the covariant derivative with respect to $\gamma_{\mu\nu}$. We show that these three different gauge conditions can be imposed simultaneously, even when the background is not vacuum, as long as the high-frequency GW approximation is valid. However, to develop the formulas that can be applicable to as many cases as possible, we first write down explicitly the linearized Einstein field equations for $\chi_{\mu\nu}$ by imposing only the spatial gauge. Then, applying these formulas together with the geometrical optics approximation to such GWs, we find that they still move along null geodesics and its polarization bi-vector is parallel-transported, even when both the cosmological scalar and tensor perturbations are present. In addition, we also calculate the gravitational integrated Sachs-Wolfe effects due to these two kinds of perturbations, whereby the dependences of the amplitude, phase and luminosity
        distance of the GWs on these perturbations are read out explicitly.

        J. Fier, X.-J. Fang, B.-W. Li, S. Mukohyama, A. Wang, T. Zhu, Gravitational wave cosmology I: high frequency approximation, Phys. Rev. D (2021) [arXiv:2102.08968].

        Speaker: Dr Jared Fier (Baylor University)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR8B

      ZR8B

      Convener: Yi Pang
      • 226
        Double Field Theory and Pseudo-Supersymmetry

        TBA

        Speaker: Christopher Pope (High Energy Phys.Group Blackett-Lab Imp.Coll.)
      • 227
        Beyond of the Poincaré Chern-Simons hypergravity, in (2+1) dimensions.

        We study the minimal coupling of Chern-Simons gravity based on the Maxwell symmetry with massless spin-5/2 gauge fields, in three dimensions. It is shown the simplest hyper-Maxwell super-algebra and its corresponding Chern-Simons gravity, which contains a massless spin-2 fields which is coupled with a massless Majorana fermion spin-5/2. For certain combinations of osp(1/4) and sp(4) algebras, we find two different alternatives for hypersymmetric extensions of the Maxwell algebra, using the Inönü-Wigner contraction procedure. The hyper-Maxwell Chern-Simons actions was constructed for each case, which show interactions of non-propagating spin-4 fields with one or two spin-5/2 gauge fields.

        Speaker: Dr Ricardo Caroca (Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción, Chile)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Christophe Grojean (DESY (Hamburg) and Humboldt University (Berlin))
      • 228
        A collinear factorisation approach at e+e- colliders

        I discuss the physics that underpins QED collinear-factorisation formulae, in particular the PDFs, and some applications of the latter to the simulation of e+e- collision processes

        Speaker: Stefano Frixione (INFN)
      • 229
        The partonic picture at high-energy lepton colliders

        After the triumph of discovering the Higgs boson at the CERN Large Hadron Collider, people are getting increasingly interested in studying the Higgs properties in detail and searching for the physics beyond the Standard Model (SM). A multi-TeV lepton collider provides a clean experimental environment for both the Higgs precision measurements and the discovery of new particles. In high-energy leptonic collisions, the collinear splittings of the leptons and electroweak (EW) gauge bosons are the dominant phenomena, which could be well described by the parton picture. In the parton picture, all the SM particles should be treated as partons that radiated off the beam particles, and the electroweak parton distribution functions (EW PDFs) should be adopted as a proper description for partonic collisions of the initial states. In our work, both the EW and the QCD sectors are included in the Dokshitzer-Gribov-Lipatov-Altarelli-Parisi (DGLAP) formalism to perturbatively resum the potential large logarithms emerging from the initial-state radiation (ISR). I will show the results of QCD jet production as well as some other typical SM processes at a possible high-energy electron-positron collider and a possible high-energy muon collider obtained using the PDFs.

        Speaker: Yang Ma (University of Pittsburgh)
    • Neutrino Physics and Leptons ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Claudia Hagedorn (Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular (IFIC))
      • 230
        The Radiative SUSY Seesaw Mechanism

        In this talk we first review the radiative seesaw scenario in the context of inverse seesaw models, in which small lepton number violating parameters generate radiatively at the one-loop order the observed small light neutrino masses. Then, we show how the supersymmetric version of this radiative mechanism offers cancellations among the one-loop contributions to neutrino masses thanks to a SUSY non-renormalization theorem, thereby relaxing dramatically the size of the lepton number violating parameters in such models. Finally, we discuss the phenomenological and cosmological implications of this radiative SUSY seesaw scenario.

        Speaker: Pablo Candia da Silva (The University of Manchester)
      • 231
        Leptogenesis from $SU(5)$ GUT with $\mathcal{T}_{13}$ Family Symmetry

        In a seesaw scenario, GUT and family symmetry can severely constrain the structure of the Dirac and Majorana mass matrices of neutrinos. We will discuss an interesting case where these matrices are related in such a way that definite predictions for light neutrino masses are achieved without specifying the seesaw scale. This opens up the possibility to consider both high- and low-scale leptogenesis. We will explore both of these possibilities in an $SU(5)\times \mathcal{T}_{13}$ model and show that sub-GeV right-handed neutrinos with active-sterile mixing large enough to be probed by DUNE can explain baryon asymmetry of the Universe through resonant leptogenesis.

        Speaker: Moinul Rahat (University of Florida)
      • 232
        Light particles with baryon and lepton numbers

        We consider light new particles $\chi$ and $\phi$ that carry baryon and lepton numbers. If these particles are lighter than nucleons they lead to exotic decays such as $p\to \pi^+ \chi$ and $p\to e^+\phi$, not yet fully constrained by dedicated searches. For $\chi$ and $\phi$ masses in the GeV range, proton decays are kinematically forbidden but other decays of the forms baryon\,$\to$\,meson$+\chi$, meson\,$\to$\,baryon$+\bar\chi$, and baryon\,$\to$\,anti-lepton$+\phi$ involving heavy initial hadrons are allowed. This opens up the possibility to search for apparent baryon number violation not just in underground experiments such as Super-Kamiokande and DUNE but also in decays of heavy hadrons in charm and $B$ factories.

        Speaker: Julian Heeck
      • 233
        Search for K+ decays to a lepton and invisible particles

        The NA62 experiment at CERN reports searches for K+ → e+N, K+→μ+N and K+→μ+νX decays, where N and X are massive invisible particles, using the 2016-2018 data set.
        The N particle is assumed to be a heavy neutral lepton, and the results are expressed as upper limits of O(10−9) and O(10−8) of the neutrino mixing parameter |Ue4|2 and |Uμ4|2, improving on the earlier searches for heavy neutral lepton production and decays in the kinematically accessible mass range.
        The X particle is considered a scalar or vector hidden sector mediator decaying to an invisible final state, and upper limits of the decay branching fraction for X masses in the range 10-370 MeV/c2 are reported for the first time, ranging from O(10−5) to O(10−7).
        An improved upper limit of 1.0 10−6 is established at 90% CL on the K+→μ+ννν branching fraction.

        Speaker: Artur Shaikhiev (University of Birmingham)
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Iacopo Vivarelli (University of Sussex (GB))
      • 234
        Electroweak SUSY in leptonic final states with the CMS detector

        Results from the CMS experiment are presented for electroweak production of supersymmetric partners with decays to leptonic final states. The searches use proton-proton collision data with luminosity up to 137 fb-1 recorded by the CMS detector at center of mass energy 13 TeV during the LHC Run 2.

        Speaker: Kaitlin Salyer (Boston University (US))
      • 235
        Search for charginos and neutralinos in final states with two boosted hadronically decaying bosons and missing transverse momentum with the ATLAS experiment

        Searches for electroweakinos light enough to be produced at the LHC are well motivated by consideration on dark matter, naturalness and the recently observed muon g-2 anomaly. This talk presents a search for electroweakinos in fully-hadronic final states to exploit the advantage of the large branching ratio, and the efficient background rejection by identifying the high-pT bosons using large-radius jets and jet substructure information. Compared to the more traditionally considered lepton final states, it allows to reach sensitivity to higher electroweakinos masses and to set strong limits on a variety of simplified models. For example, for the case of the wino-bino simplified model a wino mass up to 1060 GeV is excluded. Additionally, more concrete complete models and parameter scans are also considered.

        Speakers: Yuta OKAZAKI (Kyoto U), Yuta Okazaki (Kyoto University (JP))
      • 236
        Searches for supersymmetry in tau final states with the CMS detector

        Results from the CMS experiment are presented for searches for supersymmetric particle production with tau leptons in the final state. The searches use proton-proton collision data with luminosity up to 137 fb-1 recorded by the CMS detector at center of mass energy 13 TeV during the LHC Run 2.

        Speaker: Saikat Karmakar (Tata Institute of Fundamental Research-B, India)
    • Plenary: IV Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Lorenzo Calibbi (Nankai University)
      • 237
        Axion dark matter
        Speaker: Pierre Sikivie (University of Florida)
      • 238
        Precision axion physics with running axion couplings
        Speaker: Kiwoon Choi (IBS, Daejeon)
      • 239
        Exploring farther with long-lived particles
        Speaker: Jessie Shelton
      • 240
        Four-form relaxation of Higgs mass and its cosmological implications
        Speaker: Hyun Min Lee (Chung-Ang U)
    • 09:40
      Coffee Break
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Sugumi Kanno
      • 241
        Exploring fundamental physics with gravitational wave observations

        Gravitational wave observations provide a plethora of opportunities to explore questions in fundamental physics and physics beyond the standard model. Multimessenger observation of of gravitational waves and electromagnetic radiation from distant sources can be used to test modified theories of gravity, measure cosmological parameters, ascertain the nature of dark matter and dark energy. Gravitational waves emitted in the aftermath of neutron star collisions potentially carry the signature of QCD phase transition. Axionic clouds around black holes could lead to continuous gravitational waves with characteristic signature. In this talk I will describe the different aspects of fundamental physics that is accessible to the gravitational-wave window.

        Speaker: Bangalore Sathyaprakash (The Pennsylvania State University)
      • 242
        Effective picture of cosmic bubble expansion

        We derive an effective equation-of-motion for an expanding bubble wall in the thermal plasma with a general form of the thermal friction. The efficiency factor for gravitational waves productions from colliding bubble walls is obtained with a special interest for the strong first-order phase transition.

        Speaker: Shao-Jiang Wang
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Wanzhe Feng
      • 243
        Thermodynamics of Supersymmetric Black Holes in AdS(5)

        Supersymmetric black holes have zero temperature but their dependence on chemical potentials defines conventional thermodynamics. The phase diagram for supersymmetric AdS black holes is reminiscent of Schwarzschild-AdS, featuring a cusp, a minimal ``temperature”, and a Hawking-Page transition. This talk presents a complete phase diagram and discusses the confinement/deconfinement transition for supersymmetric black holes in AdS(5) and their N=4 SYM dual.

        Speaker: Finn Larsen (Michigan U)
      • 244
        Quantum gravity microstates from Fredholm determinants

        This talk describes how to go well beyond the perturbative correspondence between JT gravity and large N matrix models (discovered by Saad, Shenker and Stanford) to uncover detailed information about the individual microscopic states of the matrix model. This corresponds to data about the underlying microstates of the gravity system, which are crucial in the regime where the smooth spacetime description is inadequate. This system is therefore a fully tractable model of quantum gravity where the phenomenon of emergent spacetime is manifest. They key new tool in this context is a Fredholm determinant, which can be computed using numerical methods.

        Speaker: Clifford Johnson (University of Southern California and Princeton University)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Kechen Wang (Wuhan University of Technology)
      • 245
        Implication of Higgs/EW precision on 2HDM

        Studying the properties of Standard Model (SM) – like Higgs boson becomes one important window to explore the physics beyond the SM. In this work, we present studies about the implications of the Higgs and Z-pole precision measurements at future Higgs Factories. We perform a global fit to various Higgs search channels to obtain the 95% C.L. constraints on the model parameter spaces of Two Higgs Double Model (2HDM). In the 2HDM, we analyse tree level effects as well as one-loop contributions from the heavy Higgs bosons. The strong constraints on cos(β − α), mΦ and heavy Higgs mass splitting can be complementary to direct search of the LHC and Z pole precision measurements. We alo explore its effects on the electroweak phase transition of 2HMD. We compare the sensitivity of various future Higgs factories, namely Circular Electron Positron Collider (CEPC), Future Circular Collider (FCC)-ee and International Linear Collider (ILC).

        Speaker: wei su (university of Adelaide)
      • 246
        Heavy Higgs Bosons in 2HDM at a Muon Collider

        We study the discovery potential of the non-Standard Model (SM) heavy Higgs bosons in theTwo-Higgs-Doublet Models (2HDMs) at a multi-TeV muon collider and explore the discrimination power among different types of 2HDMs.

        Speaker: Shufang Su (University of Arizona)
      • 247
        Testing electroweak phase transition at muon colliders

        We study the complementarity of the proposed multi-TeV muon colliders and the near-future gravitational wave (GW) detectors to the first order electroweak phase transition (FOEWPT), taking the real scalar extended Standard Model as the representative model. A detailed collider simulation shows the FOEWPT parameter space can be greatly probed via the the vector boson fusion production of the singlet, and its subsequent decay to the di-Higgs or di-boson channels. Especially, almost all the parameter space yielding detectable GW signals can be probed by the muon colliders. Therefore, if we could detect stochastic GWs in the future, a muon collider could provide a hopeful crosscheck to identify their origin. On the other hand, there is considerable parameter space that escapes GW detections but is within the reach of the muon colliders. The precision measurements of Higgs couplings could also probe the FOEWPT parameter space efficiently.

        Speaker: Wei Liu (Nanjing University of Science and Technology)
    • Neutrino Physics and Leptons ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Shun Zhou (IHEP, CAS)
      • 248
        Results on Lepton Flavor Universality and Lepton Flavor Violation at Belle

        The study of the lepton flavor universality (LFU) and searches for lepton flavor violation (LFV) attract attention as a probe for the new physics signal. We present the study of LFU violation observables $R_K$ and $R_{K^*}$ in electroweak penguin $B$ decays $B \to K^{(*)} \ell^{+} \ell^{-}$ ($\ell = e, \mu$). We also present search for $B \to K^{*} \tau^{+} \tau^{-}$ as well as LFV decays $B \to \ell \tau$, $\tau \to \ell \gamma$ and $\Upsilon(1S) \to \ell\tau$. All these results are based on data collected by the Belle experiment at the KEKB asymmetric-energy e^+e^- collider.

        Speakers: Hulya Atmacan, Hulya Atmacan (University of Cincinnati Main Campus)
      • 249
        Tau physics prospects at Belle II

        The Belle II experiment is a substantial upgrade of the Belle detector and will operate
        at the SuperKEKB energy-asymmetric e+e− collider. The design luminosity of the machine
        is 8 × 1035 cm−2s−1 and the Belle II experiment aims to record 50 ab−1 of data, a factor
        of 50 more than its predecessor. From February to July 2018, the machine has completed a
        commissioning run and main operation of SuperKEKB has started in March2019. Belle II has
        a broad τ physics program, in particular in searches for lepton flavour and lepton number
        violations (LFV and LNV), benefiting from the large cross section of the pair wise τ
        lepton production in e+e− collisions. We expect that after 5 years of data taking, Belle II
        will be able to reduce the upper limits on LF and LN violating τ decays by an order of
        magnitude. Any experimental observation of LFV or LNV in τ decays constitutes an unambiguous
        sign of physics beyond the Standard Model, offering the opportunity to probe the underlying
        New Physics. In this talk we will review the τ lepton physics program of Belle II.

        Speaker: Marcela Garcia Hernandez
      • 250
        Testing the neutrino mass generation mechanism at the current and future colliders

        The generation of the neutrino mass is an essential observation from the neutrino oscillation experiments. This indicates a major revision of the Standard Model which initiated with the massless neutrinos. A possible interesting scenario is the seesaw mechanism where SM gauge singlet Right Handed Neutrinos are introduced. Another interesting aspect is the extension of the SM with SU$(2)_𝐿$ triplet fermions. Alternatively a general U$(1)$ extension of the SM is also an interesting idea which involves three generations of the SM singlet RHNs to generate the tiny neutrino mass through the seesaw mechanism. Additionally such models can contain a $𝑍^\prime$ boson which could be tested at the colliders through the pair production of the RHNs.

        Speaker: Arindam Das (Hokkaido University)
      • 251
        1 ↔ 2 Processes of a Sterile Neutrino Around Electroweak Scale in the Thermal Plasma

        In this talk I will show how we calculated the 1<->2 processes of a sterile neutrino with the mass ~100GeV in the early universe. This is essential for evaluating the corresponding leptogenesis processes. The Goldstone equivalence gauge is applied and its application in thermal plasma will be introduced.

        Speaker: Yi-Lei Tang (Sun Yat-Sen University)
    • New Developments in Quantum Field Theory ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Yang Zhang (USTC)
      • 252
        Recent Developments in N=4 Yang-Mills Scattering Amplitudes

        I will review recent developments in N=4 Yang-Mills amplitudes.

        Speaker: Anastasia Volovich (Brown University (US))
      • 253
        Collider Physics tools for classical gravitational wave observables

        In this talk, I will review some of the recent developments in applying Quantum Field Theory ideas and scattering amplitudes technology to the study of classical gravitational observables that are relevant to e.g. the LIGO/VIRGO detectors. I will mostly focus on a particular framework, originally devised by Kosower, Maybee, and O'Connell, to extract classical physics from quantum observables. This particular avenue opens the possibility to transfer numerous advances from collider physics calculations, such as integration-by-parts relations, reverse unitarity, and (canonical) differential equations to evaluate the relevant Feynman integrals that appear in the classical gravitational observables of interest. We find surprising similarities between maximally supersymmetric gravity as well as pure Einstein gravity.

        Speaker: Enrico Herrmann (UCLA)
    • 11:30
      Lunch
    • Formal SUSY Theories ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Wenbin Yan (Yau Mathematical Sciences Center, Tsinghua University)
      • 254
        4d superconformal theories with a=c

        We study a set of four-dimensional N=2 superconformal field theories (SCFTs) labeled by a pair of simply-laced Lie groups. For some special choices, the resulting theories have identical central charges (a=c) without taking any large N limit. Moreover, we find that the Schur indices for such theories can be written in terms of that of N=4 super Yang-Mills theory upon rescaling fugacities.

        Speaker: Jaewon Song (KAIST)
      • 255
        Confinement in Non-Lagrangian 4d N=1 Theories

        I will describe a method for computing confinement in $4d$ $\mathcal{N}=1$ theories that can be obtained by deforming $4d$ $\mathcal{N}=2$ of Class S. Such theories generically do not admit a conventional Lagrangian description. The confinement for this class of $4d$ $\mathcal{N}=1$ theories can be captured in topological properties of a complex curve, known as $\mathcal{N}=1$ curve, which can be understood as the spectral curve associated to a generalized Hitchin system.

        Speaker: Lakshya Bhardwaj
      • 256
        Instanton counting in BCD-type gauge theories

        Localization method together with ADHM construction provide a powerful way to compute the exact partition function of 8 SUSY gauge theories. In particular, Nekrasov's partition function is interesting because of the non-perturbative corrections from instantons. It is, however, known to be difficult to perform the integrals in an analytic way that appear in the computation of instanton partition functions of BCD-type gauge theories. In this talk, we propose an analytic expression for these integrals in the unrefined limit in the form of summation over Young diagrams. Our results are inspired by the topological vertex formalism in topological string theory.

        Speaker: Prof. Ruidong Zhu (Soochow University)
      • 257
        On Twisted Elliptic Genera

        We study the elliptic genera of twisted 6d $(1,0)$ SCFTs from several approaches: 2d localization, modular bootstrape, Higgsing and twisted elliptic blowup equations. The twist is made when the 6d gauge algebra has outer automorphism symmetry. Upon twisted circle compactification, nontrivial 5d Kaluza-Klein theories appear. We provide a universal method to compute the twisted elliptic genera of the 6d theories and find novel properties such as spectral flow symmetry.

        Speaker: Kaiwen Sun
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Ning Chen (Nankai University)
      • 258
        Enhanced Long-Lived Dark Photon Signals at the LHC

        We construct a model in which the standard model
        is extended by a hidden sector with two gauge $U(1)$ bosons.
        A Dirac fermion $\psi$ charged under both $U(1)$ fields
        is introduced in the hidden sector which
        can be a subcomponent of the dark matter in the Universe.
        Stueckelberg mass terms between the two
        new gauge $U(1)$ fields
        and the hypercharge gauge boson mediate
        the interactions between the standard model
        sector and the hidden sector.
        A remarkable collider signature of this model
        is the enhanced long-lived dark photon events at the LHC
        than the conventional dark photon models;
        the long-lived dark photons in the model can be
        discriminated from the background
        by measuring the time delay signal in the
        precision timing detectors which are proposed
        to be installed in the
        LHC upgrades and have an
        ${\cal O} (10)$ pico-second detection efficiency.
        Searches with current LHCb data are also investigated.
        Various experimental constraints on the model
        including collider constraints and cosmological constraints
        are also discussed.

        Speaker: Mingxuan Du (Nanjing University)
      • 259
        Searches for BSM physics using challenging and long-lived signatures with the ATLAS detector

        Various theories beyond the Standard Model predict unique signatures that are difficult to reconstruct and for which estimating the background rate is also a challenge. Signatures from displaced decays anywhere from the inner detector to the muon spectrometer, as well as those of new particles with fractional or multiple values of the charge of the electron or high mass stable charged particles are all examples of experimentally demanding signatures. The talk will focus on the most recent results using 13 TeV pp collision data collected by the ATLAS detector. Prospects for HL-LHC will also be shown.

        Speaker: Stefano Giagu (Sapienza Universita e INFN, Roma I (IT))
      • 260
        Long-lived particles searches at LHCb

        The unique design of the LHCb detector with a flexible trigger and a precision vertex tracker, offers the possibility to search for long-lived particles with low masses and short lifetimes, in complementarity with other general-purpose detectors at the LHC.
        Searches have been performed at LHCb, in fully leptonic and semi-leptonic final states. In particular, searches for long-lived particles produced in pairs from an exotic Higgs boson decay, and a search for heavy neutral leptons from a W boson decay, will be presented.

        Speaker: Federico Leo Redi (EPFL - Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne (CH))
      • 261
        Search for a light Z′ at LHC in a neutrinophilic U(1) model

        We consider a neutrinophilic U(1) extension of the standard model (SM) which couples only to SM isosinglet neutral fermions, charged under the new group. The neutral fermions couple to the SM matter fields through Yukawa interactions. The neutrinos in the model get their masses from a standard inverse-seesaw mechanism while an added scalar sector is responsible for the breaking of the gauged U(1) leading to a light neutral gauge boson (Z′) which has minimal interaction with the SM sector. We study the phenomenology of having such a light Z′ in the context of neutrinophilic interactions as well as the role of allowing kinetic mixing between the new U(1) group with the SM hypercharge group. We show that current experimental searches allow for a very light Z′ if it does not couple to SM fields directly and highlight the search strategies at the LHC. We observe that multi-lepton final states in the form of (4l + E/ T ) and (3l + 2j + E/ T ) could be crucial in discovering such a neutrinophilic gauge boson lying in a mass range of 200–500 GeV.

        Speaker: anjan barik
      • 262
        Charming ALPs

        Axion-like particles (ALPs) are ubiquitous in models of new physics explaining some of the most
        pressing puzzles of the Standard Model. However, until relatively recently, little attention has been
        paid to its interplay with flavour. In this work, we study in detail the phenomenology of ALPs
        that exclusively interact with up-type quarks at the tree-level, which arise in some well-motivated
        ultra-violet completions such as QCD-like dark sectors or Froggatt-Nielsen type models of flavour.
        Our study is performed in the low-energy effective theory to highlight the key features of these
        scenarios in a model independent way. We derive all the existing constraints on these models and
        demonstrate how upcoming experiments at fixed-target facilities and the LHC can probe regions of
        the parameter space which are currently not excluded by cosmological and astrophysical bounds. We
        also emphasize how a future measurement of the currently unavailable meson decay D → π+invisible
        could complement these upcoming searches.

        Speaker: Christiane Scherb (JGU Mainz)
      • 263
        Looking for beyond the Standard Model interactions of neutrinos and light dark matter with secondary production

        The search for beyond the Standard Model interactions of neutrinos and other light new physics species is one of the most promising experimental targets, which, in the high-energy regime, is also currently less explored. In the talk, we will discuss novel prospects for such studies that will be opened up thanks to a new far-forward physics program at the LHC to be initiated with the FASER experiment. We will illustrate this for GeV-scale heavy neutral leptons (HNLs) that could be produced in neutrino scatterings mediated by the dipole or light vector portal, but also for long-lived dark photons, dark Higgs bosons, and stable dark matter particles of similar mass that can be produced in interaction right in front of the detector. Such a secondary production of new physics species would also extend the reach of the proposed MATHUSLA and SHiP detectors. In all cases, we find good discovery prospects of BSM physics.

        Speaker: Krzysztof Jodlowski (National Centre for Nuclear Research)
    • 15:30
      Coffee Break
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Ji-Bo He
      • 264
        Mixing and CP violation at LHCb

        The latest results of beauty and charm meson decays from LHCb are presented. This includes the latest time-integrated CP violation measurements with information on the (Kpi) puzzle and on the CKM angle gamma, and time-dependent CP violation measurements. In addition recent determinations of CKM elements, the legacy result on Bs mixing, and the first observation of the mass difference in the D0 system will be discussed.

        Speaker: Adam Davis (University of Manchester (GB))
      • 265
        Measurement of the very rare K+ to pi+ nu nubar decay

        The decay K+→π+ νν ̅, with a very precisely predicted branching ratio of less than 10-10, is among the best processes to reveal indirect effects of new physics.
        The NA62 experiment at CERN SPS is designed to study the K+→π+ νν ̅decay and to measure its branching ratio using a decay-in-flight technique. NA62 took data in 2016, 2017 and 2018, reaching the sensitivity of the Standard Model for the K+→π+ νν ̅decay by the analysis of the 2016 and 2017 data, and providing the most precise measurement of the branching ratio to date by the analysis of the 2018 data. This measurement is also used to set limits on BR(K+→π+X), where X is a scalar or pseudo-scalar particle.
        The final result of the K+→π+ νν ̅branching ratio measurement and its interpretation in terms of K+→π+ X decay from the analysis of the full 2016-2017-2018 data set is presented, and future plans and prospects reviewed.

        Speaker: Zuzana Kucerova (Comenius University (SK))
      • 266
        Search for π0 decays to invisible particles at the NA62 experiment

        A study of a sample of 4 109 tagged π0 mesons from K+→π+π0(γ) is performed at the NA62 experiment at CERN, searching for the decay of the π0 to invisible particles. No signal is observed in excess of the expected background fluctuations. An upper limit of 4.4 10−9 is set on the branching ratio at 90% C.L. improving on previous results by a factor of 60.

        Speaker: Alina Kleimenova
      • 267
        Physics Reach of Rare Charm Baryon Decays

        Rare $\vert \Delta c \vert=\vert \Delta u \vert=1$ processes constitute unique flavor probes in the up-sector of the Standard Model. Semileptonic FCNC decays of charmed baryons, such as $\Lambda_c\to p \mu^+\mu^-$, offer a large set of clean null test observables such as CP-asymmetries, lepton-universality ratios, missing energy modes, lepton flavor violating modes and angular observables. In these observables any signal cleanly indicates Physics Beyond the Standard Model. A variety of rare charm baryon modes exists ($\Lambda_c\to p \mu^+\mu^-,\,\Xi_c^{0,\,+}\to \Sigma^{0,\,+} \mu^+\mu^-,\,\Xi_c^0\to \Lambda^0 \mu^+\mu^-,\,\Omega_c^0\to \Xi^0 \mu^+\mu^-$) and complements similar analyses of charmed meson decays.
        Along with sizable charm production rates at current flavor facilities, null test searches provide a formidable road in the search for New Physics scenarios, such as leptoquarks, $Z^\prime$- or SUSY-models. We present an overview of null test opportunities with rare charm baryon decays and give sensitivities to New Physics contributions.

        Speaker: Marcel Golz (TU Dortmund)
      • 268
        Search for lepton number and flavour violation in K+ and pi0 decays

        The NA62 experiment at CERN collected a large sample of charged kaon decays into final states with multiple charged particles in 2016-2018. This sample provides sensitivities to rare decays with branching ratios as low as 10-11.
        Results from searches for lepton flavour/number violating decays of the charged kaon and the neutral pion to final states containing a lepton pair based on this data set are presented.

        Speaker: Lubos Bician (CERN)
      • 269
        New measurement of radiative decays at the NA62 Experiment at CERN

        The NA62 experiment at CERN reports new results from studies of radiative kaon decays K+ → pi0e+vg(Ke3g), using a data sample recorded in 2017-2018. The sample comprises O(100k) Ke3g candidates with sub-percent background contaminations. Preliminary results with the most precise measurement of the and branching ratios and T-asymmetry measurement in the Ke3g decay, are presented.

