A conversation over ice screens: future detectors for particle physics

Europe/Zurich
https://cern.zoom.us/j/99905557673

https://cern.zoom.us/j/99905557673

Aneliya Karadzhinova-Ferrer (Rudjer Boskovic Institute (HR)), Jay Lawhorn (California Institute of Technology (US)), Patrick Asenov (Nat. Cent. for Sci. Res. Demokritos (GR)), Tamas Almos Vami (Johns Hopkins University (US))
Description

This year we turn our gaze up to future detectors for particle physics

After digging into ice cream (unfortunately this year only virtually: over our screen), outstanding speakers will present fresh highlights of future detectors for particle physics and reply to the questions of curious young researchers.

The event organized by the CMS Young Scientist Committee together with the early-career representatives of ATLAS, ALICE, and LHCb. Among other things, we aim to help junior scientists become aware and involved in topics beyond their current work. This is crucial for the future of our field, because junior scientists make up most of our community.

The event is essentially targeted to a young audience, but everyone is warmly welcome!

So...

Come for (virtual) ice cream, stay for the physics!

 
Zoom room link: https://cern.zoom.us/j/99905557673
 
LHC early career scientists fora
Participants
    • 17:00 17:20
      SHiP experiment 20m
      Speaker: Richard Jacobsson (CERN)
    • 17:20 17:40
      Neutrino-less double beta decay experiment 20m
      Speaker: Lindley Winslow (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
    • 17:40 18:00
      IceCube experiment 20m
      Speaker: Philipp Eller (Technical University of Munich)
    • 18:00 18:20
      Table-top experiments 20m

      We propose a high statistics experiment to search for invisible decay modes in nuclear gamma cascades. A radioactive source (such as $^{60}$Co or $^{24}$Na) that triggers gamma cascades is placed in the middle of a large, hermetically sealed scintillation detector, enabling photon identification with high accuracy. Invisible modes are identified by establishing the absence of a photon in a well-identified gamma cascade. We propose the use of fast scintillators with nanosecond timing resolution, permitting event rates as high as $10^7 \,$ Hz. Our analysis of the feasibility of this setup indicates that branching fractions as small as $10^{-14}$-$10^{-12}$ can be probed. This experimental protocol benefits from the fact that a search for invisible modes is penalized for weak coupling only in the production of the new particle. If successfully implemented, this experiment is an exquisite probe of particles with mass below approximately 4 MeV that lie in the poorly constrained supernova “trapping window” that exists between 100 keV and 30 MeV. Such particles have been invoked as mediators between dark matter and nucleons, explain the proton radius and (g-2)μ anomalies, and potentially power the shock wave in Type II supernovae. The hadronic axion could also be probed with modifications to the proposed setup.

      Speaker: Surjeet Rajendran (Johns Hopkins University)
    • 18:20 18:40
      NICA Project Challenges 20m
      Speakers: Vladimir D. Kekelidze (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research), Vladimir Kekelidze (Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (RU))
    • 18:40 19:10
      ECFA Early-Career Researchers 30m
      Speaker: Abhijit Mathad (Universitaet Zuerich (CH))