        Speaker: Dmitri Madigozhin (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (RU))
    • Formal SUSY Theories ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Dan Xie
      • 270
        Compactifying 5d superconformal field theories to 3d

        The study of the strong coupling behavior of quantum field theory is very challenging, with theories exhibiting interesting and mysterious strong coupling phenomena like dualities and symmetry enhancement. The tool of dimensional reduction, where the theories are realized through the compactification of a higher dimensional theory, can be used to give an organizing principle for these phenomena. In this talk I will describe the recent progress in the study of such relations between five dimensional SCFTs and three dimensional $\mathcal{N}=2$ theories. Specifically, I consider the compactification of the so-called rank $1$ Seiberg $E_{N_f+1}$ $5d$ SCFTs on tori and tubes with flux in their global symmetry, formulate a conjecture for the resulting $3d$ theories and put them to various consistency checks. This leads to many new and interesting cases of peculiar strong coupling behavior of $3d$ supersymmetric field theories like symmetry enhancement.

        Speaker: Gabi Zafrir (University of Milano-Bicocca)
      • 271
        5d SCFTs from singularities

        5d SCFTs can be constructed from M-theory on canonical threefold singularities. The Coulomb and Higgs branch information of the SCFT are encoded in the resolution and deformation of the singularity, respectively. I'm going to present the recent progress on isolated hypersurface singularities and non-isolated singularities.

        Speaker: Prof. Yinan Wang (Peking University)
      • 272
        Tetrahedron instantons

        I will describe my work arXiv:2106.11611 with Elli Pomoni and Wenbin Yan. We introduce and study tetrahedron instantons, which can be realized in string theory by D1-branes probing a configuration of intersecting D7-branes in flat spacetime with a nonzero constant background B-field. Physically they capture instantons on C^3 in the presence of the most general intersecting codimention-two supersymmetric defects. Moreover, we construct the tetrahedron instantons as particular solutions of general instanton equations in noncommutative field theory. We analyze the moduli space of tetrahedron instantons and discuss the geometric interpretations. We compute the instanton partition function, which lies between the higher-rank Donaldson-Thomas invariants on C^3 and the partition function of the magnificent four model.

        Speaker: Xinyu Zhang (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
      • 273
        Superconformal theories from S-fold geometries

        The term S-folds denotes F-theory compactifications which involve non-trivial S-duality transformations. In this talk I will discuss 4d N=2 preserving S-folds and the worldvolume theories on D3-branes probing them. They consist of two new infinite series of superconformal theories whose distinction lies in the discrete torsion carried by the S-fold and in the difference in the asymptotic holonomy of the gauge bundle on the 7-brane. These models are connected by an interesting web of RG flows and their Higgs branches provide new examples of instanton moduli spaces.

        Speaker: Simone Giacomelli (University of Oxford)
    • Grand Unified Theories ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Fei Wang (ZhengZhou University)
      • 274
        Some phenomenological aspects of 6D SUSY SO(10) with magnetic flux

        Supersymmetric SO(10) theory with extra abelian symmetry in six spacetime dimensions can explain the multiplicity of quarks and lepton flavours. Bulk superfields charged under extra U(1) give rise to multiple 4D fields through magnetic flux compactification. Details of how the realistic fermion mass pattern arises in such a framework will be discussed and its prediction for the heavy and light neutrino mass scale will be outlined. The framework also predicts specific flavour patterns in proton decay somewhat different from usual 4D SO(10) GUT models. The effective theory below the GUT scale is a two-Higgs-doublet model with a pair of Higgsino and leads to particular predictions for the scalar spectrum.

        Speaker: Ketan Patel (Physical Research Laboratory)
      • 275
        A high-quality axion from the non-minimal SU(6) GUT

        We propose an SU(6) GUT, which enjoys a global symmetry of SU(2)*U(1)_{PQ}. The GUT breaking to the SM gauge symmetry undergoes two stages. The second stage of symmetry breaking scale corresponds to the axion physics scale. By studying the Peccei-Quinn quality constraint, we show an upper bound to the axion decay constant to be consistent with the classical axion window. The QCD axion, which has a KSVZ-type coupling to the vector-like quarks, has a DFSZ-type effective di-photon couplings, and can be probed by the upcoming IAXO experiment. Some other issues of the SU(6) GUT will be discussed as well.

        Speaker: Dr NING CHEN (Nankai University)
      • 276
        Perturbativity aspects of the minimal SO(10) Higgs model

        We shall present a brand new study of the minimal renormalizable SO(10) Higgs model focusing on its perturbativity aspects. With an essentially complete grip on the one-loop corrections to its scalar spectrum one can identify the symmetry breaking chains featuring an intermediate SU(4)xSU(2)xU(1) symmetry as a practically unique option for a potentially realistic model building.

        Speaker: Dr Michal Malinský (IPNP, Charles University, Prague)
      • 277
        Towards the minimal non-supersymmetric E6 GUT

        Although the minimal supersymmetric GUT has been proposed already some
        years ago, its non-supersymmetric counterpart is, strangely enough,
        not yet known. In this talk I will present some attempts in constructing
        the minimal non-supersymmetric E6 scalar potential which leads to the SM
        at low energy. This includes Higgs representations 27 and 351’, as well
        as the more involved 650.

        Speaker: Borut Bajc (Jožef Stefan Institute)
      • 278
        Neutron-antineutron oscillation as a probe of baryogenesis

        Neutron-antineutron ($n$-$\bar{n}$) oscillation is a baryon number violating process for which new constraints will be set in future experiments at ESS and DUNE. We study the impact of a potential $n$-$\bar{n}$ oscillation discovery on the baryon asymmetry of the Universe in an effective field theory framework. We extend our analysis by a simplified model connected to GUT for one of two possible UV-complete topologies of the $n$-$\bar{n}$ operator, and make a connection to resonant production at the LHC. We find that successful baryogenesis can be realized in regions of parameter space that are currently unexplored but will be probed by future $n$-$\bar{n}$ oscillation experiments.

        Speaker: Kare Fridell (Technical University of Munich (TUM))
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Yungui Gong (Huazhong University of Science and Technology)
      • 279
        Constrain extra dimensions with shortcuts

        Extra dimensions are expected to solve some long-standing problems in the Standard Model of particle physics. Searching for their traces in our Universe helps to promote our understanding on the physics. Taking advantage of the source property of gravitational waves (GWs), extra dimensions might leave observable effects on GWs. Thus the observation of GWs becomes a new way to probe and study extra dimensions. In the report, we will shortly review the history and viewpoint of extra dimensions, traditional experiments on testing extra dimensions, and some researches on extra dimensions through GWs. We then introduce the conception of shortcuts, which is a new feature of GWs in extra dimensions. Finally, we shall show what we could learn on extra dimensions from detections of GW170817 and its counterpart GRB 170817A.

        Speaker: Zi-Chao Lin (Lanzhou University)
      • 280
        Gravitational Imprints from Heavy Kaluza-Klein Resonances

        We consider Kaluza-Klein (KK) resonances with masses $m_{\rm KK}$ at the multi-TeV scale, out of reach of LHC. The backreaction of the radion field on the gravitational metric is taken into account by using the superpotential formalism. The confinement/deconfinement first order phase transition leads to a gravitational wave stochastic background which mainly depends on the scale $m_{\rm KK}$ and the number of colors, $N$, in the dual theory. Its power spectrum peaks at a frequency that depends on the amount of tuning required in the electroweak sector. It turns out that the present and forthcoming gravitational wave observatories can probe scenarios where the KK resonances are very heavy.

        Speaker: Mariano Quiros Carcelen (The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology (BIST) (ES))
      • 281
        Imprints of black hole area quantization in gravitational waves.

        We argue that black hole area quantization, in the form predicted by Bekenstein and Mukhanov, could leave observable imprints in the gravitational-wave signal of a binary black hole merger by affecting the absorption properties of the black holes. These imprints include gravitational-wave echoes after the ringdown stage, and suppressed tidal heating during the inspiral phase. This phenomenology is within reach of future gravitatinal-wave detectors, and could be used to bound the fundamental quantum of black hole area.

        Speaker: Adrian del Rio Vega (Penn State)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR8C

      ZR8C

      Convener: Pujian Mao
      • 282
        Odd-dimensional analogue of the Euler characteristic

        When compact manifolds X and Y are both even dimensional, their Euler characteristics obey the Kunneth formula χ ( X × Y ) = χ ( X ) χ ( Y ) .In terms of the Betti numbers of b_p ( X ) , χ ( X ) =∑_p (-1 )^p b_p ( X ) , implying that χ(X) = 0 when X is odd dimensional. We seek a linear combination of Betti numbers, called ρ, that obeys an analogous formula ρ(X × Y ) = χ(X)ρ(Y ) when Y is odd dimensional. The unique solution is ρ(Y ) = − ∑_p (-1)^p p b_p(Y ). Physical applications include: (1) ρ → (−1)^m ρ under a generalized mirror map in d = 2m+1 dimensions, in analogy with χ → (−1)^m χ in d = 2m; (2) ρ appears naturally in compactifications of M-theory. For example, the 4-dimensional Weyl anomaly for M-theory on X^4 × Y^7 is given by χ(X^4)ρ(Y^7) = ρ(X^4 × Y^7) and hence vanishes when Y^7 is self-mirror. Since, in particular, ρ(Y ×S^1) = χ(Y ), this is consistent with the corresponding anomaly for Type IIA on X^4 ×Y^6, given by χ(X^4)χ(Y^6) = χ(X^4 ×Y^6), which vanishes when Y^6 is self-mirror; (3) In the partition function of p-form gauge fields, ρ appears in odd dimensions as χ does in even.

        Speaker: Leron Borsten
      • 283
        Three notions of brane gravity localisation

        Effectively generating a lower-dimensional theory of gravity or supergravity on a subsurface brane worldvolume within a noncompact transverse space requires certain special conditions for the transverse space structure. Three different scenarios emerge, depending crucially on the nature of boundary conditions that are imposed on solutions as one transversely approaches the brane worldvolume. Genuinely lower-dimensional behaviour at long worldvolume distances can be compatible with short-distance higher-dimensional structure, but this requires a specific type of boundary condition compatible with the existence of normalisable transverse-space zero modes is chosen.

        Speaker: Kellogg Sheffield Stelle (Imperial College (GB))
      • 284
        Non-relativistic Gravity and Supergravity

        In this talk I will show that Newtonian gravity is not the unique non-relativistic gravity theory that can be defined by taking a limit of (matter coupled) general relativity. I will discuss several extensions of Newtonian gravity including non-relativistic gravity theories involving geometries with a higher co-dimensional foliation and with non-zero torsion. Using these extensions, I will show how a non-relativistic limit of 10D supergravity can be defined that can be identified with the effective low-energy approximation of a non-relativistic superstring theory. Using this identification I will discuss several aspects of non-relativistic superstring theory using field theory techniques.

        Speaker: E.A. Bergshoeff (Rijksuniversiteit Groningen)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Kechen Wang (Wuhan University of Technology)
      • 285
        Feebly-interacting particles at the muon collider

        The search for new physics with very feeble interaction strength is stimulating a vibrant experimental program. This talk will present the opportunities that could be exploited at a future high-energy muon collider and highlight the experimental challenges arising from this specific collision environment. Finally, recent results studying the reach of such machine in models predicting long-lived charged winos and higgsinos will be presented.

        Speaker: Federico Meloni (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE))
      • 286
        Probing Dark Matter with ILC

        The International Linear Collider offers a number of unique opportunities for searches for dark matter and dark sector particles potentially related to realization of supersymmetry in Nature. The collider program will offer important capabilities, but also, the ILC will enable new fixed-target experiments using the high-energy electron and positron beams, both beam dump experiments and dedicated experiments using single beams. This talk will describe the expectations for these programs, which address all of the possible dark sector portals.

        Speaker: Aleksander Filip Zarnecki (University of Warsaw)
      • 287
        Probing a bino NLSP at lepton colliders

        We consider a scenario where light bino is the next-to-lightest supersymmetric particle (NLSP) and gravitino/axino is the lightest superysmmetric particle (LSP). For a bino mass less than or around hundred GeV, it can be pair produced at the future lepton colliders through t−channel slepton exchange, subsequently decaying into a gravitino/axino plus a photon. We study the prospects to look for such binos at the future colliders and find that a bino mass around 100 GeV can be probed at the 2σ (5σ) level for a slepton below 2 TeV (1.5 TeV) with a luminosity 5.6 ab−1. For a bino mass around 10 GeV, a slepton mass less than 4.5 TeV (3.5 TeV) can be probed at the 2σ (5σ) level, which is much beyond the reach of the LHC for direct slepton searches.

        Speaker: Dr mengchao zhang (IBS-CTPU)
      • 288
        Sensitivity to invisible scalar decays at CLIC

        An electron-positron Higgs factory is regarded as the highest-priority next large-scale collider facility. Among others, two linear collider projects are being considered: the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) and the International Linear Collider (ILC). Reaching energies at the TeV scale, both machines would allow us not only to study Higgs boson and top quark properties with very high precision but could also result in the direct or indirect discovery of New Physics. SM-like Higgs boson or new heavy scalar decays with the emission of invisible dark matter particles could be the only way to observe Beyond the Standard Model effects at achievable energy scales and establish the connection between the Standard Model and New Physics sectors.

        We studied the possibility of measuring the invisible Higgs boson and additional heavy scalar decays with CLIC running at 380 GeV and 1.5 TeV. The analysis is based on the WHIZARD event generation and fast simulation of CLIC detector response with DELPHES. We estimated the expected limits on the invisible decays of the 125 GeV Higgs boson, as well as the cross section limits for the production of an additional neutral scalar, assuming its invisible decays, as a function of its mass. The results obtained are one order of magnitude more stringent than the current limits coming from the LHC.

        Speaker: Mr Krzysztof Mekala (University of Warsaw)
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Eung Jin Chun (Korea Institute for Advanced Study)
      • 289
        Investigating New Physics Models with Signature of Same-Sign Diboson$+{E\!\!/}_{T}$

        We investigate the prospect of searching for new physics via the novel signature of same-sign diboson + ${E\!\!/}_{T}$ at current and future LHC. We study three new physics models: (i) natural SUSY models, (ii) type-III seesaw model and (iii) type-II seesaw/Georgi-Machacek model. In the first two class of models, this signature arises due to the presence of a singly-charged particle which has lifetime long enough to escape detection, while in the third model this signature originates resonantly from a doubly-charged particle produced along with two forward jets that, most likely, would escape detection. We analyze in great detail the discovery prospects of the signal in these three classes of models in the current as well as the upcoming runs of the LHC (such as HL-LHC and HE-LHC) by showing a distinction among these scenarios.

        Speaker: Dibyashree Sengupta (University of Oklahoma)
      • 290
        Minimal and non-minimal Universal Extra Dimension models in the light of LHC data at 13 TeV

        Universal Extra Dimension (UED) is a well-motivated and well-studied scenario. One of the main motivations is the presence of a dark matter (DM) candidate namely, the lightest level-1 Kaluza-Klein (KK) particle (LKP), in the particle spectrum of UED. The minimal version of UED (mUED) scenario is highly predictive with only two parameters namely, the radius of compactification and cut-off scale, to determine the phenomenology. Therefore, stringent constraint results from the WMAP/PLANCK measurement of DM relic density (RD) of the universe. The production and decays of level-1 quarks and gluons in UED scenarios give rise to multijet final states at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiment. We study the ATLAS search for multijet plus missing transverse energy signatures at the LHC with 13 TeV center of mass energy and 139 inverse femtobarn integrated luminosity. In view of the fact that the DM RD allowed part of mUED parameter-space has already been ruled out by the ATLAS multijet search, we move on to a less restricted version of UED namely, the non-minimal UED (nmUED), with non-vanishing boundary-localized terms (BLTs). The presence of BLTs significantly alters the dark matter as well as the collider phenomenology of nmUED. We obtain stringent bounds on the BLT parameters from the ATLAS multijet plus missing transverse energy search.

        Speaker: Mr Avnish . (Institute of Physics)
      • 291
        Segregating BSM models at Present and Future Colliders based on Spin and Isospin Representations

        Theories Beyond the Standard Model (BSM) address the outstanding issues of the Standard Model (SM). These theories predict new particles with different spin and isospin representations within a similar mass range.We consider one such model, the Leptoquarks, well motivated by various anomalies observed in the flavour sector. These particles have integral spins, 0 or 1, and belong to either of the singlet, doublet or triplet representation of the weak isospin. We showed how the spin of a leptoquark pair produced at LHC and FCC, in a $2 \to 2$ scattering can be distinguished from their angular signature at the rest frame of interaction[1]. Such frame can be successfully reconstructed from their decay products. We have also explored the other observables which indicate the spin of the leptoquarks. Once the spin determined, we consider the associated production of leptoquarks with a photon in electron-hadron colliders like LHeC and FCC-he where the notion of the Radiation Amplitude Zero (RAZ) has been exploited to determine the weak isospin representation of the leptoquarks[2]. We have proposed a strategy to segregate the signals of different member of the same isospin multiplets based on electromagnetic charge of the jets, originating from their respective decays. Finally, SM Backgrounds have been estimated and the signal significance for respective processes are calculated to present the reach of these colliders.

        References
        [1] P. Bandyopadhyay, S. Dutta, M. Jakkapu and A. Karan,
        [arXiv:2007.12997 [hep-ph]].

        [2] P. Bandyopadhyay, S. Dutta and A. Karan,
        Eur. Phys. J. C 81 (2021) no.4, 315

        Speaker: Dr Saunak Dutta (Delhi University)
      • 292
        Revisiting Type-II see-saw: Present Limits and Future Prospects at LHC

        The type-II see-saw mechanism based on the annexation of the Standard Model by weak gauge triplet of scalar field proffers a natural explanation for the very minuteness of neutrino masses. Noting that the phenomenology for the degenerate triplet Higgs spectrum is substantially contrasting than that for the non-degenerate one, we perform a comprehensive study for a wide range of the model parameter space parametrised by triplet Higgs vacuum expectation value ($v_t$), the mass-splitting between the doubly and singly charged Higgs (∆m) and the doubly charged Higgs mass ($m_{H^{±±}}$). Considering all the Drell-Yan production mechanisms, some of which are often forsaken by both CMS and ATLAS, we derive the most stringent 95% CL lower limit on the doubly charged Higgs mass for a wide range of $v_t$ and ∆m by implementing already existing direct collider searches by CMS and ATLAS. Further, we propose a search strategy that yields improved limits for a significant part of the parameter space of $v_t$ and ∆m.

        Speaker: Saiyad Ashanujjaman (Institute of Physics, Bhubaneswar)
      • 293
        Chasing the Higgs shape at HL-LHC

        The Higgs boson may well be a composite scalar with a finite extension in space. Owing to the momentum dependence of its couplings the imprints of such a composite pseudo Goldstone Higgs may show up in the tails of various kinematic distributions at the LHC, distinguishing it from an elementary state. From the bottom up we construct the momentum dependent form factors to capture the interactions of the composite Higgs boson with the weak gauge bosons. We demonstrate their impact in the differential distributions of various kinematic parameters for the pp->ZH->llbb
        channel. We show that this channel can provide an important avenue to probe the Higgs' substructure at the HL-LHC.

        Speaker: Tirtha Sankar Ray (IIT Kharagpur, India)
      • 294
        Jet flavour tagging for the ATLAS Experiment

        The ability to identify jets stemming from the hadronisation of b-quarks (b-jets) is crucial for the physics program of ATLAS. The higher pileup conditions and the growing interest for measurements including c-jets and for searches in the high transverse momentum regime make the task more and more complex. The algorithms responsible for establishing the jet’s flavour are evolving quickly, exploiting powerful multivariate and deep machine learning techniques. Since the primary input to any such algorithm consists of charged-particle tracks within the jet, the identification of jets from heavy-flavor decays depends strongly on the tracking efficiency and resolution and the robustness of the track-jet association logic. Flavour-tagging techniques in ATLAS will be reviewed, presenting the state-of-the-art in terms of algorithms, with focus on the capability to reconstruct and select the relevant tracks produced in the ATLAS Inner Detector.

        Speaker: Jonathan Shlomi (Weizmann Institute of Science (IL))
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Hao Zhang (Theoretical Division, Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 295
        Probing heavy scalar in supersymmetric final states

        We explore the supersymmetric (susy) final states coming from MSSM Higgs decaying via neutralinos and charginos, collectively called electroweakinos. They give rise to mono-(h/Z) + missing energy final states. We consider backgrounds coming from Standard Model (SM) and susy processes. The susy backgrounds have not been considered in this kind of analysis earlier, which comes from direct electroweakino production via SM mediators. Our study shows that the susy backgrounds have important ramifications in these analysis. They have appreciable production rates and significant kinematic overlap with the signal. The case of wino-like long-lived chargino decaying from MSSM Higgs is also discussed. These search can improve the sensitivity in disappearing charged track searches at the LHC because of the boost received from heavy Higgs bosons.

        Speaker: Dr Amit Adhikary (Centre for High Energy Physics, Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, India)
      • 296
        Probing Theories with Reduced Couplings at Future Colliders

        The search for renormalization group invariant relations among parameters to all orders in perturbation theory constitutes the basis of the reduction of couplings concept. Reduction of couplings can be achieved in certain $N=1$ supersymmetric grand unified theories and few of them can even become finite at all loops. The resulting theories in which successful reduction of couplings has been achieved so far include: (i) a reduced version of the minimal $N=1$ $SU(5)$ model, (ii) an all-loop finite $N=1$ $SU(5)$ model, (iii) a two-loop finite $N=1$ $SU(3)^3$ model and finally (vi) a reduced version of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model. We present a number of benchmark scenarios for each model and investigate their observability at existing and future hadron colliders. The heavy supersymmetric spectra featured by each of the above models are found to be beyond the reach of the 14 TeV HL-LHC. It is also found that the reduced version of the MSSM is already ruled out by the LHC searches for heavy neutral MSSM Higgs bosons. In turn, the discovery potential of the 100 TeV FCC-hh is investigated and found that large parts of the predicted spectrum of these models can be tested.
        In this talk we will present results and updates from our recent work (Eur.Phys.J.C 81 (2021) 2,185: arXiv:2011.07900 [hep-ph]).

        Speaker: Grigorios Patellis
      • 297
        Searching for Compressed Top Partners in the CMS Open Data

        A cluster of soft displaced tracks corresponds to the dark matter co-annihilation regime. The long-lived regime is, in particular, motivated by the unexplored top partner physics. The background in this regime is extremely challenging to model using a traditional simulation method. We demonstrate the feasibility of handling the formidable background using the CMS Open Data. We perform this analysis to search for compressed and long-lived top partners in the 8 TeV CMS Open Data events with the integrated luminosity of 11.6 fb$^{-1}$ and obtain new limits. With 15-30 GeV mass splitting between the top partner and the DM candidate, we exclude the top partner mass below 350 GeV, which is more stringent than the ATLAS and CMS results using 8 TeV data with 20 fb$^{-1}$ luminosity. Our study also shows that the CMS Open Data can be a powerful tool to help physicists explore non-conventional new physics and even enable deriving new limits on exotic signals from data directly.

        Speaker: Haipeng An (Tsinghua University)
      • 298
        Long lived NMSSM :Analysing some long lived NSLP signatures in the NMSSM

        We analyse NMSSM scenarios containing a singlino LSP dark matter. By systematically considering several NLSP compositions, we identify and classify regions of parameter space where NLSP exhibits a long lifetime due to suppressed couplings and leads to a displaced vertex signature at the colliders. We furthermore construct viable production and decay processes at the HL-LHC to search for such displaced vertices.

        Speaker: Amandip De (Indian Institute of Science)
      • 299
        Search for long-lived charginos based on a disappearing-track signature with the ATLAS experiment

        The disappearing track signature, which arises from the decay of a long-lived charged particle to a neutral particle and particles with momenta below the reconstruction thresholds, is characteristic of many well-motivated models for physics beyond the standard model, including anomaly mediated SUSY breaking models, natural models of SUSY with light higgsinos, and dark matter models with mass-degenerate multiplets. This talk presents a search for disappearing tracks in the ATLAS detector using the full Run 2 dataset. The results are interpreted in the context of long-lived charginos produced either directly or in the cascade decay of heavy prompt gluino states.

        Speaker: Paul Gessinger (CERN)
      • 300
        ATLAS searches for supersymmetry with long-lived particles

        Various Supersymmetry (SUSY) scenarios, including split SUSY and anomaly or gravity-mediated SUSY-breaking scenarios, lead to signatures with long-lived particles. Searches for these processes may target either the long lived particle itself or its decay products at a significant distance from the collision point. These signatures provide interesting technical challenges due to their special reconstruction requirements as well as their unusual backgrounds. This talk will present recent results in long-lived SUSY searches using ATLAS Run 2 data.

        Speaker: Emily Anne THOMPSON (DESY)
    • Plenary: V Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Qing Wang (Tsinghua University)
      • 301
        Higgs measurements at ATLAS and CMS

        Since the Higgs boson discovery in 2021, a continuous effort has been made to study several of its properties like the coupling strengths, spin and charge-parity quantum numbers. The Higgs boson is not only a key ingredient of the Standard Model of particle physics to understand the mechanism which gives mass to other particles, but also to open new frontiers beyond the Standard Model.

        The most recent measurements on the Higgs sector by ATLAS and CMS experiments at the LHC will be presented in this talk, including differential and Simplified Template cross-section measurements as well as coupling to the second generation fermions and di-Higgs production searches.

        Speaker: Antonio De Maria (Nanjing University (CN))
      • 302
        BSM Higgs searches at ATLAS and CMS
        Speaker: Aruna Nayak (National Institute of Science Education and Research (IN))
      • 303
        Other searches at ATLAS and CMS
        Speaker: Rachid Mazini (Academia Sinica (TW))
      • 304
        SUSY squark/gluino searches at ATLAS and CMS
        Speaker: Luigi Longo (CERN)
      • 305
        SUSY chargino/neutralino searches at ATLAS and CMS
        Speaker: Teruki Kamon (Texas A & M University (US))
    • 22:05
      Coffee Break
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Anzhong Wang (Baylor University)
      • 306
        On the origin of the LIGO "mystery" noise and the high energy particle physics desert

        One of the most ubiquitous features of quantum theories is the existence of zero-point fluctuations in their ground states. For massive quantum fields, these fluctuations decouple from infrared observables in ordinary field theories. However, there is no "decoupling theorem" in Quantum Gravity, and we recently showed that the vacuum stress fluctuations of massive quantum fields source a red spectrum of metric fluctuations given by ∼ mass5/frequency in Planck units. I show that this signal is consistent with the reported unattributed persistent noise, or "mystery" noise, in the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), for the Standard Model of Particle Physics. If this interpretation is correct, then it implies that: 1) This will be a fundamental irreducible noise for all gravitational wave interferometers, and 2) There is no fundamental weakly-coupled massive particle heavier than those in the Standard Model.

        Speaker: Niayesh Afshordi
      • 307
        Tentative evidence for echoes from GW190521

        GW190521 in a class of its own is a different signal, being the most massive BBH event observed to date. The exceptionally dominant ringdown of this event and its large mass makes it a plausible candidate to search for GW echoes. In this letter we perform an unprecedented search in two different platforms, satisfying a physical template (matched filtering and MCMC with PyCBC) and model agnostic search (Coherent WaveBurst-cWB). We expect the existence of post-merger horizon mode frequencies $m\times\Omega_{H}$ (with m=2 for quadrupolar gravitational radiation) as a consequence of BBH merger non-linear dynamics and Planck scale Boltzmann reflection near the would be event horizon. In this search, with a careful bayesian inference approach using dynamic nested sampling MCMC algorithm, we found $ln\mathcal{B}^{\rm{IMRE}}_{\rm{IMR}}= +2.0$ evidence for such frequencies and their echoes in GW190521. On the other hand, the results obtained via cWB supports that main event and the echo are preferably co-localized, $\mathcal{B}^{\rm{co-loc}}_{\rm{non co-loc}}\approx 7.1$. Additionally, accounting for all the "look-elsewhere" effects, we find tentative evidence for GW echoes at false detection probability of $2.5\times 10^{-3}$, using cWB pipeline.

        Speaker: Jahed Abedi (University of Stavanger)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Xing Huang (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee)
      • 308
        Gravitino production during inflation

        In this talk I will review the dynamics of supergravity models in inflation, focusing especially on the amplification of the modes of the gravitino induced by the time-dependent background. In particular, I will show that in certain well-motivated models in supergravity, gravitinos are produced during inflation, and in their turn source scalar metric perturbations. This process modifies the tensor-to-scalar ratio, allowing to revive models of inflation that, in the absence of supersymmetry, are ruled out by observation.

        Speaker: Lorenzo Sorbo (University of Massachusetts, Amherst)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Gauthier Durieux (CERN)
      • 309
        Electroweak Precision Physics at the FCC-ee

        The Future Circular Collider with electron-positron beams (FCC-ee) should provide improvements of the electroweak precision measurement concerning Z, W, H, and their masses by a large factor over the present status. The unparalleled experimental precision would open, via Electroweak loop corrections, a broad discovery potential for new, at least weakly interacting particles up to high energy scales. The Z boson mass and width, as well as the Z to bb partial width, and the forward-backward asymmetries for leptons and quarks can be measured with high precision with the run at the Z pole, where the instantaneous luminosity is expected to be five to six orders of magnitude larger than LEP. As a result, a precise determination of the effective weak mixing angle, as well as of the running electromagnetic coupling can be extracted directly from the data. Considerable improvements of the strong coupling constant determination will be possible with the measurements of the hadronic widths of the Z and W bosons.

        Speaker: Jan Eysermans (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US))
      • 310
        Longitudinally polarized ZZ scattering at the Muon Collider

        Measuring longitudinally polarized vector boson scattering in, e.g., the ZZ channel is a promising way to investigate the unitarization scheme from the Higgs and possible new physics beyond the Standard Model. However, at the LHC, it demands the end of the HL-LHC lifetime luminosity, 3000/fb, and advanced data analysis technique to reach the discovery threshold due to its small production rates. Instead, there could be great potential for future colliders. In this paper, we perform a Monte Carlo study and examine the projected sensitivity of longitudinally polarized ZZ scattering at a TeV scale muon collider. We conduct studies at 14 TeV and 6 TeV muon colliders respectively and find that a 5 standard deviation discovery can be achieved at a 14 TeV muon collider, with 3000/fb of data collected. While a 6 TeV muon collider can already surpass HL-LHC, reaching 2 standard deviations with around 4000/fb of data. The effect from lepton isolation and detector granularity is also discussed, which may be more obvious at higher energy muon colliders, as the leptons from longitudinally polarized Z decays tend to be closer.

        Speaker: Mr Tianyi Yang (Peking University (CN))
      • 311
        Precision Test of the Muon-Higgs Coupling at a High-energy Muon Collider

        An open question in particle physics is whether the Higgs mechanism generates the masses of all the fermions by the Yukawa interactions. We propose to scrutinize the muon Yukawa coupling at a high-energy muon collider. By the subtle interplay between the muon Yukawa coupling in the high-energy production of multiple (vector and Higgs) bosons, we show that it is possible to measure the muon Yukawa coupling to an accuracy of ten percent for a 10 TeV collider and a few percent for a 30 TeV machine.

        Speaker: Keping Xie (University of Pittsburgh)
    • Neutrino Physics and Leptons ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Claudia Hagedorn (Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular (IFIC))
      • 312
        Can CE$\nu$NS experiments probe Dirac vs Majorana nature of neutrinos?

        Coherent Elastic Neutrino Nucleus Scattering (CE$\nu$NS) provide a novel window to probe new physics connected with the well established non-vanishing neutrino masses. In this talk we will discuss how in the presence of a transition magnetic moment of neutrinos the CE𝜈NS experiments have the potential to shed light on the nature of neutrinos: Dirac vs Majorana. In particular, we will take the NUCLEUS experiment as an example to demonstrate that through a study of differential energy distribution of the final states the CEνNS experiments can potentially achieve such a feat.

        Speaker: Chandan Hati (Technische Universität München, James-Franck-Straße 1, D-85748 )
      • 313
        Recent Astroparticle and Beyond the Standard Model Results from MicroBooNE

        MicroBooNE is an 85-ton active mass liquid argon time projection chamber (LArTPC) at Fermilab. Its excellent calorimetry and resolution (both spatial and energy), along with its exposure to two neutrino beamlines make it a powerful detector not just for neutrino physics, but also for Beyond the Standard Model (BSM) physics and astroparticle physics. The experiment has competitive sensitivity to heavy neutral leptons possibly present in the leptonic decay modes of kaons, and also to scalar bosons that could be produced in kaon decays in association with pions. In addition, MicroBooNE serves as a platform for prototyping searches for rare events in the future Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE). This talk will explore the capabilities of LArTPCs for BSM physics and astroparticle physics and highlight some recent results from MicroBooNE.

        Speaker: David Marsden (University of Manchester)
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Iacopo Vivarelli (University of Sussex (GB))
      • 314
        Searches for sleptons with the ATLAS detector

        Many supersymmetry models feature sleptons with masses below a TeV. Light sleptons can arise in well motivated dark matter models as well as proposed solutions to the observed anomalous muon magnetic moment. The talk presents recent ATLAS results from searches for slepton pair production in a variety of final states, including models in which R-parity is either conserved or violated, and results from searches in which sleptons appear in cascade decades from heavier supersymmetric particles.

        Speaker: Lorenzo Rossini (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE))
      • 315
        Search for supersymmetry in compressed scenario's with the CMS detector

        Results from the CMS experiment are presented for supersymmetry searches targeting so-called compressed spectra. Those have small mass splittings between the different supersymmetric partners. Such a spectrum presents unique experimental challenges. This talk describes the new techniques utilized by CMS to address such difficult scenarios. The searches use proton-proton collision data with luminosity up to 137 fb-1 at the center of mass energy of 13 TeV collected during the LHC Run 2.

        Speaker: Denis Rathjens (Texas A & M University (US))
      • 316
        Prospects for Chargino Searches and Measurements at the ILC

        The lighter chargino is a prime candidate to be the next-to-lightest SUSY particle (the NLSP). Even if up to now data from the LHC have not shown evidence of SUSY, the complementary nature of physics with e+e- collisions still offers many interesting scenarios in which SUSY can be discovered at the ILC. In this contribution we present the capability of the ILC for excluding or, respectively, discovering SUSY in the most challenging SUSY channels, such as higgsinos and winos at low mass differences. We also include evaluations of precision of model-parameter measurements as well as the constraints that these measurements put on parts of the sparticle-spectrum beyond direct reach, and how they contribute to discriminate between different models of SUSY breaking at high scale. The impact of low Pt hadrons from gamma-gamma beam induced interactions on the analysis of low deltaM higgsino processes is also presented. For the first time it is shown that, besides the fragile signature of such processes, they can be discovered and measured at the ILC even in presence of those overlay hadrons. The studies are based on the full detector simulation of the ILD concept and realistic accelerator conditions.

        Speaker: Maria Teresa Nunez Pardo de Vera (DESY)
    • Theories of New Strong Dynamics ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Giacomo Cacciapaglia
      • 317
        Naural composite Higgs model

        We present a simple mechanism for generating a Higgs quartic in composite Higgs models without a corresponding quadratic term. The extra quartic will originate from a Higgs dependent kinetic mixing between additional fermionic states. The mechanism can be naturally embedded to models with maximal symmetry as well as Twin Higgs models. The resulting Twin Higgs models will have a fully natural realistic Higgs potential, where the quartic mechanism will serve as the only source for the Z_2 breaking, while the top and gauge sectors can remain exactly Z_2 invariant.

        Speaker: Teng Ma
      • 318
        Partial Compositness from Partial Unification

        Providing an Ultra-Violet completion valid up to the Planck scale is of paramount importance to validate the composite Higgs paradigm, on a par with supersymmetry. We propose the first complete framework, based on partial unification of a confining hypercolor gauge group with the Standard Model color group, where couplings of the standard model fermions are mediated by both gauge and scalar bosons. We demonstrate our approach by providing an explicit model based on a Techni-Pati-Salam (TPS) unification, SU(8)PS×SU(2)L×SU(2)R , able to generate masses for all fermion generations, including neutrinos, via partial compositeness. The TPS scenario features an Sp(4) hypercolor group, and lattice studies will be crucial to validate the model.

        Speaker: Vatani Shahram (IP2I Lyon)
      • 319
        A road to a beyond the Standard Model model

        We describe examples of renormalizable field theories where the breaking of chiral symmetry at the UV cutoff leaves behind at low energy dynamically generated elementary particle masses in a way alternative to the Higgs mechanism. In this scenario 1) the scale of the elementary particle masses is set by the RGI scale of the theory 2) masses are kept ``small'' owing to an enhanced chiral symmetry enjoyed by the massless theory, thus solving the 't Hooft naturalness problem, 3) in order to match the experimental value of the top mass, a super-strongly interacting sector, gauge-invariantly coupled to standard matter, needs to exist with an RGI scale, Λ𝑇≫Λ𝑄𝐶𝐷, of the order of a few TeV's, 4) the peculiar dependence of the non-perturbatively generated masses upon the gauge couplings is such that it may offer a hint to solve the mass hierarchy problem, 5) Λ𝑇 sets the order of magnitude of the electro-weak scale, 6) the 125 GeV resonance recently identified at LHC is interpreted as a 𝑊+𝑊−/𝑍𝑍 composite state bound by exchanges of super-strongly interacting particles to which the electro-weak bosons are coupled,
        7) at (momenta)2≪Λ2𝑇 the couplings of the composite Higgs boson with quark, leptons and electro-weak bosons deviate from those of the Standard Model by O(𝛼𝑊) corrections, 8) with a reasonable choice of particle content, a theory extending the Standard Model with the inclusion of the new super-strong sector exhibits gauge coupling unification at a scale ∼1018GeV making the proton life time comfortably larger then the present limit of 1.7×1034 years.

        Speaker: Giancarlo Rossi
    • Plenary: VI Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Jin-Min Yang (ITP, CAS)
      • 320
        Neutrino masses and Yukawa interactions
        Speaker: Zhi-zhong Xing (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 321
        Solar WIMP Search with the IceCube Neutrino Observatory
        Speaker: Jeffrey Lazar (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
      • 322
        Galactic Probes of Dark-Sector Physics
        Speaker: Mariangela Lisanti (Princeton University)
      • 323
        Progresses of the Dark Matter Particle Explorer

        The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) is a satellite-borne, calorimetric type, high-energy-resolution space cosmic ray and gamma-ray detector. It was launched in December 2015 and has been stably operating for more than five years. Its three major scientific objectives are dark matter indirect detection, cosmic ray physics and gamma-ray astronomy. Precise measurements of the all-electron, proton and Helium spectra in wide energy ranges have been obtained, shedding new light on the research of cosmic ray physics and dark matter properties. We will also present the current status of the mission and its recent physical results.

        Speaker: Qiang Yuan (Purple Mountain Observatory, CAS)
    • 09:40
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Yang Bai (University of Wisconsin, Madison)
      • 324
        (In)elastic Boosted Dark Matter Search Prospects at DUNE

        The far detector of the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) comprising four liquid argon time projection chambers (LArTPCs) totaling 70-kton mass will be installed at a depth of 1,500 m at the Sanford Underground Research Facility. Thanks to its large volume and the LArTPC-based precision imaging capability, the DUNE far detector can probe signals of cosmic origin. Of these, boosted dark matter has been receiving a lot of attention as a plausible thermal dark matter scenario beyond the weakly interacting massive particle. We discuss the signal detection prospects of boosted dark matter at the DUNE far detector, taking solar-captured boosted dark matter and galactic inelastic boosted dark matter as concrete examples. In addition to the drastic cosmic background reduction due to the underground detector location, we argue that kinematic features arising in the unique boosted dark matter signatures can be readily captured by the far detector, strongly reducing contamination from neutrino-sourced backgrounds in these searches.

        Speaker: Doojin Kim (Texas A&M University)
      • 325
        Prospects for Low Mass Dark Matter Searches at DUNE

        Design goals for future neutrino experiments, including high-intensity proton beams and precise detectors, provide an opportunity to explore physics beyond the standard model. Dark matter accounts for 27% of our universe, but it’s particle nature remains to be uncovered, and many efforts have been made to elucidate the properties of dark matter.
        The DUNE experiment uses high-intensity 120 GeV proton beams and a target system made out of graphite. The high-intensity proton beam interactions in the target will produce copious amounts of photons. Through vector portal processes, these photons may couple to dark photons that subsequently decay to dark matter at the sub-GeV mass scale and its footprints can be detected by a precision Near Detector complex located at 574m downstream of the target facility.
        In this presentation, I will discuss the concept and method of the analysis searching for low mass dark matter in DUNE, and present estimated sensitivities for this search, along with prospects for further improvements in this type of probes.

        Speaker: Wooyoung Jang (Texas U, Arlington)
      • 326
        Lepton Number Violating Electron Recoils at XENON1T and PandaX by the U(1)B-L Model with Non-Standard Interactions

        I will introduce an SU(3)C × SU(2)L × U(1)Y × U(1)B-L model, in which the neutrino masses and mixing can be generated via Type-I seesaw mechanism after U(1)B-L breaking. A light mediator emerges and enables non-standard interaction that violates the lepton number. It shows that the non-standard interaction leads to low energy recoil events that is consistent with the observed KeV range electron recoil excess at the XENON1T and PandaX experiment . Observational bounds on the nonstandard couplings will be discussed.

        Speaker: Yugen Lin (Institute of High Energy Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 327
        Neutrino and Axion Astronomy with Dark Matter Experiments

        Beyond their unprecedented sensitivity to dark matter (DM), as I will demonstrate, large direct detection experiments constitute impressive neutrino telescopes. This opens a new window into astronomy, leading to possible insights into major problems such as the origin of supermassive black holes. Furthermore, DM experiments can be exploited as novel tools in multi-messenger astronomy for exploration of new physics. I will discuss detection of relativistic axions from transient astrophysical sources (e.g. axion star explosions), which can lead to new insights into the fundamental axion potential.

        Speaker: Volodymyr Takhistov
    • Electroweak, Top quark, and Higgs Physics ZR2

      ZR2

      Conveners: Jianming Qian (University of Michigan (US)), Qiang Li (Peking University (CN))
      • 328
        Higgs boson measurements in its decays into bosons with the ATLAS experiment

        With the full LHC Run 2 pp collision dataset collected at 13 TeV, very detailed measurements of Higgs boson properties can be performed using its decays into bosons. This talk presents measurements of Higgs boson properties using decays into bosons and their combination with fermionic decays, including production mode cross sections and simplified template cross sections, as well as their interpretations.

        Speaker: Rafael Coelho Lopes De Sa (University of Massachusetts (US))
      • 329
        Searches for low- and high-mass Higgs-like resonances with the ATLAS detector

        Several theories beyond the Standard Model predict the existence of new particles decaying into pairs of gauge bosons. These states generally have masses larger than that of the Higgs boson, while some theories predict resonances with masses smaller than it. The latest ATLAS results on searches for such resonances in final states with leptons and photons based on pp collision data collected at 13 TeV will be presented.

        Speaker: Shuo Han (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US))
      • 330
        Electroweak Restoration at the LHC and Beyond: The $Vh$ Channel

        The LHC is exploring electroweak (EW) physics at the scale EW symmetry is broken. As the LHC and new high energy colliders push our understanding of the Standard Model to ever-higher energies, it will be possible to probe not only the breaking of but also the restoration of EW symmetry. We propose to observe EW restoration in double EW boson production via the convergence of the Goldstone boson equivalence theorem. This convergence is most easily measured in the vector boson plus Higgs production, $Vh$, which is dominated by the longitudinal polarizations. We define EW restoration by carefully taking the limit of zero Higgs vacuum expectation value (vev). EW restoration is then measured through the ratio of the $p^h_T$ distributions between $Vh$ production in the Standard Model and Goldstone boson plus Higgs production in the zero vev theory, where $p^h_T$ is the Higgs transverse momentum. As EW symmetry is restored, this ratio converges to one at high energy. We present a method to extract this ratio from collider data. With a full signal and background analysis, we demonstrate that the 14 TeV HL-LHC can confirm that this ratio converges to one to 40% precision while at the 27 TeV HE-LHC the precision will be 6%. We also investigate statistical tests to quantify the convergence at high energies. Our analysis provides a roadmap for how to stress test the Goldstone boson equivalence theorem and our understanding of spontaneously broken symmetries, in addition to confirming the restoration of EW symmetry.

        Speaker: Samuel Lane (University of Kansas)
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Yuming Wang (Nankai University)
      • 331
        New physics in $b\rightarrow se^+e^-$: A model independent analysis

        The lepton universality violating flavor ratios $R_K/R_{K^*}$ indicate new physics either in $b \to s \mu^+ \mu^-$ or in $b \to s e^+ e^-$ or in both. If the new physics is only $b \to s e^+ e^-$ transition, the corresponding new physics operators, in principle, can have any Lorentz structure. In this work, we perform a model independent analysis of new physics only in $b \to se^+e^-$ decay by considering effective operators either one at a time or two similar operators at a time. We include all the measurements in $b\rightarrow se^+e^-$ sector along with $R_K/R_{K^*}$ in our analysis. We show that various new physics scenarios with vector/axial-vector operators can account for $R_K/R_{K^*}$ data but those with scalar/pseudoscalar operators and with tensor operators can not. We also show that the azimuthal angular observable $P_1$ in $B \to K^* e^+ e^-$ decay is most suited to discriminate between the different allowed solutions.

        Speaker: Suman Kumbhakar (IISc Bangalore)
      • 332
        A Flavorful Composite Higgs Model : Connecting B anomalies with the hierarchy problem

        Lack of new states at the TeV scale challenges all kinds of solutions to the hierarchy problem but the current B anomalies might be a new guidance. One possible solution to the neutral current B anomalies is a TeV-scale $Z’$ boson of the broken $U(1)_F$ gauged flavor symmetry, which might implies the connection between the two problems. In this talk, I will realize this idea based on a $SU(4)/Sp(4)$ composite Higgs model. The symmetry breaking by the strong dynamics introduces the composite Higgs doublet as pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone bosons. At the same time, the $U(1)_F$ gauged flavor symmetry as a subgroup of $SU(4)$ is also broken by the strong dynamics, which introduced a $Z’$ boson at the TeV scale as desired. The allowed parameter space to explain the B anomalies without violating other experimental constraints is probed. The UV origin of the $U(1)_F$ flavor symmetry will also be discussed.

        Speaker: Yi Chung (University of California, Davis)
      • 333
        Solving flavor anomalies in the 2HDM with flavor symmetries

        The $3.1 \sigma$ $R_K$ anomaly after Moriond 2021 and $3.3 \sigma$ $\Delta a_\mu$ from Fermilab Muon g-2 Experiment implicate that the lepton flavor universality violation (LFUV) may play a role in the exploration of new physics. Aiming at solving these flavor anomalies both in quark and lepton sectors, a specific Two-Higgs Doublet Model (2HDM) with particular U(1) gauge symmetry, which is designed to get rid of the redundancy in generic 2HDM-III Yukawa couplings, is proposed and investigated. Among three additional new particles in the flavor gauged 2HDM, FCNC processes can be induced by heavy neutral scalar and Z’ only in down-type quark sector, which provide solutions to anomalies in $b \to s \ell \bar{\ell}$ and anomalous magnetic dipole moment (AMDM) for leptons. The charged Higgs, on the other hand, explains anomalies in $b \to c \ell \nu$ processes. Combining other typical flavor observables, the allowed parameter space for explaining all the three different types of flavor anomalies, within one consistent UV-complete model, can be obtained.

        Speaker: Prof. Fanrong Xu (Jinan University)
      • 334
        Analysis of $B_c \to D^{(*)}\tau \bar \nu_\tau$ processes

        We present a compressive study on rare semileptonic $B_c \to D^{(*)}\tau \bar \nu_\tau$ decays involving $b \to u \tau \bar \nu_\tau$ quark level transitions in an effective field theory approach. We consider the presence of an additional (pseudo)vector and (pseudo)scalar type interactions which can be either complex or real and constrain the new couplings using the existing data on $R_{D^{(*)}}$, $R_{J/\psi}$, $R_\pi^l$, Br($B_{u,c} \to \tau \bar \nu_\tau$) and Br($B \to\pi \tau \bar \nu_\tau$) parameters. In order to segregate the sensitivity of new coefficients, we check the effects of these couplings on the branching ratios, lepton non-universality and various angular observables of $B_c \to D^{(*)}\tau \bar \nu_\tau$ processes.

        Speaker: Dr Suchismita Sahoo (Central University of Karnataka)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Yu Gao (Institute of High Energy Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 335
        Probing the minimal $U(1)_X$ model at future electron-positron colliders via the fermion pair-production channel

        The minimal $U(1)_X$ extension of the Standard Model (SM) is a well-motivated new physics scenario, where the anomaly cancellation requirement dictates the new neutral gauge boson ($Z^\prime$) couplings with the SM fermions in terms of two scalar charges ($x_H$ and $x_\Phi$). In this paper, we investigate the SM charged fermion pair production mechanism for different values of these scalar charges in the $U(1)_X$ scenario at future electron-positron colliders, i.e. $e^+e^-\to f\bar{f}$. Apart from the standard photon and $Z$ boson exchange for this process, this model features a $t$-channel (or both $s$ and $t$-channel for $f=e^-$) $Z^\prime$-boson exchange, which interferes with the SM processes. Considering the dilepton and dijet signatures from the heavy resonance we estimate the bounds on the U$(1)_X$ coupling $(g^\prime)$ and the $Z^\prime$ mass $(M_{Z^\prime})$. Considering the LEP-II results and prospective International Linear Collider (ILC) bounds on the effective scale for the four fermion interaction we estimate the reach on $M_{Z^\prime}/g^\prime$ for different center of mass energies. We study the angular distributions, forward-backward $(\mathcal{A}_{\rm{FB}})$, left-right $(\mathcal{A}_{\rm{LR}})$ and left-right forward-backward $(\mathcal{A}_{\rm{LR, FB}})$ asymmetries of the $f\bar{f}$ final states which can show substantial deviations from the SM results, even for a multi-TeV $Z'$. This provides a powerful complementary way to probe the heavy $Z'$ parameter space beyond the direct reach of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), as well as an effective way to determine the $U(1)_X$ charges.

        Speaker: Arindam Das (Hokkaido University)
      • 336
        Millicharged particles at electron colliders

        We propose to search for millicharged particles in electron colliders operated with the center-of-mass energies at ${\cal O}$(1-10) GeV, which include Belle II, BESIII, BaBar, and also the proposed experiment STCF. We use the monophoton final state to probe the parameter space of millicharged particles at electron colliders. We find that electron colliders have sensitivity to the previously unexplored parameter space for millicharged particles with MeV-GeV mass: $\epsilon < {\cal O}(10^{-1})$ for $0.5$ GeV $< m < 3.5$ GeV in BaBar, $\epsilon < {\cal O}(10^{-3})$ for $0.1$ GeV $< m < 1.5$ GeV in BESIII, $\epsilon < 10^{-3}-10^{-2}$ for $0.1$ GeV $< m < 4$ GeV in Belle II, and $\epsilon < {\cal O}(10^{-4})$ for $1$ MeV $< m < 1$ GeV in STCF.

        Speaker: Jinhan Liang (Nanjing University)
      • 337
        Radiation Amplitude Zero and Production of Leptoquark at Electron-Proton and Electron-Photon colliders

        Radiation Amplitude Zero (RAZ) is a well-known phenomenon in electroweak sector [1]. The tree-level single photon amplitudes for various electroweak processes vanish at certain regions of phase space depending on the electric charges and four-momenta of the external particles [2]. Using this fact we perform PYTHIA based analyses to probe the signature of leptoquarks [3], which have gained much attention in recent years in explaining flavour anomalies, at $ep$ [4] and $e\gamma$ [5] colliders. While the position of zero in case of $ep$ collider depends only on the charge of leptoquark, the same at $e\gamma$ collider involves the mass of leptoquark and energy of collision too. We find that these two colliders are complementary to each other in a sense that the leptoquarks showing zero at one colliders do not exhibit the null zone at the other one. The effects of non-monochromatic photons at $e\gamma$ collider have also been studied.
        References
        [1] K. O. Mikaelian, M. A. Samuel and D. Sahdev, Phys. Rev. Lett. 43, 746 (1979), doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.43.746
        [2] S. J. Brodsky and R. W. Brown, Phys. Rev. Lett. 49, 966 (1982), doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.49.966
        [3] I. Doršner, S. Fajfer, A. Greljo, J. F. Kamenik and N. Košnik, Phys. Rept. 641, 1-68 (2016), doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2016.06.001 [arXiv:1603.04993 [hep-ph]].
        [4] P. Bandyopadhyay, S. Dutta and A. Karan, Eur. Phys. J. C 81, no.4, 315 (2021), doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-021-09090-z [arXiv:2012.13644 [hep-ph]].
        [5] P. Bandyopadhyay, S. Dutta and A. Karan, Eur. Phys. J. C 80, no.6, 573 (2020), doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-8083-7 [arXiv:2003.11751 [hep-ph]].

        Speaker: Anirban Karan (IIT Hyderabad)
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Zhaofeng Kang
      • 338
        A Suppressed Higgs coupling in a classically conformal extension of the Standard Model

        We consider a classically conformal $U(1)$ extension of the Standard Model (SM).
        The $U(1)$ symmetry is radiatively broken by the Coleman-Weinberg mechanism, after which the $U(1)$ Higgs field $\phi$ drives electroweak symmetry breaking through a mixed quartic coupling with the SM Higgs doublet with coupling constant $\lambda_{mix}$.
        We calculate the Higgs triple couplings in this system and find a suppression of the coupling $g_{h \phi \phi}$ when compared to the naively expected value $g_{h \phi \phi} \sim \lambda_{mix} v_{h}$ ($v_{h} = 246$ GeV), likely due to the unique nature of the classically conformal potential.
        We consider experimental signals for such conformal structure via the anomalous Higgs decay $h \rightarrow \phi \phi$ and anomalous SM Higgs couplings.
        Such specific conformal structure would allow for a sizeable anomalous SM Higgs coupling alongside a heavily suppressed $h \rightarrow \phi \phi$ decay mode.

        Speaker: Victor Baules (University of Alabama, The)
      • 339
        New bounds on sparticle masses through rare signals and collider searches

        Though collider searches are constraining supersymmetric parameter space, generic model independent bounds on sneutrinos remain very low. We calculate new model independent lower bounds on general supersymmetric scenarios with sneutrino LSP and NLSPs. By recasting ATLAS LHC exotic searches in mono boson channels, we place an upper bound on the cross section on $pp\rightarrow\tilde{\nu}\tilde{\nu}+V$ processes in mono-$\gamma$, mono-$W$/$Z$ and mono-Higgs channels. We also evaluate the LHC discovery potential of sneutrinos in the HL-LHC 3 ab−1 run. Lastly, we present preliminary results for similar constraints on higgsino LSPs by placing upper bounds on $pp\rightarrow\tilde{\chi}^0\tilde{\chi}^0+V$ process cross sections.

        Speaker: Humberto Gilmer (Ohio State University)
      • 340
        Non-Minimal Dark Sectors: Mediator-induced Decay Chains and Multi-Jet Collider Signatures

        If the dark sector contains multiple components with similar quantum numbers which only communicate with the visible sector through a mediator, this mediator necessarily gives rise to dark-sector decays, with heavier dark components decaying to lighter components. Such successive decays can even give rise to relatively long dark decay chains with visible matter being produced at each step. In this talk, I discuss the collider signatures of such decay chains in a simple scenario where a multi-component dark sector is connected through a mediator to the Standard Model quarks. The properties of the multi-jet signatures arising in such scenarios are examined at both the parton and detector levels. Within relatively large regions of parameter space, these signatures are not excluded by existing mono-jet and multi-jet searches. Such decay cascades therefore represent a potential discovery route for multi-component dark sectors at current and future collider.

        Speaker: Huayang Song (University of Arizona)
      • 341
        Light hidden mesons inspired by neutral naturalness and SUSY

        Confining hidden sectors are an attractive possibility for physics beyond the Standard Model (SM). They are especially motivated by neutral naturalness theories, which reconcile the lightness of the Higgs with the strong constraints on colored top partners. We study hidden QCD with one light quark flavor, coupled to the SM via effective operators suppressed by the mass of new electroweak-charged particles. This effective field theory is inspired by a new tripled top model of supersymmetric neutral naturalness. The hidden sector is accessed primarily via the Z and Higgs portals, which also mediate the decays of the hidden mesons back to SM particles. We find that exotic Z decays at the LHC and future Z factories provide the strongest sensitivity to this scenario, and we outline a wide array of searches. For a larger hidden confinement scale ~GeV, the exotic Z decays dominantly produce final states with two hidden mesons. ATLAS and CMS can probe their prompt decays up to 3 TeV at the high luminosity phase, while a TeraZ factory would extend the reach up to 20 TeV through a combination of searches for prompt and displaced signals. For smaller confinement scale, the Z decays to the hidden sector produce jets of hidden mesons, which are long-lived. LHCb will be a powerful probe of these emerging jets. Furthermore, the light hidden vector meson could be detected by proposed dark photon searches.

        Speaker: LINGFENG LI (HKUST)
    • 11:30
      Lunch
    • Axion Physics and Experiments ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Nick Houston (Beijing University of Technology)
      • 342
        Axion Quality from Superconformal Dynamics

        We discuss a possibility that a superconformal dynamics induces the emergence of a global U(1)PQ symmetry to solve the strong CP problem through the axion. Fields spontaneously breaking the U(1)PQ symmetry couple to new quarks charged under the ordinary color SU(3)C and a new SU(N) gauge group. The theory flows into an IR fixed point where the U(1)PQ breaking fields hold a large anomalous dimension leading to the suppression of U(1)PQ-violating higher dimensional operators. The spontaneous breaking of the U(1)PQ makes the new quarks massive. The U(1)PQ symmetry is anomalous under the SU(3)C but not under the SU(N) so that the axion couples to only the color SU(3)C and the usual axion potential is generated. We also comment on a model that the U(1)PQ breaking fields are realized as meson superfields in a new supersymmetric QCD.

        Speaker: Prof. Yuichiro Nakai (T. D. Lee Institute, Shanghai)
      • 343
        Probe Dark Matter Axions with Broadband and Narrowband methods

        The cosmological axions/axion-like particles can compose a significant part of dark matter, however the uncertainty of their mass is large. Here we propose to search the axions broadbandly using a cylindrical capacitor, in which the static electric field converts dark matter axions into an oscillating magnetic field. A superconductor ring-coil pickup system can further boost the sensitivity. This proposed setup is capable of wide mass range searches. On the other hand, The hyperfine splitting between the spin 0 singlet ground state and the spin 1 triplet state of hydrogen is 0.59×10^−5eV, which is close to the mass of the QCD dark matter axions. With some additional adjustment by the Zeeman effect, quantum transitions could be induced between these hydrogen states. We believe this method will be efficent for a narrowband search of the QCD axions.

        Speaker: Qiaoli Yang (Jinan University)
      • 344
        The echo method for axion dark matter detection

        In this talk I will present a new idea to search for axion dark matter. It is based on the backscattering of a powerful electromagnetic wave that is produced due to the stimulated decay of ambient axions. This backscattering, the echo, is a negligible (but detectable) signal with frequency spectrum centered at one half the axion mass. In the mass range where the axion is motivated to be the dark matter, one would expect the echo signal in the microwave, radio, or even infrared ranges of the electromagnetic spectrum. I will show the main properties of the echo signal, possible detection schemes and future prospects.

        Speaker: Ariel Arza (ITMP, Lomonosov Moscow State University)
      • 345
        Detecting an Axion-like particle with machine learning and jet substructure variables at the LHC

        Axion-like particles (ALPs) appear in various new physics models with spontaneous global symmetry breaking. When the ALP mass is in the range of MeV to GeV, the cosmology and astrophysics bounds are so far quite weak. In this work, we investigate such light ALPs through the ALP-strahlung production process $pp \to V a (\to \gamma\gamma)$ at the 14 TeV LHC with an integrated luminosity of 3000 fb$^{-1}$ (HL-LHC). Building on the concept of jet image which uses calorimeter towers as the pixels of the image and measures a jet as an image and several jet substructure variables, we propose two methods to identify the highly boosted ALPs which decay to a pair of highly collimated photons. With the photon-jet algorithm and the CNN tagging algorithm, we demonstrate that our approaches can extend current LHC sensitivity and probe the ALP mass range from 0.3~GeV to 10~GeV. The obtained bounds are stronger than the existing limits on the ALP-photon coupling.

        Speaker: Daohan Wang (Institute of theoretical physics, CAS)
      • 346
        Axion haloscope array With PT symmetry beyond the quantum limit

        We generalize the recently proposed PT-symmetric axion haloscope to a larger array with more PT-symmetric structures. The optimized signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) has a greater enhancement, as well as the signal power. Furthermore, we show that the robustness of the detector towards the variations of the array coupling is the strongest when a binary tree structure is introduced which contains a largely enhanced PT symmetry. The multiple allowed probing sensors can further increase the SNR by a factor of sensors' number due to the correlation of the signals. This type of array can strongly boost the search for axion compared to single mode resonant detection. The enhancement to the SNR becomes the most manifest when applied to the newly proposed detection using superconducting radiofrequency caivty with AC magnetic field where most of the parameter space of the QCD axion above kHz can be probed.

        Speaker: Yifan Chen (LPTHE, Paris)
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Haipeng An (Tsinghua University)
      • 347
        Radio-frequency Dark Photon Dark Matter across the Sun

        Dark photon as an ultralight dark matter candidate can interact with the Standard Model particles via kinetic mixing. We propose to search for the ultralight dark photon dark matter using radio telescopes with solar observations. The dark photon dark matter can efficiently convert into photons in the outermost region of the solar atmosphere, the solar corona, where the plasma mass of photons is close to the dark photon rest mass. Due to the strong resonant conversion and benefiting from the short distance between the Sun and the Earth, the radio telescopes can lead the dark photon search sensitivity in the mass range of $4 \times 10^{-8} - 4\times 10^{-6} \, \rm{eV}$, corresponding to the frequency $10 - 1000 \, {\rm MHz}$. As a promising example, the operating radio telescope LOFAR can reach the kinetic mixing $\epsilon \sim 10^{-13}$ ($10^{-14}$) within 1 (100) hour solar observations.The future experiment SKA phase 1 can reach $\epsilon \sim 10^{-16} - 10^{-14}$ with $1$ hour solar observations.

        Speaker: Jia Liu (Peking University)
      • 348
        Low-mass primordial black holes as the dark matter candidate

        Primordial black holes (PBHs), possibly formed via gravitational collapse of large density perturbations in the very early universe, are one of the earliest proposed and viable dark matter (DM) candidates. Recent studies indicate that PBHs can make up a large or even entire fraction of the present day DM density for a wide range of masses. Ultralight
        PBHs in the mass range of 10^{15} - 10^{17} g, emit particles through Hawking radiation, and can be probed via observations of those emitted particles in various detectors. In this talk, I will discuss how the observations of the 511 keV gamma ray line and continuum gamma-rays set some of the most stringent exclusion limits on the DM fraction of ultralight PBHs. I will also demonstrate how measurements of low-energy photons from the Galactic Center by the imminent telescopes such as AMEGO can probe the DM fraction of PBHs into a completely unexplored mass window.

        Speaker: Ranjan Laha (Indian Institute of science (IN))
      • 349
        A dark clue to seesaw and leptogenesis in a pseudo-Dirac singlet doublet scenario with (non)standard cosmology

        We propose an appealing alternative scenario of leptogenesis assisted by dark
        sector which leads to the baryon asymmetry of the Universe satisfying all theoretical and
        experimental constraints. The dark sector carries a non minimal set up of singlet doublet
        fermionic dark matter extended with copies of a real singlet scalar field. A small Majorana
        mass term for the singlet dark fermion, in addition to the typical Dirac term, provides the
        more favourable dark matter of pseudo-Dirac type, capable of escaping the direct search.
        Such a construction also offers a formidable scope to radiative generation of active neutrino
        masses. In the presence of a (non)standard thermal history of the Universe, we perform
        the detailed dark matter phenomenology adopting the suitable benchmark scenarios, consistent with direct detection and neutrino oscillations data. Besides, we have demonstrated
        that the singlet scalars can go through CP-violating out of equilibrium decay, producing
        an ample amount of lepton asymmetry. Such an asymmetry then gets converted into the
        observed baryon asymmetry of the Universe through the non-perturbative sphaleron processes owing to the presence of the alternative cosmological background considered here.
        Unconventional thermal history of the Universe can thus aspire to lend a critical role both
        in the context of dark matter as well as in realizing baryogenesis.

        Speaker: SUDIPTA SHOW (Physical Research Laboratory)
      • 350
        Freezing In with Lepton Flavored Fermions

        Dark, chiral fermions carrying lepton flavor quantum numbers are natural candidates for freeze-in. Small couplings with the Standard Model fermions of the order of lepton Yukawas are ‘automatic’ in the limit of Minimal Flavor Violation. In the absence of total lepton number violating interactions, particles with certain representations under the flavor group remain absolutely stable. For masses in the GeV-TeV range, the simplest model with three flavors, leads to signals at future direct detection experiments like DARWIN. Interestingly, freeze-in with a smaller flavor group such as SU (2) is already being probed by XENON1T.

        Speaker: Shiuli Chatterjee (Indian Institute of Science)
      • 351
        Search for Dark Sector at Belle

        The Belle experiment at the KEKB asymmetric-energy e^+e^- collider has accumulated close to $1\,{\rm ab}^{-1}$ of data in electron-positron collisions at center-of-mass energies around various $\Upsilon(nS)$ resonances. These data can be used to perform a number of new physics searches in the context of dark sector with an unprecedented precision.
        We present the results of a search of the dark photon in $B$-meson decays, the search for dark matter in bottomonium decays, as well as the latest results in the search for dark forces, via direct production, or in the decay of mesons.

        Speaker: Giacomo De Pietro (INFN and Univ. Roma Tre)
    • Electroweak, Top quark, and Higgs Physics ZR3

      ZR3

      Conveners: Junjie Cao (Henan Normal University), Yang Zhang (Zhengzhou University)
      • 352
        Charged Higgs from different representations at the LHC

        Charged Higgs from Higgs doublets generally couples to fermions thus mainly decay to sermonic modes. However, the inert doublets cannot have such two-body decays and mainly decays via three-body. Even then the coupling of charged Higgs with Z and W bosons are absent at the tree-level due to custodial symmetry. SU(2) triplet Higgs boson with Y=0 hyper charge breaks the custodial symmetry leading to a tree-level vertex with Z and W boson. This prompts the decays into ZW as compared to t b in a doublet charged Higgs case. However, additional Z_2 symmetry can make this triplet as inert leading to displaced mono/di-leptonic signatures. In case of complex triplet, the model produces a pure triplet dark matter along with a pure and mixed triplet charged Higgs bosons. The last scenario this gives rise to both the displaced and the prompt charged leptons in the final states. We try to distinguish such scenarios at the LHC.

        Speaker: Priyotosh Bandyopadhyay (Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad)
      • 353
        Vacuum stability and asymptotic behaviour in Extended Higgs and Leptoquarks

        The status of Standard Model vacuum stability with generic
        problems beyond Standard Models (BSM) will be scrutinised.
        We will see how addition of scalar from different SU(2) representations, i.e.
        Inert Higgs Doublet model (IDM) and Inert Higgs triplet model (ITM) enhance the stability of electroweak vacuum[1]. Addition of fermions can decrease the stability and need additional scalar to get to the stability which would be clear while discussing the extension with Type-I Seesaw and IDM[2]. We also see for Type-III seesaw +IDM due to SU(2) triplet fermions, the impact on $g_2$ is visible and it increases with energy unlike SM or Type-I Seesaw and IDM losing the asymptotic freedom[3]. This constraints the fermion generation to only two for Planck scale stability. Finally, Vacuum stability and perturbativity for scalar Doublet and Triplet Leptoquarks is also studied. In this scenario, the behaviour of all gauge couplings will be modified. We have also studied the perturbativity of the scalar quartic couplings. Dark matter and collider phenomenologies will also be discussed briefly in IDM and ITM.

        References
        [1] S. Jangid and P. Bandyopadhyay, Eur. Phys. J. C
        doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-8271-5 [arXiv:2003.11821 [hep-ph]].80(2020)no.8,715
        [2] S. Jangid, P. Bandyopadhyay, P. S. Bhupal Dev and A. Kumar, JHEP 08 (2020), 154 doi:10.1007/JHEP08(2020)154 [arXiv:2001.01764 [hep-ph]].
        [3] P. Bandyopadhyay, S. Jangid and M. Mitra, doi:10.1007/JHEP02(2021)075 [arXiv:2008.11956 [hep-ph]].JHEP 02 (2021),075
        [4] D. Buttazzo, G. Degrassi, P. P. Giardino, G. F. Giudice, F. Sala, A. Salvio and A. Strumia, JHEP 12 (2013), 089 doi:10.1007/JHEP12(2013)089 [arXiv:1307.3536 [hep-ph]].
        [5] L. Delle Rose, C. Marzo and A. Urbano, JHEP 12 (2015), 050 doi:10.1007/JHEP12(2015)050 [arXiv:1506.03360 [hep-ph]].

        Speaker: Ms SHILPA JANGID (IIT HYDERABAD)
      • 354
        Impact of quark flavor violating SUSY on h(125) decays

        We study the Higgs boson decays h -> c cbar, b bbar, b sbar, photon photon
        and gluon gluon in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) with
        general quark flavor violation (QFV), identifying the h with the Higgs boson
        with a mass of 125 GeV. We compute the widths of the h decays to c cbar,
        b bbar, b sbar (s bbar) at full one-loop level in the MSSM with QFV.
        For the h decays to photon photon and gluon gluon we compute the widths
        at NLO QCD level. We perform a systematic MSSM parameter scan respecting all
        the relevant constraints, i.e. theoretical constraints from vacuum stability
        conditions and experimental constraints, such as those from K- and B-meson
        data and electroweak precision data, as well as recent limits on Supersymmetric
        (SUSY) particle masses and the 125 GeV Higgs boson data from LHC experiments.
        From the parameter scan, we find the followings:
        (1) DEV(h -> c cbar) and DEV(h -> b bbar) can be very large simultaneously:
        DEV(h -> c cbar) can be as large as about +/-60% and
        DEV(h -> b bbar) can be as large as about +/-20%.
        Here DEV(h -> X Y) is the deviation of the decay width Gamma(h -> X Y)
        in the MSSM from the SM prediction:
        DEV(h -> X Y) = Gamma(h -> X Y)_MSSM / Gamma(h -> X Y)_SM - 1.
        (2) The QFV decay branching ratio BR(h -> b sbar / bbar s) can be as
        large as about 0.17% in the MSSM. It is almost zero in the SM. The sensitivity
        of ILC(250 + 500 + 1000) to this decay BR could be about 0.1% at 4 sigma signal
        significance.
        (3) DEV(h -> photon photon) and DEV(h -> gluon gluon) can be large
        simultaneously: DEV(h -> photon photon) can be as large as about + 4% and
        DEV(h -> gluon gluon) can be as large as about -15%.
        (4) There is a very strong correlation between DEV(h -> photon photon)
        and DEV(h -> gluon gluon). This correlation is due to the fact that the
        stop-loop (stop-scharm mixture loop) contributions dominate the two DEVs.
        (5) The deviation of the width ratio Gamma(h -> photon photon)/Gamma(h ->
        gluon gluon) in the MSSM from the SM value can be as large as about +20%.
        (6) All of these large deviations in the h decays are due to large
        scharm-stop mixing and large stop/scharm involved trilinear couplings
        T_U23, T_U32, T_U33 and large sstrange-sbottom mixing and large
        sstrange/sbottom involved trilinear couplings T_D23, T_D32, T_D33.
        (7) ILC can observe such large deviations from SM at high signal significance.
        (8) In case the deviation pattern shown here is really observed at ILC,
        then this would strongly suggest the discovery of QFV SUSY (MSSM with QFV).

        Note: This work is based on collaboration with H. Eberl and E. Ginina (HEPHY, Vienna).
        References:
        Phys. Rev. D 91 (2015) 015007 [arXiv:1411.2840 [hep-ph]]
        JHEP 1606 (2016) 143 [arXiv:1604.02366 [hep-ph]]
        IJMP A34 (2019) 1950120 [arXiv:1812.08010 [hep-ph]]

        Speaker: Prof. Keisho Hidaka (Tokyo Gakugei University)
      • 355
        Probing the B+L violation process with the observation of cosmic magnetic field

        We numerically investigate the B+L violation process by performing three-dimensional lattice simulations of a unified scenario of first-order phase transitions and the sphaleron generation. The simulation results indicate that the Chern-Simons number changes along with the helical magnetic field production when the sphaleron decay occurs. Based on these numerical results, we then propose a novel method to probe the baryon asymmetry generation of the Universe, which is a general consequence of the electroweak sphaleron process, through the astronomical observation of corresponding helical magnetic fields.

        Speaker: Ligong Bian (Chongqing University)
      • 356
        The Road Not Taken: more dimension-4's before EFT

        The LHC has not discovered any New Physics beyond the anticipated $h(125)$ boson, pushing the SUSY scale to multi-TeV, and new ideas abound for out-of-the-box searches, or Effective Field Theory with high cutoff scale. But, have we exhausted dimension-4 operators involving sub-TeV particles that are not exotic (non-XLP)? We advocate the existence of an extra Higgs doublet that possessess extra Yukawa couplings, where emergent mass-mixing hierarchies and alignment have well-hidden their effects so far. ${\cal O}(1)$ extra Higgs quartics can induce first order electroweak phase transition and imply sub-TeV spectrum. The extra Yukawa couplings, led by $\rho_{tt}$ and $\rho_{tc}$ that can be ${\cal O}(1)$, can drive electroweak baryogenesis, while $\rho_{ee}/\rho_{tt} \propto \lambda_e/\lambda_t$, the ratio of standard electron and top Yukawa couplings, can tame electron EDM. Finding these extra Higgs bosons via $cg \to tH/A \to tt\bar c$, $tt\bar t$ and $cg \to bH^+ \to bt\bar b$ processes (plus processes allowed by Higgs boson splittings) at the LHC, and pushing the flavor frontier to break the flavor code, would usher in a new Higgs/flavor era. SUSY may still be realized at a higher scale, possibly related to the Landau pole of the scalar sector.

        Speaker: Prof. George W.S. Hou (National Taiwan University)
    • Formal SUSY Theories ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Wenbin Yan (Yau Mathematical Sciences Center, Tsinghua University)
      • 357
        Non-unitary TQFTs from 3D $\mathcal{N}=4$ rank 0 SCFTs

        We propose a novel procedure of assigning a pair of non-unitary topological quantum field theories (TQFTs), TFT$_\pm [\mathcal{T}_{\rm rank \;0}]$, to a (2+1)D interacting $\mathcal{N}=4$ superconformal field theory (SCFT) $\mathcal{T}_{\rm rank \;0}$ of rank 0, i.e.\ having no Coulomb and Higgs branches. The topological theories arise from particular degenerate limits of the SCFT. Modular data of the non-unitary TQFTs are extracted from the supersymmetric partition functions in the degenerate limits. As a non-trivial dictionary, we propose that $F = \max_\alpha \left(- \log |S^{(+)}_{0\alpha}| \right) = \max_\alpha \left(- \log |S^{(-)}_{0\alpha}|\right)$, where $F$ is the round three-sphere free energy of $\mathcal{T}_{\rm rank \;0 }$ and $S^{(\pm)}_{0\alpha}$ is the first column in the modular S-matrix of TFT$_\pm$. From the dictionary, we derive the lower bound on $F$, $F \geq -\log \left(\sqrt{\frac{5-\sqrt{5}}{10}} \right) \simeq 0.642965$, which holds for any rank 0 SCFT. The bound is saturated by the minimal $\mathcal{N}=4$ SCFT proposed by Gang-Yamazaki, whose associated topological theories are both the Lee-Yang TQFT. We explicitly work out the (rank 0 SCFT)/(non-unitary TQFTs) correspondence for infinitely many examples.

        Speaker: Mr Myungbo Shim (Kyung Hee University)
      • 358
        S-type Operations, Line Defects and 3D Mirror Symmetry beyond ADE quivers

        I will present a systematic field theory prescription for constructing 3D N=4 mirror pairs involving quiver gauge theories beyond the well-known ADE examples. The construction involves a certain generalization of the S operation, which arises in the context of the 3d SL(2,Z) action on a CFT with a U(1) 0-form symmetry. I will show how this construction can be used to find Lagrangian descriptions for a large class of Argyres-Douglas theories compactified on a circle. I will also discuss how the prescription can be extended to include half-BPS line operators and determine the associated mirror maps, which were previously known only for the A-type quiver gauge theories.

        Speaker: Anindya Dey (Johns Hopkins)
      • 359
        Schur index in closed-form and free fields

        Flavored Schur indices of 4d N=4 SCFTs encode many crucial information of the associated VOAs. For Lagrangian theories, the indices can be written as a multi-contour-integral of one-loop factor Z. In this talk, we will show that for 4d N=4 theories, some special residues of Z coincide with the free field characters of the bcβγ systems, proposed by Bonetti, Meneghelli and Rastelli, that realize the associated VOAs. These residues serve automatically as additional solutions to the flavored modular differential equations. This result inspires an elementary method to rewrite the Schur indices in closed-form, in terms of finite sums and products of theta functions and their derivatives.

        Speaker: Yiwen Pan
      • 360
        Feigin-Semikhatov duality and its applications

        In this talk, we investigate relationships between two families of $\mathcal W$-algebras, that is, the subregular $\mathcal W$-algebra for $\mathfrak{sl}_{n}$ and the principal $\mathcal{W}$-superalgebra for $\mathfrak{sl}_{1|n}$ in terms of their algebraic structure and representation theory.
        The very beginning case is the Kazama-Suzuki coset construction of $\mathcal{N}=2$ superconformal algebra in terms of WZWN model of $\mathfrak{sl}_2$ whose inverse construction was invented by Feigin-Semikhatov-Tipunin by using a lattice theory.
        The relationship of these two algebras are generalized to the above mentioned two families of $\mathcal{W}$-superalgebras.
        It was originally conjectured by Feigin and Semikhatov and recently by Gaiotto and Rapcak in a much wider context of chiral algebras appearing at two dimensional boundary of four dimensional super Yang-Mills theory with various boundary conditions.

        Firstly, I explain that the Heisenberg cosets of these two (super)algebras are isomorphic, which is conjectured by Gaiotto and Rapcak.
        Secondly, I enhance this duality to the reconstruction of these two algebras from the other, which is the honest generalization of Kazama-Suzuki coset construction.
        Then I explain the correspondence between the representation theory of these two algebras together with the isomorphisms between the superspaces of logarithmic intertwining operators.
        Finally, I explain the levels when these two algebras give rational (super)conformal field theories and the classification of simple modules and the fusion rules. In this case, the duality of the fusion rules is explicitly written down in terms of duality of two lattices appearing as simple currents of respective representation theory.

        Speaker: Shigenori Nakatsuka (The University of Tokyo)
    • New Developments in Quantum Field Theory ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Yu-tin Huang (National Taiwan University)
      • 361
        Constructing on-shell operator basis for all masses and spins

        We first propose a general method to construct the complete set of on-shell operator bases involving massive particles with any spins. To incorporate the non-abelian little groups of massive particles, the on-shell scattering amplitude basis should be factorized into two parts: one is charged, and the other one is neutral under little groups of massive particles. The complete set of these two parts can be systematically constructed by choosing some specific Young diagrams of Lorentz subgroup and global symmetry U(N) respectively (N is the number of external particles), without the equation of motion and integration by part redundancy. Thus the complete massive amplitude bases without any redundancies can be obtained by combining these two complete sets. Some examples are presented to explicitly demonstrate this method. This method is applicable for constructing amplitude bases involving identical particles, and all the bases can be constructed automatically by computer programs based on it.

        Speaker: Zi-Yu Dong (ITP-CAS, Beijing)
      • 362
        Multiparticle fields method for the description of the bound states scattering

        All existing quantum field theories are formulated in terms of functions defined in the Minkowski space and possess the values from a set of operators. Such functions satisfy the equations which conserve their form during the Lorentz transform. As a result of these two points, within such theories, it is impossible to construct an operator which could change the coordinate dependence of the state keeping the temporal dependence intact. For example, it is impossible to construct an operator which creates a particle with certain momentum only – it is only possible to construct an operator which creates a particle with certain energy-momentum. This makes it difficult to describe the bound states within the relativistic quantum theory. In addition, a relativistic theory of bound states scattering, built on top of such models, would result in the conservation of the total energy-momentum four-verctor of the single-particle states (regardless of the quantization method and the method of dynamic problem solution – using the perturbation theory or not). So in QCD the total four-momentum of quarks and gluons in initial state will be equal to the total four-momentum of quarks and gluons in the final state. This is an obvious contradiction to the experiment, where the total four-momentum of hadrons is conserved, and not of their constituent particles. This problem is usually overcome using the parton model [1]. In this case the total four-momentum of hadron is given as a sum of the four-momenta of its constituent partons which do not interact with each other. This is obviously a way to only elude the mentioned problems, while the method of multiparticle fields aims at their solution. The basic idea of this method can be illustrated using the example of a two-particle field.
        Consider a set of event pairs, where each pair is chosen from the Minkowski space for one of the particles. In [2] it was shown that the measurement of the quantum state of such particles must be done at the same time relative to the frame in which this measurement is done. So the multiparticle states are described on the subset of the Cartesian product of Minkowski spaces, which corresponds to the simultaneous events. We call it the subset of simultaneous events. We show that it is possible to derive the dynamic equations similar to the known Klein-Gordon-Fock and Dirac equations for the fields on such a subset. The solutions of the dynamical equations for the two-particle gauge field can be given in a form of two components. The first one plays the role of a potential of the particle interaction inside the bound particle, while the second one is the field which after the quantization describes the interaction between the bound particles. Curiously enough, the first component, which describes the interaction inside the bound particle, satisfies the dynamic equation which in its turn describes the confinement under certain boundary conditions, and the mechanism of spontaneous symmetry braking under some others.
        This model may serve as an effective field theory for the description of the elastic and inelastic scattering of hadrons.

        1) R. P. Feynman, Photon Hadron Interactions, 1. printing (Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass, 1998).
        2) N. O. Chudak et al Internal States of Hadrons in Relativistic Reference Frame, Ukr. J. Phys. 61, 1033 (2016)
        3) N. N. Bogoliubov and D. V. Shirkov, Introduction to the Theory of Quantized Fields, 2d American ed (John Wiley, New York, 1980)..

        Speaker: Mr Fedir Musonov (Odessa Polytechnic State University)
    • New Tools in New Physics Searches ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Nishita Desai (Tata Institute of Fundamental Research)
      • 363
        (S)ARGES -- Advanced Renormalisation Group Equation Simplifier

        We present ARGES, a toolkit for obtaining renormalisation group equations in perturbation theory, as well as SARGES, its supersymmetric counterpart.
        The programs can handle any perturbatively renormalisable four-dimensional quantum field theory, and have pioneered the approach of performing a symbolic rather than numeric computation. We highlight further notable features, such as input of unconventional scalar and Yukawa sectors, an interactive evaluation and disentanglement as well as capabilities to inject algebraic simplification rules.

        Speaker: Tom Steudtner (TU Dortmund)
      • 364
        MARTY, an independent software program for general symbolic calculations in Beyond the Standard Model physics

        We present MARTY (arXiv:2011.02478 [hep-ph]), the very first independent
        program automating the calculation of amplitudes, squared amplitudes and
        Wilson coefficients at the tree level and the one-loop level for general
        BSM models. This type of calculations requires a computer algebra system
        and could only be done, up to now, using Mathematica that is a
        commercial and closed software for symbolic manipulations. MARTY does
        not rely on Mathematica since it re-implements its own symbolic
        computation machinery. We show how to perform phenomenological analyses
        in general BSM scenarios using MARTY, for any domain of high energy physics.

        Speaker: Mr Grégoire Uhlrich
      • 365
        FlexibleDecay: An automated calculator of scalar decay widths

        We present FlexibleDecay, a tool to calculate decays of scalars in an arbitrary BSM model. The tool aims for high precision particularly in the case of Higgs boson decays. In the case of scalar and pseudoscalar Higgs boson decays the known higher order SM QED, QCD and EW effects are taken into account where possible. The program works in a modified MSbar scheme that exhibits a decoupling property with respect to heavy BSM physics, with BSM parameters themselves treated in the MSbar/DRbar-scheme allowing for an easy connection to high scale tests for, e.g., perturbativity and vacuum stability, and the many observable calculations readily available in MSbar/DRbar programs. Pure BSM effects are taken into account at the leading order, including all one-loop contributions to loop-induced processes. The program is implemented as an extension to FlexibleSUSY, which determines the mass spectrum for arbitrary BSM models, and does not require any extra configuration from the user.

        Speaker: Wojciech Kotlarski (TU - Dresden)
      • 366
        Probing long-lived particles with SModelS v2

        The new developments in SModelS, an automated tool enabling the fast interpretation of simplified model results from the LHC, make it possible to include a wide range of constraints for long-lived particles and treat them at the same footing as the constraints from prompt searches. We present these new features of SModelS v2.x and the new experimental analyses included in its database, and showcase how they constrain different new physics scenarios, including electroweakinos in the MSSM, and scalar or fermionic dark matter in the scotogenic model. Finally, we also report on our SModelS/pyhf interface, allowing the usage of full likelihoods as published by ATLAS.

        Speaker: Gael Alguero (LPSC, Grenoble)
    • Searches for the BSM Physics at the LHC and Future Hadronic Colliders ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Shufang Su (University of Arizona)
      • 367
        Searches for new physics in events with jets in the final state in CMS

        Many new physics models, e.g., compositeness, extra dimensions, excited quarks, and dark matter mediators, are expected to manifest themselves in final states with jets. This talk presents searches in CMS for new phenomena in the final states that include jets, focusing on the recent results obtained using the full Run-II data-set collected at the LHC.

        Speaker: Eirini Tziaferi (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (GR))
      • 368
        Highly Boosted Higgs Bosons and Unitarity in Vector-Boson Fusion at Future Hadron Colliders

        We study the observability of new interactions which modify Higgs-pair production via vector-boson fusion processes at the LHC and at future proton-proton colliders. In an effective-Lagrangian approach, we explore in particular the effect of the operator $h^2 W_{\mu\nu}^a W^{a,\mu\nu}$, which describes the interaction of the Higgs boson with transverse vector-boson polarization modes. By tagging highly boosted Higgs bosons in the final state, we determine projected bounds for the coefficient of this operator at the LHC and at a future 27 TeV or 100 TeV collider. Taking into account unitarity constraints, we estimate the new-physics discovery potential of Higgs pair production in this channel.

        Speaker: Zhijie Zhao (Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 369
        Searches and techniques for boosted resonances (non-diboson) with the ATLAS detector

        Many new-physics signatures at the LHC produce highly boosted particles, leading to close-by objects in the detector and necessitating jet substructure techniques to disentangle the hadronic decay products. This talk will illustrate the use of these techniques in recent ATLAS searches for heavy W’ and Z’ resonances in top-bottom and di-top final states, as well as searches for vector-like quarks, using the full Run 2 dataset. It will explain the techniques used, including new top-tagging techniques using machine learning and the use of large-radius jets containing electrons.

        Speaker: Miguel Villaplana (IFIC - Univ. of Valencia and CSIC (ES))
      • 370
        Searches for vector-like quarks at CMS

        We present results of searches for vector-like quarks using proton-proton collision data collected with the CMS detector at the CERN LHC at a center-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. Single and pair production of vector-like quarks are studied, with decays into a variety of final states, containing top and bottom quarks, electroweak gauge and Higgs bosons. The presented searches make use of a wide variety of reconstructed objects, allowing to explore diverse signatures from multi-leptonic to fully hadronic. We set exclusion limits on the vector-like quark masses and cross sections, and for combinations of the vector-like quark branching ratios.

        Speaker: Francesco Carnevali (Universita e sezione INFN di Napoli (IT))
      • 371
        Searches for new physics with leptons using the ATLAS detector

        Many theories beyond the Standard Model predict new phenomena, such as Z’, W’ bosons, or heavy leptons, in final states with isolated, high-pt leptons (e/mu/tau). Searches for new physics with such signatures, produced either resonantly or non-resonantly, are performed using the ATLAS experiment at the LHC. This includes a novel search that exploits the lepton-charge asymmetry in events with an electron and muon pair. Lepton flavor violation (LVF) is a striking signature of potential beyond the Standard Model physics. The search for LFV with the ATLAS detector focuses on the decay of the Z boson into different flavour leptons (e/mu/tau). The recent 13 TeV pp results will be reported.

        Speaker: Christos Vergis (University of Bonn (DE))
    • 15:30
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Haipeng An (Tsinghua University)
      • 372
        Light singlino DM of the natural NMSSM

        Inspired by the fact that relatively small values of the effective higgsino mass parameter of the Z3-symmetric Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (NMSSM) could render the scenario ‘natural’, we explore the plausibility of having relatively light neutralinos and charginos (the electroweakinos or the ewinos) in such a scenario with a rather light singlino-like Lightest Supersymmetric Particle (LSP), which is a Dark Matter (DM) candidate, and singlet-dominated scalar excitations. By first confirming the indications in the existing literature that finding simultaneous compliance with results from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and those from various DM experiments with such light states is, in general, a difficult ask, we proceed to demonstrate, with the help of a few representative benchmark points, how exactly and to what extent could such a highly motivated ‘natural’ setup with a singlino-like DM candidate still remains plausible.

        Speaker: Dr Waleed Abdallah (Faculty of Science, Cairo University, Giza 12613, Egypt)
      • 373
        Gravitational SIMPs

        We study the impact of thermalization and number-changing processes in the dark sector on the yield of gravitationally produced dark matter (DM). We take into account the DM production through the $s$-channel exchange of a massless graviton both from the scattering of inflatons during the reheating era, and from the Standard Model bath via the UV freeze-in mechanism. By considering the DM to be a scalar, a fermion, and a vector boson we show, in a model-independent way, that DM self-interaction gives rise to a larger viable parameter space by allowing lower reheating temperature to be compatible with Planck observed relic abundance. As an example, we also discuss our findings in the context of the $\mathbb{Z}_2$-symmetric scalar singlet DM model.

        Speaker: Basabendu Barman
      • 374
        A search for dark matter using sub- PeV gamma-rays observed by Tibet ASγ

        The discovery of diffuse sub-PeV gamma-rays by the Tibet AS$_\gamma$ collaboration promises to revolutionize our understanding of the high-energy astrophysical universe. It has been shown that this data broadly agrees with prior theoretical expectations. We study the impact of this discovery on a well-motivated new physics scenario: PeV-scale decaying dark matter (DM). Considering a wide range of final states in DM decay, a number of DM density profiles, and numerous astrophysical background models, we find that this data provides the most stringent limit on DM lifetime for various Standard Model final states. In particular, we find that the strongest constraints are derived for DM masses in between a few PeV to few tens of PeV. Near future data of these high-energy gamma-rays can be used to discover PeV-scale decaying DM.

        Speaker: Tarak Nath Maity (Indian Institute of Science)
      • 375
        Flavor anomalies, Dark matter with vector-like fermions and scalar leptoquark

        We make a comprehensive study of vector-like fermionic dark matter and flavor anomalies in a simple extension of standard model. The model is added with doublet vector-like fermions of quark and lepton type, and also a $S_1(\bar{\textbf{3}},\textbf{1},1/3)$ scalar leptoquark. An additional lepton type singlet fermion is included, whose admixture with vector-like lepton doublet plays the role of dark matter and is examined in relic density and direct detection perspective. Electroweak precision observables are computed to put constraint on model parameter space. We constrain the new couplings from the branching ratio and angular observables associated with $b \to sll (\nu_l \bar \nu_l)$, $b \to s \gamma$ decays. We then estimate the branching ratios of the rare lepton flavor vioalting $\tau$ decays such as $\tau \to \mu (\gamma, \phi, \eta, \eta^\prime)$. We also investigate the muon anomalous magnetic moment.

        Speaker: Shivaramakrishna Singirala (School of physics, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad 500046)
      • 376
        Dark Sector searches in CMS

        New physics may have gone unseen so far due to it being hidden in a dark sector. This may result in a rich phenomenology which we can access through portal interactions. In this talk, we present recent results from dark-sector searches in CMS using the full Run-II data-set of the LHC.

        Speaker: Sushil Chauhan (Panjab Univ., India)
      • 377
        Dark matter flux from Accreting Black Holes and Direct Detections

        We discuss the possibility that accreting black hole systems could be sources for dark matter flux through several different mechanisms. We firstly discuss two types of systems: coronal thermal plasmas around supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei (AGNs), and accretion disks of stellar-mass X-ray black hole binaries (BHBs). We explore how these black hole systems may produce keV light dark matter fluxes and find that the dark fluxes from those sources might be too weak to account for the current XENON1T excess. On the other hand, black holes can be good accelerators to accrete and boost heavy dark matter particles. If considering collisions or dark electromagnetism, those particles could then escape and reach the benchmark speed of 0.1c at the detector. We also extend the black hole mass region to primordial black holes (PBHs) and discuss the possibility of contributing to keV light dark flux via superradiance of PBHs.

        Speaker: Sichun Sun
    • Early Universe Cosmology ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Yeuk Kwan Edna Cheung (Nanjing University)
      • 378
        Massless Preheating and Electroweak Vacuum Metastability

        Current measurements of Standard-Model parameters suggest that the electroweak vacuum is metastable. This metastability has important cosmological implications because large fluctuations in the Higgs field could trigger vacuum decay in the early universe. For the false vacuum to survive, interactions which stabilize the Higgs during inflation---e.g., inflaton-Higgs interactions or non-minimal couplings to gravity---are typically necessary. However, the post-inflationary preheating dynamics of these same interactions could also trigger vacuum decay, thereby recreating the problem we sought to avoid. This dynamics is often assumed catastrophic for models exhibiting scale invariance since these generically allow for unimpeded growth of fluctuations. In this talk, we examine the dynamics of such "massless preheating" scenarios and show that the competing threats to metastability can nonetheless be balanced to ensure viability. We find that fully accounting for both the backreaction from particle production and the effects of perturbative decays reveals a large number of disjoint "islands of (meta)stability" over the parameter space of couplings. Ultimately, the interplay among Higgs-stabilizing interactions plays a significant role, leading to a sequence of dynamical phases that effectively extend the metastable regions to large Higgs-curvature couplings.

        Speaker: Jeff Kost (University of Sussex)
      • 379
        Mapping the viable parameter space for testable leptogenesis

        We for the first time map the range of active-sterile neutrino mixing angles in which leptogenesis is possible in the type I seesaw model with three heavy neutrinos with Majorana masses between 50 MeV and 70 TeV, covering the entire experimentally accessible mass range. Our study includes both, the asymmetry generation during freeze-in (ARS mechanism) and freeze-out (resonant leptotenesis) of the heavy neutrinos. The range of mixings for which leptogenesis is feasible is considerably larger than in the minimal model with only two heavy neutrinos and extends all the way up to the current experimental bounds. For such large mixing angles the HL-LHC could potentially observe a number of events that is large enough to compare different decay channels, a first step towards testing the hypothesis that these particles may be responsible for the origin of matter and neutrino masses.

        Speaker: Yannis Georis (Catholic University of Louvain)
      • 380
        Constraining inflaton coupling from CMB in different inflation models

        This talk focusses on constraining the inflaton couplings and reheating temperature by the CMB data in different inflation models. It has been pointed out that within a given inflation model, it is possible to “measure” the inflaton coupling from CMB. The models parameters can be related to the observable CMB data by the reheating parameters. Using the Planck 2018 data, we give constraints to the inflaton couplings and the reheating temperature in three inflation models. In these models there exist regions where it is possible to give analytic relations between the inflaton couplings and the spectral index. Besides, we find that in a specific model one can impose a lower (or upper) bound on the couplings only using the spectral index, even if the tensor-to-scalar ratio is never measured.

        Speaker: Lei Ming (Department of Physics, Nanjing University)
      • 381
        Gravitational Leptogenesis in Bounce Cosmology

        We investigate whether successful Gravitational Leptogenesis can take place during an Ekpyrotic contraction phase. Two possible paths by which this can occur are coupling the Ekpyrotic scalar to a gravitational Chern-Simons term, or to a U(1) gauge field Chern-Simons term. These couplings lead to the production of chiral gravitational waves, which generate a lepton number asymmetry through the gravitational-lepton number anomaly. This lepton asymmetry is subsequently reprocessed by equilibrium sphaleron processes to produce a baryon asymmetry. We find successful Gravitational Leptogenesis to be possible in Ekpyrotic bounce cosmologies through both of these mechanisms.

        Speaker: Neil Barrie
      • 382
        Affleck-Dine Leptogenesis from Higgs Inflation

        We investigate the possibility of simultaneously explaining inflation, the neutrino masses and the baryon asymmetry through extending the Standard Model by a triplet Higgs. The neutrino masses are generated by the vacuum expectation value of the triplet Higgs, while a combination of the triplet and doublet Higgs' plays the role of the inflaton. Additionally, the dynamics of the triplet, and its inherent lepton number violating interactions, lead to the generation of a lepton asymmetry during inflation. The resultant baryon asymmetry, inflationary predictions and neutrino masses are consistent with current observational and experimental results.

        Speaker: Chengcheng Han (SYSU)
    • Electroweak, Top quark, and Higgs Physics ZR3

      ZR3

      Conveners: Alexander Josef Grohsjean (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE)), Yaquan Fang (Chinese Academy of Sciences (CN))
      • 383
        Higgs boson measurements in couplings to quarks and leptons with the ATLAS experiment

        Testing the Yukawa couplings of the Higgs boson to quarks and leptons is important to understand the origin of fermion masses. The talk presents several new measurements in Higgs boson decays to two bottom quarks or two tau leptons, searches for Higgs boson decays to two charm quarks or two muons, as well as indirect constraints of the charm-Yukawa coupling. The production of Higgs bosons in association with top quarks will also be discussed. These analyses are based on pp collision data collected at 13 TeV.

        Speaker: Guy Koren (Tel Aviv University (IL))
      • 384
        Combined Higgs boson measurements and their interpretations in Effective Field Theories and new physics models with the ATLAS experiment

        Combining measurements of many production and decay channels of the observed Higgs boson allows for the highest possible measurement precision for the properties of the Higgs boson and its interactions. These combined measurements are interpreted in various ways; specific scenarios of physics beyond the Standard Model are tested, as well as a generic extension in the framework of the Standard Model Effective Field Theory. The latest highlight results of these measurements and their interpretations performed by the ATLAS Collaboration will be discussed.

        Speaker: Lei Zhang (Nanjing University (CN))
      • 385
        BSM Higgs searches at CMS

        Since the first idea by Brout, Engler and Higgs in 1964, the Higgs boson had been searched for intensively. Finally, it was discovered at a mass of about 125 GeV in 2012 by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. While currently all measurements of e.g. cross sections and branching ratios show a good agreement with the Standard Model predictions, there are strong reasons to expect physics beyond the Standard Model, which could manifest itself in an extended Higgs sector. This could result in additional observable Higgs bosons, or in subtle deviations of the 125 GeV Higgs boson properties from the SM. This presentation summarizes recent results on searches for an extended Higgs sector in the CMS experiment.

        Speaker: Paul Asmuss (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE))
      • 386
        Searches for additional Higgs bosons in ATLAS

        The discovery of the Higgs boson with the mass of about 125 GeV completed the particle content predicted by the Standard Model. Even though this model is well established and consistent with many measurements, it is not capable to solely explain some observations. Many Supersymmetric extensions addressing such shortcomings introduce additional Higgs-like bosons which can be either neutral, singly-charged or even doubly-charged. The current status of searches based on the full LHC Run 2 dataset of the ATLAS experiment at 13 TeV are presented.

        Speaker: Adam Bailey (Univ. of Valencia and CSIC (ES))
      • 387
        Searches for resonances decaying to boson pairs in ATLAS

        Many new physics models, including supersymmetric extensions to the Standard Model such as two Higgs doublet models (2HDMs), predict the existence of new particles decaying into two bosons (W, Z, photon, or Higgs bosons) making these important signatures in the search for new physics. Searches for such diboson resonances have been performed in final states with different numbers of leptons, photons, as well as jets and b-jets where new jet substructure techniques are used to disentangle the hadronic decay products in highly boosted configuration. This talk summarises recent ATLAS searches with Run 2 data collected at the LHC and explains the experimental methods used, including vector- and Higgs-boson-tagging techniques.

        Speaker: William Balunas (University of Oxford (GB))
      • 388
        Exotic Higgs Decays at CMS

        A review of the recent searches for Exotic Decays of the Higgs boson performed by the CMS experiment will be presented. Whilst it is an overview talk, the speaker can choose a couple of subjects to develop in more detail.

        Speaker: Fengwangdong Zhang (University of California Davis (US))
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Lorenzo Calibbi (Nankai University)
      • 389
        Semileptonic $B$ decays and related study at Belle

        Though the Belle experiment has stopped data taking more than a decade ago, new results on $B$ meson decays are still being obtained. This is in part due to new experimental tools elaborated for Belle II applied to the Belle data set, such as the FEI (Full Event Interpretation) hadronic and semileptonic tag which enables new measurements of $B \to D^{*}\ell\nu$, $B \to D^{\ast\ast}\ell\nu$ and $B \to X\ell\nu$. Other analyses are motivated by the progress in theory such as the measurement of $q^{2}$ moments in $B \to X_{c}\ell\nu$, which allows for a determination of $|V_{cb}|$ up to the order $1/m_{b}^{4}$. The talk covers the study of semileptonic $B$ decay results and related analyses, such as a new high-precision test of QCD factorisation with $\mathcal{B}(\bar{B}^0\to D^{(*)+}\pi^{-})$ and $\mathcal{B}(\bar{B}^0\to D^{(*)+}K^{-})$, with Belle data set.

        Speaker: Youngjoon Kwon (Yonsei University )
      • 390
        New Physics Implications of LHCb Data on b to s transitions

        We present new physics implications of LHCb measurements of bsll observables within a model-independent approach and make projections for future measurements that indicate that LHCb will be in the position to discover lepton non-universality with the Run 3 data in a single observable. Moreover, we present global fits of rare B-decays within multidimensional fits involving up to all the relevant 20 Wilson coefficients and compare different scenarios via likelihood ratio tests, applying Wilks’ theorem.

        Speaker: Nazila Mahmoudi (Lyon University)
      • 391
        Potential Signatures and Combined Constraints for First Generation Leptoquarks

        We present potential signatures and combined constraints for leptoquarks which couple to first generation fermions, considering both low energy precision observables and LHC direct searches. Including all ten leptoquark representations, five scalar and five vector ones, we study at the precision frontier the constraints from $K\to\pi\nu\nu$, $K\to\pi e^+e^-$, $K^0-\bar K^0$ and $D^0-\bar D^0$ mixing, as well as from experiments sensitive to parity-violating interactions (APV, QWEAK and COHERENT). We include LHC searches for $s$-channel single resonant production, pair production and Drell-Yan-like signatures of leptoquarks. Particular emphasis is placed on the recent CMS analysis of lepton flavour universality violation in non-resonant di-lepton pairs. The excess in electron events could be a hint at first generation leptoquarks, $t$-channel contributions from $\tilde{S}_1, S_2, S_3, \tilde{V}_1, V_2 ~(\kappa_2^{RL} \neq 0)$ and $V_3$ can explain the excess without violating other bounds. Regarding the so-called "Cabibbo angle anomaly", we observe that the present constraints are too restrictive to allow for a resolution via direct leptoquark contributions to super-allowed beta decays.

        Speaker: Luc Schnell (ETH Zurich, École Polytechnique de Paris, LPTHE Sorbonne Université)
      • 392
        QCD corrections to Bs mixing in leptoquark models

        Scalar Leptoquark models can explain the current anomalies in B physics. However, one of the main constraints on these models comes from Bs-mixing.

        We analyse the QCD corrections to the Bs-mixing process within a scalar leptoquark model, going at 2-loop level. In order to examine the effect of this process we use a low energy EFT, and compute the Wilson coefficients at NLO.

        Speaker: Jordi Folch Eguren (University of Barcelona/TU Dortmund)
      • 393
        A Supersymmetric Solution to the $R_{K^{(*)}}$ Anomalies

        The latest measurement of the ratio $R_K$ at LHCb provides evidence for lepton flavour non-universal interactions beyond the Standard Model.
        A popular extension of the Standard Model is the R-parity conserving Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM), however, it is widely claimed in the literature that an explanation of these anomalies is not possible within this model.
        In this talk, I will show contrary to the claims that it is not only possible
        to relax the tensions, but also to explain the longstanding (g-2) anomaly of the muon at the same time.

        Speaker: Mustafa Tabet
      • 394
        Planck-safe U(1)' Extensions Explaining RK(*)

        We report on a new class of flavorful $Z^\prime$-extensions of the standard model, which explain the recent hints for lepton universality violation in $R_{K^{(*)}}$-data.
        The models feature new vector-like fermions as well as additional scalar fields around the electroweak scale or above.
        On top of well-known theoretical and phenomenological constraints, we require stable and Landau-pole free coupling constant evolution up to the Planck scale.
        We identify viable "Planck safe" benchmark scenarios and discuss phenomenological implications.

        Speaker: Tim Höhne (TU Dortmund)
    • Formal SUSY Theories ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Dan Xie
      • 395
        Counting BPS states with exponential networks

        I will describe a framework for computing the BPS spectrum of M-theory on a local Calabi-Yau threefold times R4xS1. Exponential Networks define counts of special Lagrangians in the mirror Calabi-Yau, thereby leading to a proposal for computing related DT invariants from geometric data of mirror curves. I will briefly sketch a connection to BPS quivers and a computation of the Kontsevich-Soibelman invariant of wall-crossing for the local Hirzebruch surface F0.

        Speaker: Pietro Longhi (ETH Zurich)
      • 396
        Shifted Quiver Yangians and Representations from BPS Crystals

        We introduce a class of new algebras, the shifted quiver Yangians, as the BPS algebras for type IIA string theory on general toric Calabi-Yau three-folds. We construct representations of the shifted quiver Yangian from general subcrystals of the canonical crystal. We derive our results via equivariant localization for supersymmetric quiver quantum mechanics for various framed quivers, where the framings are determined by the shape of the subcrystals. Our results unify many known BPS state counting problems, including open BPS counting, non-compact D4-branes, and wall crossing phenomena, simply as different representations of the shifted quiver Yangians. Furthermore, most of our representations seem to be new, and this suggests the existence of a zoo of BPS state counting problems yet to be studied in detail.

        Speaker: Dmitrii Galakhov (Kavli IPMU)
    • Lepton Colliders ZR8D

      ZR8D

      Convener: Christophe Grojean (DESY (Hamburg) and Humboldt University (Berlin))
      • 397
        Flavor Physics at FCC-ee

        Z-pole operation at FCC-ee offers a unique laboratory for flavor physics, with the anticipated production of 10^12 b-quarks and the opportunity for triggerless data-taking in a clean e+e- collision environment. Using new simulation and analysis tools developed for FCC-ee physics and performance studies, theoretically compelling beauty, charm, and tau decay modes are studied in order to evaluate key performance metrics and expected yields. Comparisons with LHCb Upgrade and Belle-II are performed, in order to highlight areas within flavor physics where FCC-ee measurements can be highly impactful.

        Speaker: Clement Helsens (CERN)
      • 398
        Testing CP-violation in the scalar sector at lepton colliders

        We proposed a novel method to test the CP-violation in scalar sector at Higgs factories. Based on the CP-properties' analysis, if we have already discovered two scalars, the existence of three vertices $H_1ZZ$, $H_2ZZ$, and $H_1H_2Z$ at tree level becomes the evidence for us to confirm CP-violation. At a lepton collider, all four components of energy-momentum can be reconstructed, and thus all these vertices can be measured model-independently.

        Speaker: Dr Ying-nan Mao (Wuhan University of Technology)
      • 399
        Quark Pair Production at Lepton Colldiers: Experimental challenges

        We will discuss the experimental challenges and prospects for precision measurements of observables associated to quark pair production at e+e- Higgs/Top Factories (with focus in the ILC)

        Speaker: Adrian Irles (IFIC CSIC/UV)
      • 400
        Fermion pair production at $e^-e^+$ linear collider experiments in GUT inspired gauge-Higgs unification

        In gauge-Higgs unification (GHU), the 4D Higgs boson appears as a part of the fifth dimensional component of 5D gauge field. Recently, an $SO(11)$ GUT inspired $SO(5)\times U(1)\times SU(3)$ GHU model has been proposed. In the GHU, Kaluza-Klein (KK) excited states of neutral vector bosons, photon, $Z$ boson and $Z_R$ boson, appear as neutral massive vector bosons $Z'$s. The $Z'$ bosons in the GHU couple to quarks and leptons with large parity violation, which leads to distinctive polarization dependence in, e.g., cross sections and forward-backward asymmetries in $e^-e^+\to \mu^-\mu^+, q\bar{q}$ processes.
        In the talk, we discuss fermion pair production in $e^-e^+$ linear collider experiments with polarized $e^-$ and $e^+$ beams in the GUT inspired GHU. Deviations from the SM are shown in the early stage of ILC 250 GeV experiments. The deviations can be tested for the KK mass scale up to about 15 TeV.
        This talk is mainly based on Phys.Rev.D102(2020)015029.

        Speaker: Naoki Yamatsu (Kyushu University)
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Lei Wu (Nanjing Normal University)
      • 401
        A relatively light, highly bino-like dark matter in the $Z_3$-symmetric NMSSM and recent LHC searches

        A highly bino-like Dark Matter (DM), which is the Lightest Supersymmetric Particle (LSP), could be motivated by the stringent upper bounds on the DM direct detection rates. This is especially so when its mass is around or below 100 GeV for which such a bound tends to get most severe. Requiring not so large a higgsino mass parameter, that would render the scenario reasonably 'natural', prompts such a bino-like state to be relatively light. In the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM), in the absence of comparably light scalars, such an excitation, if it has to be a thermal relic, is unable to meet the stringent experimental upper bound on its abundance unless its self-annihilation hits a funnel involving either the $Z$-boson or the Standard Model (SM)-like Higgs boson. We demonstrate that, in such a realistic situation, a highly bino-like DM of the popular $Z_3$-symmetric Next to-Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (NMSSM) is viable over an extended range of its mass, from our targeted maximum in the vicinity of the mass of the top quark down to about 30~GeV. This is facilitated by the presence of comparably light singlet-like states that could serve as funnel (scalars) and/or coannihilating (singlino) states even as the bino-like LSP receives a minimal (but optimal) tempering triggered by suitably light higgsino states that, in the first place, evade stringent lower bounds on their masses that can be derived from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiments only in the presence of a lighter singlino-like state. An involved set of blind spot conditions is derived for the DM direct detection rates by considering for the very first time the augmented system of neutralinos comprising of the bino, the higgsinos and the singlino which highlights the important roles played by the NMSSM parameters `$\lambda$' and $\tan\beta$ in delivering a richer phenomenology.

        Speaker: Mr Subhojit Roy (Harish-Chandra Research Institute, INDIA)
      • 402
        Probing mild-tempered neutralino dark matter through top-squark production at the LHC

        In Supersymmetry, the lightest neutralino turns out to be a promising WIMP dark matter(DM) candidate. In the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model(MSSM), a pure neutralino state can be a thermal DM if it has mass $\cal{O}$(1) TeV. So a WIMP dark matter(DM) of mass $\cal{O}$(100) GeV or less should be a "tempered neutralino". Taking into account current constraints from direct detection(DD) experiments, it turns out that this DM should mostly be a bino-dominated "mild-tempered" neutralino, where a small Higgsino component is necessary to achieve the observed relic density. This DM candidate can be produced indirectly through heavier Higgsino-like electroweakino states, which, in turn, can appear from the decay of top-squark. Keeping that in mind, we shall discuss how in a DM motivated MSSM scenario at the LHC, a common robust feature is the presence of the Standard Model(SM) Higgs boson, along with $\rm t\bar{t}$ and the indispensable $\rm E{\!\!\!/}_T$. We shall also present how this "mild-tempered'' neutralino DM can be probed at the LHC through a Higgs-mediated channel at the center of mass energy $\rm \sqrt{s}= 13~TeV$ and integrated luminosity options $\cal{L}$$\rm =300~fb^{-1}$ and $\rm 3000~fb^{-1}$.

        Speaker: Arnab Roy
      • 403
        Signals from Light Sneutrino Dark Matter at future e +e − Colliders

        We study the possibility of measuring neutrino Yukawa couplings in the Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model supplemented with right-handed neutrinos (NMSSMr) when the lightest of such states is the Dark Matter (DM) candidate, by exploiting a `dijet + dilepton + Missing Transverse Energy' (MET) signature. We show that, contrary to the minimal realisation of Supersymmetry (SUSY), the MSSM, wherein the DM candidate is typically a much heavier (fermionic) neutralino state, this extended model of SUSY offers one with a much lighter (bosonic) state as DM that can then be produced at the next generation of $e^+e^-$ colliders with energies up to 500 GeV or so. The ensuing signal, mediated by (both neutral and charged) --into production and decay, is extremely pure so it also affords one with the possibility of extracting the Yukawa parameters of the (s)neutrino sector. Altogether, our results serve the purpose of motivating searches for light DM signals at such machines, where the DM candidate can have a mass around the Electro-Weak (EW) scale.

        Speaker: YI LIU (university of Southampton)
      • 404
        Anapole Moment of Majorana Fermions and Implications for Direct Detection of Neutralino Dark Matter

        In many theories dark matter is assumed to be a Majorana fermion, for which the anapole moment can induce an effective interaction with targets in direct detection experiments via the exchange of a virtual photon. In this talk, I will present the novel contribution to the anapole moment of a generic Majorana fermion due to vectors in the one-loop expression. For this, the diagrams are evaluated by application of the background field method, ensuring a gauge- and gauge-parameter independent result. After the model-independent discussion I will focus on the anapole moment of the lightest neutralino in various MSSM scenarios and will highlight its implication for direct detection experiments of neutralino dark matter. Notably the here presented novel contribution can be significant in scenarios in which squarks and sleptons are heavy and the chargino mixing angles are non-degenerate.

        Speaker: Merlin Reichard (Technical University of Munich (TUM))
      • 405
        Multi-scalar signature of self-interacting dark matter in the NMSSM and beyond

        As the standard model of the Big Bang cosmology, the ΛCDM model can account for most observations of the Universe, especially on the large scale structure of the Universe.However, the predictions on small scale structures exist some anomalies:missing satellites, cusp vs core, too big to fail. The issues can be resolved if the DM has strong self-interactions with light mediator(o(1)Mev) where the cross section is constrained. The self-interacting DM with scalar mediator can be naturally realized in the NMSSM.In this work, we focus on the SIDM scenario in the general NMSSM, and discuss the possible LHC signatures of the SIDM in the NMSSM basing on our selected benchmark points.

        Speaker: Cong Zhang (Sichuan University)
    • Theories of New Strong Dynamics ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Giacomo Cacciapaglia
      • 406
        Constraining a top-philic dark matter model featuring contact terms

        We investigate the astrophysical and collider constraints of an effective model featuring a scalar top-philic heavy dark matter candidate and a dimension-?five contact interaction term, as motivated by possible underlying extensions of the Standard Model such as composite Higgs models. We show that the presence of contact interactions can have a major impact on the dark matter relic density as well as on its direct and indirect detection prospects, while the collider phenomenology of the model is unaffected. This underlines the complementarity of collider and cosmological constraints on dark matter models.

        Speaker: Ms Lara Mason (Universite Claude Bernard Lyon 1)
      • 407
        Vector boson scattering in composite Higgs models

        Deviations from the SM in high energy longitudinal vector boson scattering might be the first evidence of a composite electroweak symmetry breaking sector. In this talk I will discuss the theoretical expectations and experimental prospects for this process in composite Higgs models. I will also compare it with searches for scalars that are typical in this class of model.

        Speaker: Diogo Buarque Franzosi (Chalmers University of Technology)
      • 408
        Terazooming in on light (composite) axion like particles

        The Tera-Z phase of future $e^+ e^-$ colliders, FCC-ee and CepC, is a goldmine for exploring $Z$ portal physics. We focus on axion-like particles (ALPs) that can be produced via $Z$ decays with a monochromatic photon. As a template model, we consider composite Higgs models with a light pseudo-scalar that couples through the Wess-Zumino-Witten term to the electroweak gauge bosons. For both photophilic and photophobic cases, we show that the Tera-Z can probe composite scales up to $100$s of TeV, well beyond the capability of the LHC and current precision physics.
        Our results also apply to generic ALPs and, in particular, severely constrain models that explain the muon $g-2$ anomaly.

        Speaker: Abhishek Iyer (IIT Delhi)
      • 409
        Chiral models of composite axions and accidental Peccei-Quinn symmetry

        The QCD axion, based on the existence of the anomalous Peccei-Quinn (PQ) symmetry, realizes a simple and elegant solution to the strong CP problem. However, explicit realizations are extremely sensitive to PQ-violating effects in the UV, which can destabilize the axion potential and spoil the solution. In this talk, we introduce a class of composite axion models that provide a natural solution to the strong CP problem. The PQ symmetry is not only accidental, but also naturally protected from higher dimensional operators by the gauge dynamics. The QCD axion emerges as the NGB of a strongly-interacting, chiral sector with no fundamental scalars, where all mass scales are generated dynamically. The model can be easily chosen to be compatible with a grand unified dynamics, and we discuss the case of non-supersymmetric SU(5) unification.

        Speaker: Alessandro Podo (Columbia University)
      • 410
        Composite Dynamics in the Early Universe

        We study the occurrence of a strong first-order electroweak phase transition in composite Higgs models. Minimal constructions realising this scenario are based on the coset SO(6)/SO(5) which delivers an extended Higgs sector with an additional scalar. In such models, a two-step phase transition can be obtained with the scalar singlet acquiring a vacuum expectation value at intermediate temperatures. A bonus of the Nambu-Goldstone boson nature of the scalar-sector dynamics is the presence of non-renormalisable Higgs interactions that can trigger additional sources of CP violation needed to realise baryogenesis at the electroweak scale. Another interesting aspect of this scenario is the generation of gravitational wave signatures that can be observed at future space-based interferometers.

        Speaker: Luigi Delle Rose (University of Florence)
      • 411
        Phase transition and gravitational wave in strongly-coupled dark gauge sectors

        Dark gauge sectors are well-motivated extensions of the Standard Model which may have interesting cosmological consequences. In this talk I will discuss the treatment of confinement and/or chiral phase transitions in dark QCD-like sectors, using Polyakov-extended chiral effective models. The implication for gravitational wave signatures in these type of theories will be explored.

        Speaker: Chen Zhang (INFN - National Institute for Nuclear Physics)
    • Plenary: VII Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Jinmian Li (Sichuan University)
      • 412
        Dark Matter (Mediators) at Colliders

        Thermal Dark Matter (DM) must have sizable couplings to lighter particles. This motivates Dark Matter searches at colliders. However, these 'lighter particles' need not include the particles humans can accelerate (basically electrons, u and d quarks, and gluons). Moreover, in most cases collider searches for the particle mediating the interaction of DM with lighter particles are more promising than searching for DM production. Special attention is paid to the production of mediators that do not couple to first generation fermions, and thus have to be produced in higher order processes.

        Speaker: Manuel Drees (Bonn U)
      • 413
        Recent Progress and Plan of PandaX Experiment

        PandaX experiment uses xenon as target to detect weak and rare physics signals, including dark matter and neutrinos. PandaX-II, 580kg liquid xenon completed successfully in 2019, and we are running a next generation experiment PandaX-4T with 4-ton xenon in the sensitive volume. In this talk, I will give an overview of the PandaX-4T experiment and commissioning. From 0.63 ton-year exposure data during commissioning, new constraints on the WIMP-nucleon spin-independent cross section is obtained.

        Speaker: Ning Zhou (Shanghai Jiao Tong University (CN))
      • 414
        Dark matter/Long-lived particles at ATLAS and CMS
        Speaker: Zeynep Demiragli (Boston University (US))
      • 415
        Sub-GeV Dark Matter
        Speaker: Bhaskar Dutta (Texas A&M University)
      • 416
        Gravitational Waves as Probes of New Fundamental Physics
        Speaker: Pedro Schwaller
    • 22:05
      Coffee Break
    • Dark Matter and Astroparticle Physics ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Yang Bai (University of Wisconsin, Madison)
      • 417
        A dark matter WIMP that can be detected and definitively identified with currently planned experiments

        A recently proposed dark matter WIMP [1] has only second-order couplings to gauge bosons and itself. As a result, it has small annihilation, scattering, and creation cross-sections, and is consequently consistent with all current experiments and the observed abundance of dark matter. These cross-sections are, however, still sufficiently large to enable detection in experiments that are planned for the near future, and definitive identification in experiments proposed on a longer time scale. The (multi-channel) cross-section for annihilation is consistent with thermal production and freeze-out in the early universe, and with current evidence for dark matter annihilation in analyses of the observations of gamma rays by Fermi-LAT and antiprotons by AMS-02, as well as the constraints from Planck and Fermi-LAT. The cross-section for direct detection via collision with xenon nuclei is estimated to be slightly below $10^{-47}$ cm$^2$, which should be attainable by LZ and Xenon nT and well within the reach of Darwin. The cross-section for collider detection via vector boson fusion is estimated to be $\sim 1$ fb, and may be ultimately attainable by the high-luminosity LHC; definitive collider identification will probably require the more powerful facilities now being proposed. This dark matter particle is compatible with a supersymmetric candidate in a multicomponent scenario.

        [1] Reagan Thornberry, Maxwell Throm, John Killough, Dylan Blend, Michael Erickson, Brian Sun, Brett Bays, Gabe Frohaug, and Roland E. Allen, ``Experimental signatures of a new dark matter WIMP'', EPL (European Physics Letters), in press, arXiv:2104.11715 [hep-ph].

        Speaker: Roland Allen (Texas A&M University)
      • 418
        Searches for dark matter with the ATLAS detector

        The presence of a non-baryonic Dark Matter (DM) component in the Universe is inferred from the observation of its gravitational interaction. If Dark Matter interacts weakly with the Standard Model (SM) it could be produced at the LHC. The ATLAS experiment has developed a broad search program for DM candidates, including resonance searches for the mediator which would couple DM to the SM, searches with large missing transverse momentum produced in association with other particles (light and heavy quarks, photons, Z and H bosons) called mono-X searches and searches where the Higgs boson provides a portal to Dark Matter, leading to invisible Higgs decays. The results of recent searches on 13 TeV pp data, their interplay and interpretation will be presented. Prospects for HL-LHC will also be discussed.

        Speaker: Jay Chan (University of Wisconsin Madison (US))
    • Electroweak, Top quark, and Higgs Physics ZR3

      ZR3

      Conveners: Alexander Josef Grohsjean (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE)), Eleni Vryonidou (University of Manchester (GB))
      • 419
        Performance and calibration for the identification of boosted Higgs bosons decaying into beauty quark pairs in ATLAS

        The physics programme at ATLAS involves a variety of Standard Model and Beyond Standard Model resonances decaying to two b quarks, including the Higgs Boson. In order to identify these resonances at high momentum, ATLAS has developed the boosted X→bb tagger, a new NN-based tagging algorithm which combines the flavour information of up to three sub-jets associated to the large-R jet capturing the decays of these particles. This talk presents the Monte Carlo performance for the boosted X→bb tagger and the corresponding calibration strategy using the full Run-2 dataset gathered by ATLAS and comparing to simulation. Foreseen results include the signal tagging efficiencies derived using Z (->bb)+jets and Z(->bb)+gamma events, and background mistag rates measured using ttbar and g->bb splitting in multi-jet events.

        Speaker: Changqiao Li (Shanghai Jiao Tong University (CN))
      • 420
        Vector boson scattering in CMS

        In this talk, vector boson scattering measurements performed by the CMS experiment will be presented. In addition to standard model measurements, some explanation of its application to search for new physics will also be shown.

        Speaker: Miao Hu (Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (US))
      • 421
        Search for a Higgs portal scalar decaying in MicroBooNE

        The MicroBooNE detector is an 85-ton liquid argon time projection chamber that has been operating in Fermilab's neutrino beamlines since 2015. Although primarily designed to measure neutrino interactions, the high intensity meson beamlines coupled with the high resolution detector and excellent high-multiplicity electron, muon or pion identification, allows for searches for New Physics in rare meson decays. In the Higgs portal model a new scalar boson mixes with the Higgs boson. The scalar boson can be produced in kaon decays, and decay to lepton or pion pairs. This model attracted some interest due to its ability to explain an excess of neutral kaon decays reported by the KOTO experiment in 2019. In this talk I will present recent MicroBooNE competitive limits on the Higgs portal scalar model.

        Speaker: Pawel Guzowski (University of Manchester)
    • Formal SUSY Theories ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Dan Xie
      • 423
        From SU(N) Seiberg-Witten Theory to Adjoint QCD

        Standard lore suggests that four-dimensional SU(N) gauge theory with 2 massless adjoint Weyl fermions ("adjoint QCD") flows to a phase with confinement and chiral symmetry breaking. In this talk, we will test and present new evidence for this lore. Our strategy involves realizing adjoint QCD in the deep IR of a renormalization group flow descending from SU(N) Seiberg-Witten theory, deformed by a soft supersymmetry-breaking mass for its adjoint scalars. A crucial role in the analysis is played by a dual Lagrangian that originates from the multi-monopole points of Seiberg-Witten theory, and which can be used to explore the phase diagram as a function of the supersymmetry-breaking mass. The semi-classical phases of this dual Lagrangian suggest that the softly broken SU(N) theory traverses a sequence of phases, separated by first-order transitions, that interpolate between the Coulomb phase of Seiberg-Witten theory and the confining, chiral symmetry breaking phase expected for adjoint QCD.

        Speaker: EMILY NARDONI (University of California, Los Angeles)
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Yungui Gong (Huazhong University of Science and Technology)
      • 424
        Gravitational wave propagation beyond general relativity: waveform distortions and decoherence

        We study the cosmological propagation of gravitational waves (GW) beyond general relativity (GR) across homogeneous and isotropic backgrounds. We consider scenarios in which GWs interact with an additional tensor field and use a parametrized phenomenological approach that generically describes their coupled equations of motion. We analyze four distinct classes of derivative and non-derivative interactions: mass, friction, velocity, and chiral. We apply the WKB formalism to account for the cosmological evolution and obtain analytical solutions to these equations. We corroborate these results by analyzing numerically the propagation of a toy GW signal. We then proceed to use the analytical results to study the modified propagation of realistic GWs from merging binary black holes, assuming that the GW signal emitted is the same as in GR.
        We generically find that tensor interactions lead to copies of the originally emitted GW signal, each one with its own possible modified dispersion relation.
        These copies can travel coherently and interfere with each other leading to a scrambled GW signal, or propagate incoherently and lead to echoes arriving at different times at the observer that could be misidentified as independent GW events.
        Depending on the type of tensor interaction, the detected GW signal may exhibit amplitude and phase distortions with respect to a GW waveform in GR, as well as birefringence effects.
        We discuss observational probes of these interactions with both individual GW events, as well as population studies for both ground- and space-based detectors.

        Speaker: Mr Meng-Xiang Lin (University of Chicago)
      • 425
        Gravitational Wave Gastronomy

        The symmetry breaking of grand unified gauge groups in the early universe often leaves behind relic topological defects such as cosmic strings, domain walls, or monopoles. For some symmetry breaking chains that produce domain walls, the accompanied presence of strings can lead to the destruction of the domain wall network, alleviating tension with present-day cosmology and to unique gravitational wave signatures. In this talk, I will discuss these gravitational wave signals which arise when a domain wall network is "eaten" by cosmic strings that nucleate as holes on the wall or when a string network is "eaten" by domain walls that attach to the strings.

        Speaker: David Dunsky (UC Berkeley)
      • 426
        Probing the existence of ultralight bosons with black hole superradiance

        In the presence of an ultralight bosonic field, spinning black holes are unstable to superradiance. The rotational energy of the black hole is converted into an oscillating boson cloud, which dissipates through the emission of nearly monochromatic gravitational radiation. Thus, gravitational wave observations by ground- or space-based detectors can be used to probe the existence of dark particles weakly coupled to the Standard Model. We demonstrate how these waveforms are obtained utilizing methods from black hole perturbation theory, outline different gravitational wave search strategies for these sources, show current bounds on the existence of ultralight bosonic clouds based on these searches, and touch on how more complicated couplings to the Standard Model may affect the observational signatures.

        Speaker: Mr Nils Siemonsen (Perimeter Institute)
      • 427
        Collider and GW complementarity in the 2HDM

        We study electroweak phase transition and resultant GWs of a CP conserving 2HDM with a softly broken $Z_2$ symmetry. We analysed the parameter space of both type I and type II 2hdm without relying on any decoupling limit. We observe $M_{H^\pm} \approx M_H$ or $M_{H^\pm} \approx M_A$ favours SFOEWPT in 2HDM. In addition to di-Higgs production, scalar to fermion decay channel is also important to probe phase transition behaviour in 2HDM. We also comment about the shape of potential leading to SFOEWPT in 2hdm.

        Speaker: AJAY Kaladharan (Oklahoma State University)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Xing Huang (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee)
      • 428
        Local SUSY, an unconventional approach

        Unconventional SUSY connects spacetime and internal symmetries, combining spin-1 gauge field and spin-1/2 matter particles in a single Lie superalgebra-valued connection. In this representation, states do not come in Bose-Fermi pairs, avoiding the doubling of particles and fields. If the local symmetry contains the Lorentz group, gravity is inevitably included, but there are no spin-3/2 or higher fundamental fields. Local SUSY is a conditional symmetry of the action, like local Poincaré or AdS invariances that depend on the nature of the spacetime background. The resulting systems are remarkably simple, closely resembling a standard quantum field theory and SUSY still emerges as a contingent symmetry, dependent on the features of the vacuum/ground state. We illustrate the general construction with some examples.

        Speaker: Jorge Zanelli (CECS, Valdivia)
    • Split SUSY and High-Scale SUSY ZR8D

      ZR8D

      Convener: James Unwin (UIC)
      • 429
        Testing Affleck Dine with Poltergeist Gravitational Waves

        The Affleck Dine mechanism is a compelling explanation for the asymmetry between matter and anti-matter. Unfortunately, testing the mechanism is quite a challenge due to the high scales involved. We will argue that the Affleck-Dine condensate usually produces long lived Q-balls that cause an early period of matter domination. Because these Q-balls decay at a rate faster than exponential, they will produce sound waves in the plasma that enhance gravitational waves from inflation at a frequency that corresponds to the time of decay. The production of observable signals is very common, and the mechanisms that can produce a sufficiently fast transition from matter to radiation domination are limited. This implies a relatively generic test of the mechanism

        Speaker: Dr Graham White (IPMU)
      • 430
        $N=1$ trinification from dimensional reduction of $N=1$, $10D E_8$ over $SU(3)/U(1)\times U(1)\times Z_3$ and its phenomenological consequences

        In this talk we will present an extension of the Standard Model that results from the dimensional reduction of the $N=1$, $10 D$ $E_8$ group over a $M4\times B_0/Z_3$ space, where $B_0$ is the nearly-Kähler manifold $SU(3)/U(1)\times U(1)$ and $Z_3$ is a freely acting discrete group on $B_0$. Using the Wilson flux breaking mechanism we are left in four dimensions with an $N=1$ $SU(3)^3$ gauge theory. Below the unification scale we have a two Higgs doublet model in a split-like supersymmetric version of the Standard Model, which yields third generation quark and light Higgs masses within the experimental limits and predicts the LSP ∼1500GeV. The above is based on our recent work: Phys.Lett.B 813 (2021) 136031, 2009.07059 [hep-ph].

        Speaker: George Manolakos (NTUA)
      • 431
        Electroweak Phase Transitions with BSM Fermions

        Negative results of searches for BSM physics at the LHC are pushing the soft-SUSY-breaking scale of colored superpartners beyond the TeV scale. On the contrary, there exist only very weak constraints on the masses of additional light fermions gauged under the SM gauge group. Therefore, split-/high-scale-SUSY scenarios are an appealing alternative to weak-scale SUSY since they automatically fulfil both experimental constraints by assuming a large separation between the soft-breaking
        squared-scalar and gaugino masses. However, heavy or even decoupled scalar masses are in general non-beneficial for the realisation of a strong first order electroweak phase transition (EWPT).

        We study the impact of additional beyond-the-Standard Model (BSM) fermions, charged under the Standard Model (SM) SU(2)xU(1) gauge group, on the EWPT in a 2-Higgs-Doublet-Model (2HDM) of type II. We find that the strength of the EWPT can be enhanced by about 40% compared to the default 2HDM. Therefore, additional light fermions are a useful tool to weaken the tension between increasing mass constraints on BSM scalars and the requirement of additional light scalar degrees of freedom to accommodate a strong first order EWPT. The findings are of particular interest for a variety of (non-minimal) split supersymmetry scenarios.

        Speaker: Martin Gabelmann (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT))
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Stefan Guindon (CERN)
      • 432
        Searches for R-parity violating SUSY with the CMS detector

        R-parity violation introduces many viable signatures to the search for supersymmetry at the LHC.The decay of supersymmetric particles can produce leptons or jets, while removing the missingtransverse momentum signal common to traditional supersymmetry searches. The talk presentsrecent results from searches of supersymmetry in these unusual signatures of R-parity violationwith the CMS detector.

        Speaker: Christopher Madrid (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))
      • 433
        Search for R-parity violating supersymmetry in a final state containing leptons and many jets with the ATLAS experiment

        R-parity-violating (RPV) SUSY models are well motivated theories, with fewer experimental constraints than many R-parity-conserving models, and allow for more natural supersymmetric mass spectra. This talk presents the latest result for a search for RPV SUSY in final states with at least one lepton and high number of jets, several of which may be b-jets. The analysis follows a general approach to be sensitive to a large variety of models for strong production of SUSY particles. Additionally, it introduces the use of novel machine learning techniques to reach sensitivity, for the first time at the LHC, for electroweak production of SUSY particles (including Higgsinos) with subsequent RPV prompt decays to quarks. These machine learning techniques are based on the distance correlation training and they play a key role also in the data-driven estimation of the backgrounds. The analysis sets impressive limits reaching as high as 2.4 TeV in gluino mass, 1.35 TeV in top-squark mass, and 320 (365) GeV in higgsino (wino) mass.

        Speaker: Martin Errenst (Bergische Universitaet Wuppertal (DE))
      • 434
        Exploring the frontier of R-parity-violating supersymmetry with the ATLAS detector

        Supersymmetry models in which R-parity violation occurs predict a wide range of experimental signatures at the LHC, including many high-multiplicity final states without large missing transverse momentum. These models are motivated by the hierarchy problem and for some parameters naturally explain the lightness of the standard model neutrinos. Searches for RPV SUSY signatures require dedicated signal regions and innovative techniques to estimate the challenging backgrounds. This talk will highlight the latest results of searches conducted by the ATLAS experiment which target supersymmetric particles produced via both strong and electroweak processes in R-parity violating scenarios.

        Speaker: Lorenzo Feligioni (CPPM, Aix-Marseille Université, CNRS/IN2P3 (FR))
    • Theories of New Strong Dynamics ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Oleksii Matsedonskyi (Weizmann Institute)
      • 435
        Electroweak baryogenesis and gravitational waves in a composite Higgs model with high dimensional fermion representations

        We study electroweak baryogenesis in the SO(6)/SO(5) composite Higgs model with the third generation quarks being embedded in the 20′ representation of SO(6). The scalar sector contains one Higgs doublet and one real singlet, and their potential is given by the Coleman-Weinberg potential evaluated from the form factors of the lightest vector and fermion resonances. We show that the resonance masses at O(1 ∼ 10 TeV) can generate a potential that triggers the strong first-order electroweak phase transition (SFOEWPT). The CP violating phase arising from the dimension-6 operator in the top sector is sufficient to yield the observed baryon asymmetry of the universe. The SFOEWPT parameter space is detectable at the future space-based detectors.

        Speaker: Ke-Pan Xie (Seoul National University)
      • 436
        Gravitational waves and baryogenesis from a non-minimal composite Higgs model

        A possible explanation of the origin of baryon asymmetry in the universe is provided by electroweak (EW) baryogenesis, where the asymmetry is generated during a first-order phase transition. This can be realized in the presence of new physics that modify the Higgs dynamics.

        Non minimal Composite Higgs models based on the coset SO(6)/SO(5) offer a suitable extension of the SM Higgs sector that can realize baryogenesis.
        The scalar sector of the theory is enriched by an additional scalar singlet field that triggers a ``two-step'' EW phase transition and introduces additional sources of CP-violation.

        In this talk I will discuss the dynamics of the two-step phase transition,
        with particular focus on the conditions needed for baryogenesis.
        An important requirement is the breaking of a discrete $Z_2$ symmetry associated to the additional singlet, which controls the degeneracy of vacua and the amount of CP violation.

        The current bounds on the electric dipole moments of the electron and the neutron impose very mild constraints on the amount of $Z_2$ breaking, allowing for a successful EW baryogenesis in a large part of the parameter space.

        Speaker: Andrea Guiggiani (Università degli studi di Firenze)
      • 437
        Cosmological Implications of Supercooled Confinement

        A strongly-coupled sector can feature a supercooled confinement transition in the early universe. When fundamental quanta of the strong sector are swept into expanding bubbles of the confined phase, the distance between them is large compared to the confinement scale. The flux linking the fundamental quanta then deforms and stretches towards the wall, producing an enhanced number of composite states upon string fragmentation. The composite states are highly boosted in the plasma frame, which leads to additional particle production through the subsequent deep inelastic scattering. I will discuss the modelling of these dynamics and introduce the consequences for the abundance and energetics of particles in the universe and for bubble-wall Lorentz factors.

        Speaker: Dr Yann Gouttenoire (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY)
    • Plenary: VIII Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Yu-Qi Chen (Institute of Theoretical Physics)
      • 438
        Baryogenesis and New Physics
        Speaker: Carlos E. M. Wagner
      • 439
        The String Landscape and Particle Remnants

        In this talk I will review some essential facts about the known landscape of string vacua and its potential implications for particle physics and cosmology. A central focus will be on string remnants, which are new particles that are apparently accidental consequences of the ultraviolet theory, not necessarily motivated by specific shortcoming of the standard models of particle physics or cosmology. A particular focus will be given to dark gauge sectors and axion-like particles, including their couplings to the photon.

        Speaker: James Halverson (Northeastern U)
      • 440
        Aspirations and Prospects for Natural Supersymmetry
        Speaker: Xerxes Tata (University of Hawaii)
      • 441
        GAMBIT: The Global and Modular Beyond-the-Standard-Model Inference Tool

        I give an update on GAMBIT, the Global And Modular Beyond-the-Standard-Models Inference Tool. After briefly motivating global fitting, I highlight why GAMBIT is a promising framework to help us identifying the new physics model beyond the standard models (BSM) of particle physics and cosmology. Focusing on the physics content, I give a non-technical introduction of the schematic structure and main features of the GAMBIT code, from the hierarchical database, through dependency resolution, to modules and backends. I finish the talk by describing the GAMBIT Universal Model Machine, the latest feature that GAMBIT 2.0 introduced.

        Speaker: Csaba Balazs (Monash University)
    • 09:40
      Coffee Break
    • Axion Physics and Experiments ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Nick Houston (Beijing University of Technology)
      • 442
        High-quality axions in solutions to the $\mu$ problem

        Solutions to the $\mu$ problem in supersymmetry based on the Kim-Nilles mechanism naturally feature a Dine-Fischler-Srednicki-Zhitnitsky (DFSZ) axion with decay constant of order the geometric mean of the Planck and TeV scales, consistent with astrophysical limits. We investigate minimal models of this type with two gauge singlet fields that break a Peccei-Quinn symmetry, and extensions with extra vectorlike quark and lepton supermultiplets consistent with gauge coupling unification. We show that there are many anomaly-free discrete symmetries, depending on the vectorlike matter content, that protect the Peccei-Quinn symmetry to sufficiently high order to solve the strong CP problem. We study the axion couplings in this class of models. Models of this type that are automatically free of the domain wall problem require at least one pair of strongly interacting vectorlike multiplets with mass at the intermediate scale, and predict axion couplings that are greatly enhanced compared to the minimal supersymmetric DFSZ models, putting them within reach of proposed axion searches.

        Speaker: Prudhvi Bhattiprolu (Northern Illinois University)
      • 443
        Resurrecting Low-Mass Axion Dark Matter Via a Dynamical QCD Scale

        In the framework where the strong coupling is dynamical, the QCD sector may confine at a much higher temperature than it would in the Standard Model, and the temperature-dependent mass of the QCD axion evolves in a non-trivial way. We find that, depending on the evolution of $\Lambda_{QCD}$, the axion field may undergo multiple distinct phases of damping and oscillation leading generically to a suppression of its relic abundance. Such a suppression could therefore open up a wide range of parameter space, resurrecting in particular axion dark-matter models with a large Peccei-Quinn scale $f_a \gg 10^{12}$ GeV, i.e., with a lighter mass than the standard QCD axion.

        Speaker: Fei Huang (ITP CAS and UC Irvine)
      • 444
        The Earth as a transducer for dark-photon dark-matter detection

        In this talk, I will propose the use of the Earth as a transducer for ultralight dark-matter detection. In particular I will point out a novel signal of kinetically mixed dark-photon dark matter: a monochromatic oscillating magnetic field generated at the surface of the Earth. Similar to the signal in a laboratory experiment in a shielded box (or cavity), this signal arises because the lower atmosphere is a low-conductivity air gap sandwiched between the highly conductive interior of the Earth below and ionosphere or interplanetary medium above. At low masses (frequencies) the signal in a laboratory detector is usually suppressed by the size of the detector multiplied by the dark-matter mass. Crucially, in our case the suppression is by the radius of the Earth, and not by the (much smaller) height of the atmosphere. The magnetic field signal exhibits a global vectorial pattern that is spatially coherent across the Earth, which enables sensitive searches for this signal using unshielded magnetometers dispersed over the surface of the Earth. I will summarize the results of such a search using a publicly available dataset from the SuperMAG collaboration. The constraints from this search are complementary to existing astrophysical bounds. Future searches for this signal may improve the sensitivity over a wide range of ultralight dark-matter candidates and masses.

        Speaker: Saarik Kalia (Stanford University)
    • Electroweak, Top quark, and Higgs Physics ZR1

      ZR1

      Conveners: Jianming Qian (University of Michigan (US)), Junjie Cao (Henan Normal University)
      • 445
        Resonant and non-resonant HH production at CMS

        A review of the recent searches for production of Higgs boson pairs (both resonant and non-resonant) performed by the CMS experiment will be presented. Whilst it is an overview talk, the speaker can choose a couple of subjects to develop in more detail.

        Speaker: Siddhesh Sawant (Baylor University (US))
      • 446
        The anomalous Zbb couplings at the LHC and lepton-hadron colliders

        To resolve the long-standing discrepancy between the precision measurement of bottom quark forward-backward asymmetry at LEP/SLC and the Standard Model prediction, we propose several novel methods to probe the $Zb\bar{b}$ coupling at the LHC and lepton-hadron colliders (HERA and EIC).

        Speaker: Dr Bin Yan (Los Alamos National Laboratory)
      • 447
        Rare top quark production at ATLAS and CMS: ttZ, ttW, ttgamma, tZ, tgamma, and tttt production

        A comprehensive set of measurements of top quark pair and single top quark production in association with EWK bosons (W, Z or ɣ) using data collected by ATLAS and CMS detectors presented. The results are compared to theory predictions and re-interpreted as searches for new physics inducing deviations from the standard model predictions. The status of the search for four top quark production, to which the LHC experiments are starting to be sensitive, and that has important BSM re-interpretations, is also reported.

        Speaker: Emanuele Usai (Brown University (US))
      • 448
        The Higgs-top CP phase with tth at the 14 TeV LHC and 100 TeV FCC

        Precision measurement of the Higgs boson properties is an important topic at the LHC and future collider experiments. We studied the potential to directly probe the maginitude and CP phase of the top quark Yukawa coupling in $t\bar th$ production with $h\to b\bar b$. The BDRS algorithm is used to tag the boosted Higgs, while the $t\bar t$ rest frame is constructed using $M_2$ assisted reconstruction. Further, sideband events of the major background $t\bar tb\bar b$ are used to reduce the corresponding systematics, and the $t\bar tZ$ process is used to reduce the systematics of the signal. With these excellent handles on the uncertainties, we can achieve high precision on measuring both the maginitude and CP phase of the top Yukawa couplings.

        Speaker: Dr Yongcheng Wu (Oklahoma State University)
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Lorenzo Calibbi (Nankai University)
      • 449
        Taming the $\epsilon_K$ in Little Randall Sundrum Models

        The Randall Sundrum (RS) models receive significant constraints
        from the neutral Kaon system. The CP violating observable $\epsilon_K$, in Randall Sundrum scenario, requires the lightest KK gluon to be heavier than $\sim$ 24 TeV. The constraint is even stronger in the Little Randall Sundrum models (LRS), $ \sim $ 32 TeV. The LRS models are motivated for their possible visibility at the Large Hardon Collider (LHC). We show that the stringent constraints from K-physics can be relaxed in the LRS models, in the presence of the Brane Localised Kinetic Terms (BLKT). In particular, for a range of values, a UV BLKT could significantly modify the lightest KK gluon wave function such that the limit can reduces to 5 TeV. We also show that such a relaxation of the constraints can also be achieved by imposing flavour symmetries ${`a la }$ Minimal Flavour Protection.

        Speaker: Dr Mathew Thomas (IISER, Trivandrum)
      • 450
        Stringy origin of modular flavor symmetry and spontaneous CP violation

        We examine a common origin of four-dimensional flavor, CP, and $U(1)_R$ symmetries in the context of heterotic string theory with standard embedding. We find that flavor and $U(1)_R$ symmetries are unified into the $Sp(2h+2, \mathbb{C})$ modular symmetries of Calabi-Yau threefolds with $h$ being the number of moduli fields. Together with the $\mathbb{Z}_2^{\rm CP}$ CP symmetry, they are enhanced to $GSp(2h+2, \mathbb{C})$ generalized symplectic modular symmetry.
        We exemplify the $S_3, S_4, T^\prime, S_9$ non-Abelian flavor symmetries on explicit toroidal orbifolds with and without resolutions and $\mathbb{Z}_2,S_4$ flavor symmetries on three-parameter examples of Calabi-Yau threefolds. Thus, non-trivial flavor symmetries appear in not only the exact orbifold limit but also a certain class of Calabi-Yau threefolds. These flavor symmetries are further enlarged to non-Abelian discrete groups by the CP symmetry.
        We also discuss the spontaneous CP violation in the context of Calabi-Yau flux compactifications.

        Speaker: Hajime Otsuka (KEK, Tsukuba)
      • 451
        A Supersymmetric Flavor Clockwork

        Clockwork models can explain the flavor hierarchies in the Standard Model quark and lepton spectrum.
        We construct supersymmetric versions of such flavor clockwork models. The zero modes of the clockwork are identified with the fermions and sfermions of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model. In addition to generating a hierarchical fermion spectrum, the clockwork also predicts a specific flavor structure for the soft SUSY breaking sfermion masses. We find sizeable flavor mixing among first and second generation squarks. Constraints from Kaon oscillations require the masses of either squarks or gluinos to be above a scale of $\sim 3$ PeV.

        Speaker: Sri Aditya Gadam (University of California, Santa Cruz)
    • 11:30
      Lunch
    • Axion Physics and Experiments ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Qiaoli Yang (Jinan University)
      • 452
        Cosmic Birefringence Triggered by Dark Matter Domination

        Cosmic birefringence is predicted if an axion-like particle (ALP) moves after the recombination. We show that this naturally happens if the ALP is coupled to the dark matter density because it then acquires a large effective mass after the matter-radiation equality. We give a simple model to realize this scenario, where dark matter is made of hidden monopoles, which give the ALP such a large effective mass through the Witten effect. The mechanism works if the ALP decay constant is of order the GUT-scale without a fine-tuning of the initial misalignment angle.

        Speaker: Prof. Masaki Yamada (Tohoku University)
      • 453
        Heavy QCD axion inflation and strong CP problem

        The QCD axion mass may receive contributions from small-size instantons or other Peccei-Quinn breaking effects. I show that it is possible for such a heavy QCD axion to induce slow-roll inflation if the potential is sufficiently flat near its maximum by balancing the small instanton contribution with another Peccei-Quinn symmetry breaking term. In addition, requiring the axion hilltop inflation may result in the strong CP phase that is close to zero.

        Speaker: Wen Yin
      • 454
        Non-thermally trapped inflation due to the tachyonic instability

        The motion of the axion field explosively produces hidden photons due to the tachyonic instability. We consider the Abelian Higgs model coupled to the hidden photon which leads to the effective mass of the Higgs. When the axion starts to oscillate and the hidden photon are produced, the Higgs is trapped by the effective mass. If the vacuum energy of the Higgs dominates the universe, then the inflation non-thermally occurs in the late-time universe. In this talk, we will present our results and its implication for cosmology.

        Speaker: Shota Nakagawa (Tohoku University)
      • 455
        Searching for solar axions with SNO

        We explore a novel detection possibility for solar axions, which relies only on their couplings to nucleons, via the axion-induced dissociation of deuterons into their constituent neutrons and protons. An opportune target for this process is the now-concluded Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) experiment, which relied upon large quantities of heavy water to resolve the solar neutrino problem. From the full SNO dataset we exclude in a model-independent fashion isovector axion-nucleon couplings $|g^3_{aN}|\equiv\frac{1}{2}|g_{an}-g_{ap}|>2\times10^{-5}$GeV${}^{-1}$ at 95 \% C.L. for sub-MeV axion masses, covering previously unexplored regions of the axion parameter space. In the absence of a precise cancellation between $g_{an}$ and $g_{ap}$ this result also exceeds comparable constraints from other laboratory experiments, and excludes regions of the parameter space for which astrophysical constraints from SN1987A and neutron star cooling are inapplicable due to axion trapping.

        Based on Phys.Rev.Lett. 126 (2021) no.9, 091601, arXiv:2004.02733

        Speaker: Nick Houston (BJUT)
    • Electroweak, Top quark, and Higgs Physics ZR1

      ZR1

      Conveners: Qiang Li (Peking University (CN)), Rohini Godbole (Centre for Theoretical Studies (CTS))
      • 456
        Higgs boson measurements at CMS

        A review of the recent measurements of the SM Higgs couplings and properties performed by the CMS experiments will be presented. Whilst it is an overview talk, the speaker can choose a couple of subjects to develop in more detail.

        Speaker: Soumya Mukherjee (Tata Inst. of Fundamental Research (IN))
      • 457
        $Z$ polarization as a probe of anomalous gauge-Higgs coupling

        $Z$ boson being a spin-one particle provides eight polarization parameters. We show how the $Z$ boson polarization can be used to study the $ZH$ production at future $e^+e^−$ colliders and at the LHC. Using the spin density matrix of the $Z$-boson we calculate the 8 independent polarization parameters which are sensitive to anomalous gauge-Higgs couplings. We then estimate bounds on the anomalous $ZZH$ couplings by constructing angular asymmetries from the $Z$ boson decay leptons, which are related to the polarization observables. Taking into account possible longitudinal beam polarizations at two different center of mass energies, we find that oppositely polarized beams at 500 GeV c.m. energy provides tighter bounds on the couplings than the same sign polarized and unpolarized beams. We find that most of the 1σ limits are of the order of a few times $10^{−3}$ for 14 TeV LHC with integrated luminosity of 1000 fb$^{−1}$ and for 500 GeV $e^+e^−$ colliders with oppositely polarized beams.

        Speaker: Priyanka Sarmah (phd student)
      • 458
        Probing anomalous HVV couplings using Higgs production in electron-proton collisions

        Abstract: We probe anomalous HZZ coupling through single Higgs boson production at the Large Hadron-electron collider with 60 GeV (7 TeV) of electron (proton) energy. The sensitivity of CP-even and CP-odd anomalous couplings are assessed through azimuthal angle difference between scattered electron and forward jets along with cross-section as a function of luminosity. Comparative studies for HWW anomalous couplings are also performed.

        Speaker: PRAMOD SHARMA (IISER Mohali)
      • 459
        Measuring Higgs Boson Self-couplings with 2→3 VBS Processes

        We study the measurement of Higgs boson self-couplings through
        2→3 vector boson scattering (VBS) processes in the framework of Standard Model effective field theory (SMEFT) at both proton and lepton colliders. The SMEFT contribution to the amplitude of the 2→3 VBS processes, taking WLWL→WLWLh and WLWL→hhh as examples, exhibits enhancement with the energy BSMSM∼E2Λ2, which indicates the sensitivity of these processes to the related dimension-six operators in SMEFT. Simulation of the full processes at both hadron and lepton colliders with a variety of collision energies are performed to estimate the allowed region on c6 and cΦ1. Especially we find that, with the help of exclusively choosing longitudinal polarizations in the final states and suitable pT cuts, WWh process is as important as the more widely studied triple Higgs production (hhh) in the measurement of Higgs self-couplings. Our analysis indicates that these processes can play important roles in the measurement of Higgs self-couplings at future 100 TeV pp colliders and muon colliders. However, their cross sections are generally tiny at low energy machines, which makes them much more challenging to explore.

        Speaker: Junmou Chen (Jinan University)
      • 460
        Boosted semi leptonic top tagging with tau

        Boosted top quark tagging is one of the challenging tasks in high energy physics experiments, in particular in exploring new physics signals at the LHC. Several techniques are already developed to tag boosted top quark in its hadronic decay channel, and recently tagging in the semi leptonic channel also has been receiving a lot of attention. In this current study we try to develop boosted($~\text{p}_{\text{T}} > 300 ~\text{GeV}$) semi leptonic top quark tagging methodology in tau channel considering its hadronic mode. In this method two sub jets inside the top like fat jets are constructed employing standard jet substructure techniques, and then cleaning those using soft drop methods. Eventually, two sub jets are identified as b and $\tau$ like jets, naively applying techniques used in the LHC experiments. Investigating several kinematic variables of these sub jets, such as sub jets energy fractions, invariant mass etc, we show that the main QCD background can be rejected achieving higher signal tagging efficiency. It is observed that the signal efficiency ~ 82% against background rejection efficiency of ~ 98% can be achievable. We try to improve further by employing multivariate analysis techniques applying boosted decision tree inputting several kinematic variables constructed out of these two subjects. Tagging boosted top quark in its tau decay channel is very useful in improving signal efficiencies, for instance, in searching very energetic Leptoquark, top squarks in R-parity breaking SUSY model etc.

        Speaker: Amandip De (Indian Institute of Science)
      • 461
        Applying A4 to three-Higgs doublet model implies alignment

        [This talk will be on JHEP 1801 (2018) 011 by Soumita Pramanick and Amitava Raychaudhuri]

        Three-higgs doublet model in $A4$ symmetric framework will be discussed.
        It was observed that if we consider three $SU(2)_L$ doublet scalars forming a triplet under
        $A4$ symmetry, alignment follows for four global minima configurations of the vacuum expectation values (vevs) naturally owing to the $A4$ symmetry. No fine-tuning was needed.
        Positivity and unitarity conditions were satisfied.

        Speaker: Dr Soumita Pramanick (National Centre for Nuclear Research (NCBJ), Warsaw, Poland)
    • New Developments in String Theory ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Bin Chen (Peking University)
      • 462
        4D effective action from non-Abelian DBI action with magnetic flux background

        We derive 4D $\mathcal{N}=1$ supersymmetric effective theory from 10D non-Abelian Dirac-Born-Infeld action compactified on a six dimensional tori with magnetic flux on the D-branes.
        For the 10D action, we use a symmetrized trace prescription and focus on the bosonic part.
        4D chiral fermions can arise via index theorem for the background flux.
        The gauge coupling and the matter K\"{a}hler metric are read from the 10D action, which depend on closed string moduli and the fluxes.
        We read the superpotential from an F-term scalar quartic interaction derived from the 10D action, and discuss the contribution of the matter K\"{a}hler metric to the scalar potential is consistent with the supergravity formulation.
        This talk is based on the collaboration with Tetsutaro Higaki, Tatsuo Kobayashi, Shintaro Takada and Rei Takahashi.

        Speaker: Yoshihiko Abe
      • 463
        Three Point Functions in ABJM Theory-Weak Coupling Computation

        We develop an integrability-based framework to compute structure constants of two subdeterminant operators and a single-trace non-BPS operator in ABJM theory in the planar limit. In this part of work I will introduce them at weak coupling using a relation to an integrable spin chain. We first develop a nested Bethe ansatz for an alternating SU(4) spin chain that describes single-trace operators made out of scalar fields. We then apply it to the computation of the structure constants and show that they are given by overlaps between a Bethe eigenstate and a matrix product state. We conjecture that the determinant operator corresponds to an integrable matrix product state and present a closed-form expression for the overlap, which resembles the so-called Gaudin determinant. We also provide evidence for the integrability of general sub-determinant operators. The techniques developed in this paper can be applied to other quantities in ABJM theory including three-point functions of single-trace operators.

        Speaker: Peihe Yang (Tianjin University)
      • 464
        Holographic Heavy-Heavy-Light Three-point functions Revisited

        We study correlation functions of D-branes and a supergravity mode in AdS, which are dual to structure constants of two sub-determinant operators with large charge and a BPS single-trace operator. Our approach is inspired by the large charge expansion of CFT and resolves puzzles and confusions in the literature on the holographic computation of correlation functions of heavy operators. In particular, we point out two important effects which are often missed in the literature; the first one is an average over classical configurations of the heavy state, which physically amounts to projecting the state to an eigenstate of quantum numbers. The second one is the contribution from wave functions of the heavy state. To demonstrate the power of the method, we first analyze the three-point functions in N=4 super Yang-Mills and reproduce the results in field theory from holography, including the cases for which the previous holographic computation gives incorrect answers. We then apply it to ABJM theory and make solid predictions at strong coupling. Finally we comment on possible applications to states dual to black holes and fuzzballs.

        Speaker: Jun-Bao Wu (Tianjin University)
      • 465
        When Nekrasov partition function meets 5-brane web with O5-plane in the thermodynamic limit

        In this paper, we study 5d N = 1 Sp(N) gauge theory with N_f flavors based on 5-brane web diagram with O5-plane. On the one hand, we discuss Seiberg-Witten curve based on the dual graph of the 5-brane web with O5-plane. On the other hand,we compute the Nekrasov partition function based on the topological vertex formalism with O5-plane. Rewriting it in terms of profile functions, we obtain the saddle point equation for the profile function after taking thermodynamic limit. By introducing the resolvent, we derive the Seiberg-Witten curve and its boundary conditions as well as its relation to the prepotential in terms of the cycle integrals. They coincide with those directly obtained from the dual graph of the 5-brane web with O5-plane. This agreement gives further evidence for mirror symmetry which relates Nekrasov partition function with Seiberg-Witten curve in the case with orientifold plane and shed light on the non-toric Calabi-Yau 3-folds including D-type singularities.

        Speakers: Futoshi Yagi (Southwest Jiaotong University ), Xiaobin Li (Southwest Jiaotong University)
    • 15:30
      Coffee Break
    • Axion Physics and Experiments ZR7

      ZR7

      Convener: Qiaoli Yang (Jinan University)
      • 466
        Thermal axion production across the QCD phase transition

        We study thermal axion production around the confinement scale. At higher temperatures, we extend current calculations to account for the masses of heavy quarks, whereas we quantify produc- tion via hadron scattering at lower temperatures. Matching our results between the two opposite regimes provides us with a continuous axion production rate across the QCD phase transition. We employ such a rate to quantify the axion contribution to the effective number of neutrino species.

        Speaker: Fazlollah Hajkarim (Padua University)
      • 467
        Thermal QCD axions across thresholds

        Thermal axion production in the early universe goes through several mass thresholds, and the resulting rate may change dramatically across them. Focusing on the KSVZ and DFSZ frameworks for the invisible QCD axion, we perform a systematic analysis of thermal production across thresholds and provide smooth results for the rate. The QCD phase transition is an obstacle for both classes of models. For the hadronic KSVZ axion, we also deal with production at temperatures around the mass of the heavy-colored fermion charged under the Peccei-Quinn (PQ) symmetry. Standard model fermions are PQ-charged within the DFSZ framework, and additional thresholds are the heavy Higgs bosons masses and the electroweak phase transition. We investigate the cosmological implications with a specific focus on axion dark radiation quantified by an effective number of neutrino species and explore the discovery reach of future CMB-S4 surveys.

        Speaker: Seokhoon Yun (Padua University)
      • 468
        Photophilic hadronic axion from heavy magnetic monopoles

        We propose a model for the QCD axion which is realized through a coupling of the Peccei-Quinn scalar field to magnetically charged fermions at high energies. We show that the axion of this model solves the strong CP problem and then integrate out heavy magnetic monopoles using the Schwinger proper time method. We find that the model discussed yields axion couplings to the Standard Model which are drastically different from the ones calculated within the KSVZ/DFSZ-type models, so that large part of the corresponding parameter space can be probed by various projected experiments. Moreover, the axion we introduce is consistent with the astrophysical hints suggested both by anomalous TeV-transparency of the Universe and by excessive cooling of horizontal branch stars in globular clusters. We argue that the leading term for the cosmic axion abundance is not changed compared to the conventional pre-inflationary QCD axion case for axion decay constant $f_a > 10^{12}~\text{GeV}$.

        Speaker: Anton Sokolov
      • 469
        Hunting Axions Using Astrophysical Observation and Quantum Metrology

        Ultralight bosons behave like coherent waves when the occupation number is large enough. If they are coupled to the Standard Model sector of the particle physics, such an oscillating background can induce a tiny signal. Near a fast rotating black hole, axion within one order of the mass window can accumulate through superradiance, with a large density saturating the non-linear self-interaction. If linearly polarized radiation is emitted near the black hole, axion can contribute to birefringence effect that shifts the position angle periodically, making the polarimetric measurements of the Event Horizon Telescope a powerful way to look for ultra-light axions. On the other hand, quantum metrology can play huge roles in the measurements of fundamental physics. Among these, resonant detection of axion dark matter based on electromagnetic coupling is a popular direction attracting many ongoing experiments and proposals such as microwave cavity, LC circuit and superconducting radio-frequency cavity. A quantum network of resonators can strongly enhance the signal power and boost the search.

        Speaker: Mr Yifan Chen (LPTHE, Paris)
      • 470
        Axion Telescopes: detecting stellar axions.

        Axions and other light, weakly interacting particles might be copiously produced in stars. Can we detect them? Here I will discuss the strategies, challenges and possibilities to detect stellar axions and axion-like particles with existent and next-generation instruments.

        Speaker: Maurizio Giannotti (Barry University)
    • Early Universe Cosmology ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Anupam Mazumdar (Groningen University)
      • 471
        Cosmological parameter shifts and AdS-EDE

        The well-known Hubble tension is widely thought to be an indication of new physics beyond $\Lambda$CDM. Theoretical modification happening before recombination (early) seems to be more viable than post-recombination (late) ones since they are less constrained by observations. We propose the AdS-EDE model which solves the tension at 1$\sigma$ level for the first time while remaining compatible with data. Predictions of important cosmological parameters are shifted in correlation with $H_0$ in the early solutions, including EDE, from their $\Lambda$CDM values. The AdS-EDE model proves to be an ideal candidate for studying parameter shifts due to its large $H_0$ value. EDE models show a positive correlation between the scalar primordial spectrum index $n_s$ and $H_0$, and become fully compatible with a Zeldovich-Harrison ($n_s=1$) spectrum given the locally measured $H_0$ value. I will talk about the physical origin of this correlation and its profound implication on our understanding of the early Universe and inflation. The other parameter shift I will discuss is the positive $\omega_{cdm}-H_0$ correlation. The enhancement in $\omega_{cdm}$ induces a larger $S_8$, exacerbating the so called $S_8$ problem which is sometimes employed to criticize EDE. I will explain this correlation is mainly a requirement of background CMB+BAO compatibility and seems inevitable in the simplest EDE models. However, clear knowledge of the physical origin of this correlation actually tells us how to possibly restore concordance with $S_8$ and LSS in the EDE models.

        Speaker: Gen Ye (University of Chinese Academy of Sciences)
      • 472
        Maximally misaligned axions

        In this talk I will discuss a simple model of maximal axion misalignment. Maximally-misaligned axions with masses larger than 10^{-22} eV constitute an attractive DM candidate with interesting phenomenology. On the other hand, maximally-misaligned axions with masses m=O(1-100)H_0 generically behave as dark energy with a decay constant that can take values well below the Planck scale, avoiding problems associated to super-Planckian scales.

        Speaker: Mario Reig (Instituto de Física Corpuscular (IFIC))
      • 473
        Analysis of Dark Radiation Abundance in Axion-Gauge Fields Models

        In the axion-gauge fields model, the nontrivial configuration and dynamics of the axion and hidden gauge fields during inflation induce gravitational wave background. In particular, the energy density of the axion needs to be sufficiently large to generate observable gravitational waves. After inflation ends, the axion decays into gauge fields, and they behave as dark radiation, which modifies the neutrino effective degrees of freedom $N_{\rm eff}$. Therefore, the model can be constrained from precise measurements of $N_{\rm eff}$. In this study, we investigate the testability of this model from future observations of $\Delta N_{\rm eff}$, in the parameter region where the ratio of tensor fluctuations from the vacuum to those from the gauge fields is $\mathcal{O}(10^{-1})$.

        Speaker: Mitsuru Kakizaki (University of Toyama)
      • 474
        From Neutrino Masses to the Full Size of the Universe - Some Intriguing Aspects of the Tetron Model

        The universe according to the tetron model consists of invisible tiny constituents, elastically bound with bond length about the Planck length and binding energy the Planck energy.
        A tetron transforms as the fundamental fermion(=octonion) representation 8 of SO(6,1). With respect to the decomposition SO(6,1)-->SO(3,1)xSO(3) a tetron possesses spin 1/2 and isospin 1/2, i.e. it represents an isospin doublet of Dirac spinors.
        The 24 known quarks and leptons arise as eigenmode excitations of a tetrahedral fiber structure, which is made up from 4 tetrons and extends into 3 additional 'internal' dimensions.
        While the laws of gravity are due to the elastic properties of the tetron bonds, particle physics interactions take place within the internal fibers.
        I will concentrate on two of the most intriguing features of the model:
        -understanding small neutrino masses from the conservation of isospin, and, more in general, calculating the spectrum of quark and lepton masses. This is obtained from the tetron model's interpretation of the Higgs mechanism.
        -the possibility to determine the full size of the universe from future dark energy measurements. This is obtained from the tetron model's interpretation of the dark energy phenomenon.

        Speaker: Bodo Lampe
      • 475
        Warm Inflation and TCC

        warm axion inflation has been introduced as an alternative to standard (cold) inflation. Coupling between inflaton (axion) field and gauge fields changes the evolution of scalar field even at the background level. It was discussed that the system with this coupling can be thermalized inherently and is protected against tachyonic instability. I will discuss that this scenario is compatible with observation and is in the landscape of quantum gravity conjectures.

        Speaker: Vahid Kamali
      • 476
        Primordial Black Holes in the Excursion Set Theory

        We study primordial black holes (PBHs) formation in the excursion set theory (EST) in a vast range of PBHs masses with and without confirmed constraints on their abundance. In this work, a new concept of the first touch in the EST is introduced for PBHs formation which takes into account the earlier horizon reentry of smaller masses. Our study shows that in the EST, it is possible to produce PBHs in different mass ranges which could make up all dark matter. We also show that in a broad blue-tilted power spectrum, the production of PBHs is dominated by a smaller mass. Our analysis put an upper limit ~ 0.1 on the amplitude of the curvature power spectrum at length scales relevant for PBHs formation.

        Speaker: Encieh Erfani (IASBS, Zanjan, Iran)
    • Electroweak, Top quark, and Higgs Physics ZR2

      ZR2

      Conveners: Eleni Vryonidou (University of Manchester (GB)), Yaquan Fang (Chinese Academy of Sciences (CN))
      • 477
        Electroweak physics and Z/W boson measurements at LHCb

        The LHCb experiment covers the forward region of proton-proton collisions, and it can improve the current electroweak landscape by studying the production of W and Z boson in this phase space complementary to ATLAS and CMS. In this talk an overview of the wide LHCb electroweak measurement program will be presented. Several preliminary studies have shown the potential of the LHCb experiment to measure the W boson mass with a muon pT based technique, which could yield a statistical precision of 10 MeV if using the full Run 2 dataset.
        A proof-of-concept measurement of the W boson mass, using only the 2016 dataset, will be presented, together with a measurement of the angular coefficients of Z boson decays.

        Speaker: Miguel Ramos Pernas (University of Warwick (GB))
      • 478
        SM precision measurements in top production at LHC

        Measurements of top quark cross sections and properties using data collected by the  ATLAS and CMS experiment at 13 TeV are presented. Among them, latest precision results on production cross sections, top mass, angular correlations and charge asymmetries will be discussed.

        Speaker: Lorenzo Massa (Universita e INFN, Bologna (IT))
      • 479
        Correlating the anomalous moment of the muon and the W mass in the MSSM

        The electroweak (EW) sector of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM)
        naturally provides a cold dark matter candidate, the neutralino, and it is also
        able to explain current experimental observations and evade existing constraints.

        In particular the EW sector of the MSSM can explain the discrepancy between the
        experimental result for the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon and
        its Standard Model prediction.

        Using the recent results from the FNAL g-2 experiment, and focusing
        on the phenomenology of the EW sector of the MSSM only (i.e. assuming
        that the colored sector is heavy, in agreement with the current experimental limits)
        we study the correlation between the g-2 and MW predictions in the MSSM,
        while keeping into account collider and DM constraints.

        We also study the impact that future MW measurements, e.g. at the ILC, could
        have in shaping the bounds of the allowed parameter space of the MSSM.

        Speaker: Emanuele Angelo Bagnaschi (Paul Scherrer Institute (CH))
      • 480
        Techniques for the SUSY-QCD corrections to pseudoscalar Higgs production via gluon fusion

        We present the technical methods for the NLO SUSY-QCD corrections
        to the production of the pseudoscalar MSSM Higgs boson in the gluon
        fusion channel. While the genuine SUSY-QCD corrections have been cal-
        culated in the limit of large SUSY particle masses some while ago, the
        finite mass effects are unknown. In this talk, I will present the technical
        details of our calculation of the NLO SUSY-QCD corrections including the
        full mass dependence of the loop particle masses. Since analytic formulae
        for the massive two-loop integrals of the virtual corrections are unknown
        the calculation is performed numerically. The details of the computation
        will be presented including the treatment of the threshold regions for nu-
        merical stability by IBP methods. Our consistent renormalization scheme
        worked out for the quark/squark sector and applied in the calculation will
        be explained in detail.

        Speaker: Thanh Tien Dat Nguyen (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
      • 481
        NLO SUSY-QCD Corrections to Pseudoscalar Production via Gluon Fusion

        In this talk I will present the genuine SUSY-QCD corrections to the
        production of the pseudoscalar Higgs boson in the Minimal Supersymmetric
        Standardmodel (MSSM). These corrections have been numerically calculated
        with no expansion in the mass ratios. A comparison to existing
        approximations is done in order to see how significant the effects beyond
        these approximations are. The (consistent) treatment of $\gamma_5$ is
        discussed. The genuine SUSY-QCD corrections can be large in several MSSM
        benchmark scenarios and are supplemented by sizeable contributions beyond
        the previously known approximations.

        Speaker: Lukas Fritz (Paul Scherrer Institut)
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Ying Li (Yantai University, China)
      • 482
        Flavour Anomalies at LHCb

        The flavour anomalies in the b->sll transition receive large attention.
        Apart from the recent update on lepton-flavour-universality, LHCb has new results on the rare decay Bs->mumu, angular distributions of charged B mesons decaying to Kmumu and Phimumu, and analyses of radiative and B decays to Kee at low-q2, and most recently on the Bs->Phimumu decay rate with full run-2 data.

        Speaker: Miriam Lucio Martinez (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))
      • 483
        Explaining the Cabibbo Angle Anomaly

        The first row of the Cabibbo-Cobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) matrix shows a discrepancy of ∼3$\sigma$ with unitarity, known as the ”Cabibbo Angle Anomaly” (CAA). After reviewing the origin and status of the anomaly, I investigate the various possibilities to explain it in the context of physics beyond Standard Model (BSM) which can be broadly grouped into three categories: modifications of four-fermion contact operators, modifications of the leptonic W vertices and modifications of the W vertices with quarks. In addition, I also discuss the phenomenological implications in the electroweak (EW) precision observables and low energy observables testing lepton flavour universality (LFU) which have to be taken into account in order to asses the viability of these solutions. Then, I review concrete realizations of BSM physics proposed to solve the CAA, which highlight the correlation with other existing anomalies such as $b\to s\ell\ell$ and $\tau\to\mu\nu\nu$, providing interesting predictions to be tested experimentally in the near future.

        Speaker: Claudio Andrea Manzari (Universitaet Zuerich (CH))
      • 484
        Angular Distribution of polarised $\Lambda_b$ decay with NP operators

        The recent anomalies in $b\to s\ell^+\ell^-$ transitions could originate from some New Physics beyond the Standard Model. Either to confirm or to rule out this assumption, more tests of $b\to s\ell^+\ell^-$ transition are needed.
        $\Lambda_b \to \Lambda \ell^+\ell^- $ decay provides us complimentary information of this mode in contrast to the mesonic decay. We will discuss how the polarized $\Lambda_b$ decay to a $\Lambda$ and a dilepton pair offers a plethora of observables that are suitable to discriminate New Physics from the Standard Model. In this talk, we will give an overview of how the angular distribution of the $\Lambda_b$ decay is calculated and present a full angular analysis of a polarized $\Lambda_b$ decay to a $\Lambda (\to p\pi)\ell^+\ell^-$ final state.
        The full angular analysis performed with new scalar and pseudo-scalar operators supplemented with the Standard Model operator basis provides us with 2 new observables which were not present while considering only SM and its chirality flipped counterparts. The full angular distribution is calculated by retaining the mass of the final state leptons. At the low hadronic recoil, we use the Heavy Quark Effective Theory framework to relate the hadronic form factors which lead to simplified expression of the angular observables where short- and long-distance physics factorize. Using the factorized expressions of the observables, we construct a number of test of short- and long-distance physics including null tests of the Standard Model and its chirality flipped counterparts that can be carried out using experimental data. We provide the
        the expected experimental precision on these angular observables achievable at the future LHCb. This is mainly based on the paper "Phys.Rev.D 104 (2021) 1, 013002".

        Speaker: RIA SAIN (INSTITUTE OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES)
      • 485
        ATLAS measurements of CP violation and rare decays processes with beauty mesons

        The ATLAS experiment has performed measurements of B-meson rare decays proceeding via suppressed electroweak flavour changing neutral currents, and of mixing and CP violation in the neutral Bs meson system.
        This talk will focus on the latest results from the ATLAS collaboration, such as rare processes B^0_s → mu mu and B^0 → mu mu, and CP violation in the B_s^0 —> J/psi phi decays. In the latter, the Standard Model predicts the CP violating mixing phase, phi_s, to be very small and its SM value is very well constrained, while in many new physics models large phi_s values are expected. The latest measurements of phi_s and several other parameters describing the B_s^0 —> J/psi phi decays will be reported.

        Speaker: Maria Smizanska (Lancaster University (GB))
      • 486
        $B \to K \nu \bar \nu$ measurements and beyond the Standard Model theories

        Semileptonic flavor changing neutral current transitions with a pair of neutrinos in the final state are very accurately determined in the standard model. The most recent Belle II result on $B\to K \nu \bar{\nu}$ uses an innovative inclusive tagging technique; this together with previous BaBar and Belle results indicates a possible enhancement in the branching fraction of $B^+\to K^+ \nu \bar{\nu}$. We have explored the possibilities of such an enhancement as a signal of new physics within several scenarios such as leptoquark and generic $Z^\prime$ models, which can also explain some of the other tensions observed in neutral as well as charged current $B$-decays.

        Speaker: Rusa Mandal (Siegen University)
      • 487
        A closer look at the extraction of $|V_{ub}|$ from $b \to \pi l \nu$

        To extract the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) matrix element $|V_{ub}|$, we have re-analyzed all the available inputs (data and theory) on the $b \to \pi l \nu$ decays including the newly available inputs on the form-factors from light cone sum rule (LCSR) and Lattice QCD (LQCD) approach. We have commented on the effect of outliers on the fits. After removing the outliers and creating a comparable group of data-sets, we mention a few scenarios in the extraction of $|V_{ub}|$. Our best results for $|V_{ub}|^{exc.}$ are $(3.94 \pm 0.14)\times 10^{-3}$ and $(3.93_{-0.15}^{+0.14})\times 10^{-3}$ in frequentist and Bayesian approaches, respectively, which are consistent with the most recent inclusive
        determination by Belle within $1~\sigma$ confidence interval.

        Speaker: Ms Ipsita Ray (IIT Guwahati)
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR5

      ZR5

      Convener: Yungui Gong (Huazhong University of Science and Technology)
      • 488
        Stabilities of black hole solutions in vector-tensor theories

        We study static and spherically symmetric black hole solutions in two classes of vector-tensor theories: generalized Proca theory and Einstein-Aether theory.
        We formulate the odd-parity black hole perturbations in these theories by expanding the corresponding action up to second order and discuss whether or not black holes with vector hair suffer ghost or Laplacian instabilities.
        We apply these results to concrete black hole solutions known in the literature and show that some of those solutions can be excluded by the violation of stability conditions.
        Our general formulation of odd-parity perturbations is useful to study the propagation of gravitational waves during the inspiral and ringdown phases of binary BHs.

        Speaker: Prof. Shinji Tsujikawa (Waseda)
      • 489
        Stochastic gravitational wave background in quantum gravity

        Inflation generically predicts a gravitational wave background
        originating from quantum fluctuations of the space-time metric. I will
        discuss quantum gravity models which predict a blue-tilted spectrum,
        such as non-local Starobinsky inflation, and present how future
        interferometer experiments help to constrain the models.

        Speaker: Sachiko Kuroyanagi
      • 490
        Probing spacetime geometry with gravitational waves

        We review recent results about tests of quantum gravity with
        gravitational waves, using modified dispersion relations and the
        luminosity distance of standard sirens. Theoretical models predicting
        signals observable with LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA and LISA are discussed. The
        gravitational-wave physics of a recent nonlocal theory with fractional
        operators and infrared corrections to gravity is presented for the first
        time.

        Speaker: Gianluca Calcagni
      • 491
        Local constraints on the dark sector by future missions to Uranus and Neptune

        Recent years have seen many publications underlining the importance of space missions to Uranus and Neptune in the following decade. Proposed mission plans would have a cruise time around 10 years, which can be utilized to search for low-frequency gravitational wave signals by observing the Doppler shift in the Earth–spacecraft radio link. Our recent work (Soyuer et al. 2020) demonstrates that detection of a supermassive black hole binary could be possible via Doppler tracking, and that a mission concurrent with LISA would improve gravitational wave source localization by an order of magnitude compared to LISA alone.

        These prospective ice giant missions could also be utilized to constrain the dark sector. Modifications to the third Kepler-law and deviations from the inverse square law of gravity can be tested by observing the extra perihelion precession of Uranus and Neptune, which allows probing the local dark matter density, modified gravity (MOND) scenarios and Yukawa-like interactions. As of now, the extraprecession measurements of ice giants are done via ephemerides measurements, which have large uncertainties and provide looser constraints with respect to constraints by other planets. Current upper bound on the local dark matter density lies around $\rho_{\rm \scriptscriptstyle DM} \sim $10$^{-20}$ g/cm$^3$. However, Doppler tracking missions to Uranus and Neptune with radio ranging accuracy of a few meters can improve this upper bound by 2 to 3 orders of magnitude via the extraprecession technique. Moreover, estimates coming from the spacecraft cruise time energy budget could yield an even better estimate than the ephemerides measurements, potentially providing evidence for dark matter or shedding light on modified gravity scenarios.

        Speaker: Deniz Soyuer (University of Zurich)
    • Gravity and Supergravity ZR8E

      ZR8E

      Convener: Jie Yang
      • 492
        S-fold solutions from D=4 supergravity vacua

        In this talk I will review the construction of new S-fold solutions of Type IIB string theory starting from vacua of a maximal four-dimensional supergravity with a suitable dyonic gauging.
        The global properties of certain modui are analyzed.

        Speaker: Mario Trigiante (Politecnico di Torino)
      • 493
        Duality and Higher Derivatives

        TBA

        Speaker: Olaf Hohm (Humboldt U Berlin)
    • New Developments in String Theory ZR6

      ZR6

      Convener: Bin Chen (Peking University)
      • 494
        Aligned Natural Inflation in Large Volume Scenario

        We embed aligned natural inflation and stabilize moduli in Large Volume Scenario. Scalar perturbation, weak gravity conjecture and Kahler condition of internal geometry constrains the model in interesting ways.

        Speaker: Kang Sin Choi (Ewha Womans University)
      • 495
        Sharpening the Boundaries Between Flux Landscape and Swampland by Tadpole Charge

        We investigate the vacuum structure of four-dimensional effective theory arising from Type IIB flux compactifications on a mirror of the rigid Calabi-Yau threefold, corresponding to a T-dual of the DeWolfe-Giryavets-Kachru-Taylor model in Type IIA flux compactifications. By analyzing the vacuum structure of this interesting corner of string landscape, it turns out that there exist perturbatively unstable de Sitter (dS) vacua in addition to supersymmetric and non-supersymmetric anti-de Sitter vacua. On the other hand, the stable dS vacua appearing in the low-energy effective action violate the tadpole cancellation condition, indicating a strong correlation between the existence of dS vacua and the flux-induced D3-brane charge (tadpole charge). We also find analytically that the tadpole charge constrained by the tadpole cancellation condition emerges in the scalar potential in a nontrivial way. Thus, the tadpole charge would restrict the existence of stable dS vacua, and this fact underlies the statement of the dS conjecture. Furthermore, our analytical and numerical results exhibit that distributions of ${\cal O}(1)$ parameters in expressions of several swampland conjectures peak at specific values.

        Speaker: Mr Keiya Ishiguro (Tsukuba, Graduate U. Adv. Studies (SOKENDAI))
      • 496
        The control issues of KKLT de Sitter construction in string theory

        In this talk, I will introduction the problem of realizing de Sitter space in string compactifications, especially the proposal by Kachru, Kallosh, Linde and Trivedi (KKLT). We analyze to which extent the KKLT proposal for the construction of de Sitter vacua in string theory is quantitatively controlled. I will then explain why, according our recent analysis, extended singularities in the bulk of the compact space appear to generically threaten the construction. In particular, we show that, requiring the curvature to be small in the conifold region, one is generically forced into a regime where the warp factor becomes negative in a large part of the Calabi-Yau orientifold. We call it the "bulk singular problem".

        Speaker: Xin Gao (Sichuan University)
      • 497
        Generalized Supersymmetric Pati-Salam Models from Intersecting D6-branes

        We discuss the $N=1$ supersymmetric
        $SU(12)_C\times SU(2)_L\times SU(2)_R$ models, $SU(4)_C\times SU(6)_L\times SU(2)_R$ models, and $SU(4)_C\times SU(2)_L\times SU(6)_R$ models from the Type IIA orientifolds on $T^6/(\mathbb{Z}_2\times \mathbb{Z}_2)$ with intersecting D6-branes. These gauge symmetries can be broken down to the Pati-Salam gauge symmetry $SU(4)_C\times SU(2)_L \times SU(2)_R$ via three $SU(12)_C/SU(6)_L/SU(6)_R$ adjoint representation Higgs fields, and further down to the Standard Model (SM) via the D-brane splitting and Higgs mechanism. We obtain three families of the SM fermions, and have the left-handed three-family SM fermion unification in the $SU(4)_C\times SU(6)_L\times SU(2)_R$ models, and the right-handed three-family SM fermion unification in the $SU(4)_C\times SU(2)_L\times SU(6)_R$ models.

        Speaker: Rui Sun (KIAS)
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Andrew Fowlie (Nanjing Normal University)
      • 498
        The new ``MUON G-2'' Result and Supersymmetry

        We confront the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) with the recent measurement of (g-2)_mu, the Dark Matter (DM) relic density, DM direct detection limits and electroweak SUSY searches at the LHC. We demonstrate that various distinct regions of the parameter space can fulfill all experimental constraints. We present predictions for future pp and e+e- colliders to explore these regions.

        Speakers: Ipsita Saha (Kavli IPMU), Manimala Chakraborti, Sven Heinemeyer (CSIC (Madrid, ES))
      • 499
        Supersymmetric Alignment Models for muon g-2

        Hierarchical masses of quarks and leptons are addressed by imposing horizontal symmetries. In supersymmetric Standard Models, the same symmetries play a role in suppressing flavor violating processes induced by supersymmetric particles. Combining the idea of spontaneous CP violation to control contributions to electric dipole moments, the mass scale of supersymmetric particles can be lowered. We present supersymmetric models with U(1) horizontal symmetries and discuss CPand flavor constraints. Models with two U(1) symmetries are found to give a viable solution to the muon g−2 anomaly.

        Speaker: Motoo Suzuki (ICRR)
      • 500
        Muon g-2 and implications for physics beyond the SM

        In April the Fermilab Muon $g-2$ experiment reported its first measurement of the muon g-2, which is in full agreement with the previous BNL measurement and pushes the world average deviation from the Standard Model to a significance of $4.2\sigma$.

        We provide an extensive survey of its impact on beyond the Standard Model physics. We compute predictions for g-2, dark matter and LHC searches in a wide range of simple models with up to three new fields, that represent some of the few ways that large g-2 can be explained. In addition, for the MSSM we exhaustively cover the scenarios where large g-2 can be explained while simultaneously satisfying all relevant data from other experiments. Generally, the g-2 result can only be explained by rather small masses and/or large couplings and enhanced chirality flips, which can lead to conflicts with limits from LHC and dark matter experiments.

        Our results show that the new measurement excludes a large number of models and provides crucial constraints on others. Two-Higgs doublet and leptoquark models provide viable explanations of g-2 only in specific versions and in specific parameter ranges. Among all models with up to three fields, only models with chirality enhancements can accommodate g-2 and dark matter simultaneously. The MSSM can simultaneously explain g-2 and dark matter for Bino-like LSP in several coannihilation regions. Allowing under abundance of the dark matter relic density, the Higgsino- and particularly Wino-like LSP scenarios become promising explanations of the g-2 result.

        Speaker: Dominik Stoeckinger (TU Dresden)
      • 501
        Gluino-SUGRA Type Scenarios In Light of FNAL Muon g-2 Anomaly

        Gluino-SUGRA ($\tilde g$SUGRA), which is an economical extension of mSUGRA, adopts much heavier gluino mass parameter than other gauginos mass parameters and universal scalar mass parameter at the unification scale. It can elegantly reconcile the experimental results on the Higgs boson mass, the muon $g-2$, the null results in search for supersymmetry at the LHC and the results from B-physics.
        In this work, we propose several new ways to generate large gaugino hierarchy (i.e. $M_3\gg M_1,M_2$) for $\tilde{g}$SUGRA model building and then discuss in detail the implications of the new muon $g-2$ results with the updated LHC constraints on such $\tilde{g}$SUGRA scenarios. We obtain the following observations: (i) For the most interesting $M_1=M_2$ case at the GUT scale with a viable bino-like dark matter, the $\tilde{g}$SUGRA can explain the muon $g-2$ anomaly at $1\sigma$ level and be consistent with the updated LHC constraints for $6\geq M_3/M_1 \geq 9$ at the GUT scale; (ii) For $M_1:M_2=5:1$ at the GUT scale with wino-like dark matter, the $\tilde{g}$SUGRA model can explain the muon $g-2$ anomaly at $2\sigma$ level and be consistent with the updated LHC constraints for $3\geq M_3/M_1 \geq 4$ at the GUT scale; (iii) For $M_1:M_2=3:2$ at the GUT scale with mixed bino-wino dark matter, the $\tilde{g}$SUGRA model can explain the muon $g-2$ anomaly at $2\sigma$ level and be consistent with the updated LHC constraints for $6.7\geq M_3/M_1 \geq 7.8$ at the GUT scale.

        Based on 2106.04466

        Speaker: Prof. Fei Wang (ZhengZhou University)
    • Plenary: IX Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Jiang-Hao Yu (Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing)
    • 22:05
      Coffee Break
    • Flavor Physics and CP Violation ZR2

      ZR2

      Convener: Robert Ziegler (KIT - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (DE))
      • 507
        Anomaly-free leptophilic axionlike particle and its flavor violating tests

        Motivated by the Xenon1T result, we study here a leptophilic flavor-dependent anomaly-free axionlike particle (ALP) and its effects on charged-lepton flavor violation. We present two representative models. The first one considers that the ALP origins from the flavon that generates the charged-lepton masses. The second model assumes a larger flavor symmetry such that more general mixings in the charged-lepton are possible, while maintaining flavor-dependent ALP couplings. We find that a keV ALP explaining the Xenon1T result is still viable for lepton flavor violation and stellar cooling astrophysical limits. On the other hand, if the Xenon1T result is confirmed, future charged-lepton flavor violation measurements can be complementary to probe such a possibility.

        Speaker: Oscar Manuel Vives Garcia (Univ. of Valencia and CSIC (ES))
      • 508
        Minimal Froggatt-Nielsen Textures

        The flavour problem of the Standard Model can be addressed through the Froggatt-Nielsen (FN) mechanism. In this work, we develop an approach to the study of FN textures building a direct link between FN-charge assignments and the measured masses and mixing angles via unitary transformations in flavour space. We specifically focus on the quark sector to identify the most economic FN models able to provide a dynamical and natural understanding of the flavour puzzle. Remarkably, we find viable FN textures, involving charges under the horizontal symmetry that do not exceed one in absolute value (in units of the flavon charge). Within our approach, we also explore the degree of tuning of FN models in solving the flavour problem via a measure analogous to the Barbieri-Giudice one. We find that most of the solutions do not involve peculiar cancellations in flavour space.

        Speaker: Alessio Mastroddi (INFN - National Institute for Nuclear Physics)
      • 509
        Exploring the flavour structure of the high-scale MSSM

        We analyse the sensitivity of quark flavour-changing observables to the MSSM, in a regime of heavy superpartners. We analyse four distinct and motivated frameworks characterising the structure of the soft-breaking terms by means of approximate flavour symmetries. We show that a set of six low-energy observables with realistic chances of improvement in the near future, namely $\Delta M_{s,d}ΔM s,d ​ , \epsilon _Kϵ K ​ , \epsilon _K'/\epsilon _Kϵ K ′ ​ /ϵ K ​ , \mathcal {B} (K\rightarrow \pi \nu {{\bar{\nu }}})B(K→πν ν ˉ )$, and the phase of $D–{\bar{D}}$
        mixing, could play a very important role in characterising these frameworks for superpartner masses up to \mathcal {O}(100)O(100) TeV. We show that these observables remain very interesting even in a long-term perspective, i.e. even taking into account the direct mass reach of the most ambitious future high-energy colliders.

        Speaker: Dr Sokratis Trifinopoulos (SISSA)
      • 510
        Super-Soft CP Violation

        Scenarios assuming an exact CP symmetry in the UV do not suffer quality problems, and are thus interesting alternatives to PQ-based solutions to the Strong CP problem. However, to correctly reproduce the Standard Model quark masses and CP violation these models must feature a non-trivial coincidence between a priori unrelated CP-even and CP-odd mass scales. In this talk we elucidate the origin of this condition and show that it can be naturally addressed by a confining dynamic generated at the Planck scale. This approach is robust and very predictive: it features vector-like quarks below a few 10’s of TeV and a dark sector that may lead to interesting cosmological signatures.

        Speaker: Alessandro Valenti (University of Padua)
    • Gravitational Waves as Probes for New Physics ZR3

      ZR3

      Convener: Anzhong Wang (Baylor University)
      • 511
        Probing String-inspired Quadratic Gravity with Gravitational Waves

        One natural extension of General Relativity is to introduce a quadratic-curvature correction to the action that is coupled to a scalar field. Such quadratic gravity includes Einstein-dilaton Gauss-Bonnet and dynamical Chern-Simons gravity that are motivated by certain types of string theory. The scalar field induces additional interaction and radiation to compact binary systems. In this talk, I will explain how well one can probe quadratic gravity with current and future gravitational wave observations.

        Speaker: Kent Yagi (University of Virginia)
      • 512
        Bridging the microhertz gap with asteroids: opportunities and challenges for gravitational wave detection

        The science case for a broad program of gravitational wave (GW) detection across all frequency bands is exceptionally strong. At present, there is a dearth of coverage by existing and proposed searches in the GW frequency band lying between the peak sensitivities of PTAs and LISA, roughly 0.1-100 microhertz. In this talk, I will outline a conceptual mission proposal to access this band. I will demonstrate that a few carefully chosen asteroids which orbit in the inner Solar System can act as excellent naturally occurring gravitational test masses despite the environmental noise sources. As such, a GW detector can be constructed by ranging between these asteroids using optical or radio links. At low frequencies, I will discuss how gravity gradient noise arising from the combined motion of the other $\sim 10^6$ asteroids in the inner Solar System sharply cuts off the sensitivity of this proposal. Sensitivity in the middle of this band is mostly limited by various solar perturbations to the asteroid test masses, while the high-frequency sensitivity is limited by noise in the ranging link. The projected strain-sensitivity curve that I will present indicates significant potential reach in this frequency band for a mission of this type.

        Speaker: Dr Michael A. Fedderke (The Johns Hopkins University)
      • 513
        Observation of a multimode quasi-normal spectrum from a perturbed black hole

        When two black holes merge, the late stage of gravitational wave emission is a superposition of exponentially damped sinusoids. According to the black hole no-hair theorem, this ringdown spectrum depends only on the mass and angular momentum of the final black hole. An observation of more than one ringdown mode can test this fundamental prediction of general relativity. Here we provide strong observational evidence for a multimode black hole ringdown spectrum using the gravitational wave event GW190521, with a Bayes factor of ∼40 preferring two fundamental modes over one. The dominant mode is the 22-mode, and the sub-dominant mode corresponds to the 33-mode. We estimate the redshifted mass and dimensionless spin of the final black hole. The detection of the two modes disfavors a binary progenitor with equal masses. We find that the final black hole is consistent with the no hair theorem and constrain the fractional deviation from general relativity of the sub-dominant mode's frequency.

        Speaker: Alex Nielsen (University of Stavanger)
    • New Developments in String Theory ZR4

      ZR4

      Convener: Gary Shiu (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
      • 514
        Moduli-dependent Calabi-Yau and SU(3)-structure metrics from Machine Learning

        We use machine learning to approximate Calabi-Yau and SU(3)-structure metrics, including for the first time complex structure moduli dependence. Our new methods furthermore improve existing numerical approximations in terms of accuracy and speed. Knowing these metrics has numerous applications, ranging from computations of crucial aspects of the effective field theory of string compactifications such as the canonical normalizations for Yukawa couplings, and the massive string spectrum which plays a crucial role in swampland conjectures, to mirror symmetry and the SYZ conjecture. In the case of SU(3) structure, our machine learning approach allows us to engineer metrics with certain torsion properties. Our methods are demonstrated for Calabi-Yau and SU(3)-structure manifolds based on a one-parameter family of quintic hypersurfaces in ℙ⁴.

        Speaker: Mathis Gerdes
      • 515
        The Standard Model Quiver in de Sitter String Compactifications

        With the advent of the string landscape, the realisation of the Standard Model in general string theory compactifications to 4D has become a primary focus. This talk concerns novel constructions of the Standard Model in global set-ups of type IIB Calabi-Yau compactifications. We argue that the Standard Model quiver can be embedded into compact Calabi-Yau geometries through orientifolded D3-branes at del Pezzo singularities dP$_n$ with n ≥ 5 in a framework including moduli stabilisation. To illustrate our approach, we explicitly construct a local dP$_5$ model via a combination of Higgsing and orientifolding. This procedure reduces the original dP$_5$ quiver gauge theory to the Left-Right symmetric model with three families of quarks and leptons as well as a Higgs sector to further break the symmetries to the Standard Model gauge group. We embed this local model in a globally consistent Calabi-Yau flux compactification with tadpole and Freed-Witten anomaly cancellations. The model features closed string moduli stabilisation with a de Sitter minimum from T-branes, supersymmetry broken by the Kähler moduli, and the MSSM as the low energy spectrum. We further discuss phenomenological and cosmological implications of this construction.

        Speaker: Andreas Schachner (Cambridge University)
      • 516
        A New Spin on the Weak Gravity Conjecture

        The mild form of the Weak Gravity Conjecture states that quantum or higher-derivative corrections should decrease the mass of large, extremal, charged black holes at fixed charge. This allows extremal black holes to decay, unless protected by a symmetry (such as supersymmetry). This conjecture can be reformulated as an integrated condition on the effective stress tensor capturing the effect of quantum or higher-derivative corrections. In addition to charged black holes, we also consider rotating BTZ black holes and show that this condition is satisfied as a consequence of the c-theorem, proving a spinning version of the Weak Gravity Conjecture.

        Speaker: Gregory Loges
      • 517
        Moduli Stabilisation and the Statistics of SUSY Breaking in the Landscape

        The statistics of the supersymmetry breaking scale in the string landscape has been extensively studied in the past finding either a power-law behaviour induced by uniform distributions of F-terms or a logarithmic distribution motivated by dynamical supersymmetry breaking. These studies focused mainly on type IIB flux compactifications but did not systematically incorporate the Kähler moduli. In this paper we point out that the inclusion of the Kähler moduli is crucial to understand the distribution of the supersymmetry breaking scale in the landscape since in general one obtains unstable vacua when the F-terms of the dilaton and the complex structure moduli are larger than the F-terms of the Kähler moduli. After taking Kähler moduli stabilisation into account, we find that the distribution of the gravitino mass and the soft terms is power-law only in KKLT and perturbatively stabilised vacua which therefore favour high scale supersymmetry. On the other hand, LVS vacua feature a logarithmic distribution of soft terms and thus a preference for lower scales of supersymmetry breaking. Whether the landscape of type IIB flux vacua predicts a logarithmic or power-law distribution of the supersymmetry breaking scale thus depends on the relative preponderance of LVS and KKLT vacua.

        Speaker: Kuver Sinha (University of Oklahoma)
    • Supersymmetry: Models, Phenomenology and Experimental Results ZR1

      ZR1

      Convener: Bhujyo Bhattacharya
      • 518
        Phenomenological predictions in supersymmetric scenarios with non-minimal flavour violation

        We present analytical one-loop contributions to $(g-2)_µ$ and Wilson coefficients in Non-Minimal Flavor Violating (NMFV) MSSM scenarios. Evaluating numerically the general results in specific scenarios, we show which scenarios could be (dis-)favored by the experimental $(g-2)_µ$ tension and flavor anomalies. These results provide important insights for BSM searches in general MSSM scenarios.

        Speaker: Mr Grégoire Uhlrich
      • 519
        muon g-2 and the B-physics anomalies in RPV supersymmetry and the discovery prospect at LHC

        In R-parity violating supersymmetric scenario, assuming the third-generation superpartners to be the lightest (calling the scenario RPV3), we show that there are some benchmark scenarios in which $R_{D^{(*)}}$, $R_{K^{(*)}}$ and $(g-2)_{\mu}$ anomalies can be addressed and also can be detected at 14 TeV LHC or future hadron colliders. We consider $\overline{t}\mu\overline{\mu}$ as our final state to be detected at hardon colliders because there is no simple Standard Model process can have this kind of final state and the background cross-section is thus very small.

        Speaker: Fang Xu
      • 520
        Four-top quark signatures through the lens of color-octet scalars

        We reinterpret two recent LHC searches for events containing four top quarks ($t\bar{t}t\bar{t}$) in the context of supersymmetric models with Dirac gauginos and color-octet scalars (sgluons). We explore whether sgluon contributions to the four-top production cross section $\sigma(pp \to t\bar{t}t\bar{t})$ can accommodate an excess of four-top events recently reported by the ATLAS collaboration. We also study constraints on these models from an ATLAS search for new phenomena with jets and missing transverse energy ($E_{\text{T}}^{\text{miss}}$) sensitive to signals with four top quarks. We find that these two analyses provide complementary constraints, with the jets + $E_{\text{T}}^{\text{miss}}$ search exceeding the four-top cross section measurement in sensitivity for sgluons heavier than about 800 GeV. We ultimately find that either a scalar or a pseudoscalar sgluon can currently fit the ATLAS excess in a range of reasonable benchmark scenarios, though a pseudoscalar in minimal Dirac gaugino models is ruled out. We finally offer sensitivity projections for these analyses at the HL-LHC, mapping the $5\sigma$ discovery potential in sgluon parameter space and computing exclusion limits at 95% CL in scenarios where no excess is found.

        Speaker: Taylor Murphy (Ohio State University)
    • Plenary: X Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Tao Han (University of Pittsburgh)
      • 521
        String Inflation
        Speaker: Renata Kallosh (Stanford university)
      • 522
        Quantum Gravity and the Swampland

        String theory seems to offer an enormous number of possibilities for low energy physics. The huge set of solutions is often known as the String Theory Landscape. In recent years, there has been increasing evidence that not all quantum field theories can be consistently coupled to gravity. Theories that cannot be ultraviolet completed in quantum gravity are said to be in the Swampland. In this talk, I’ll discuss some conjectured properties of quantum gravity, evidences for them, and their phenomenological applications.

        Speaker: Gary Shiu (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
      • 523
        Exploring suspersymmetric theories from scattering amplitudes

        In the past few years, the study of amplitudes have made inroads in connecting with classical dynamics of binary blackholes as well as the revival of the S-matrix bootstrap. We will give a brief overview of the major results on these two fronts and the new light they shed on supersymmetric theories.

        Speaker: Yu-tin Huang (National Taiwan University)
    • 09:15
      Coffee Break
    • Plenary: XI Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Zoom Room 1 (ZR1)

      Convener: Cong-Feng Qiao