1st seminar in S-LLP: Seminar series on Long Lived Particle searches
Thursday 25 February 2021 -
10:00
Monday 22 February 2021
Tuesday 23 February 2021
Wednesday 24 February 2021
Thursday 25 February 2021
10:00
Opening
-
Natsumi Nagata
(
University of Tokyo
)
Hideyuki Oide
(
Tokyo Institute of Technology (JP)
)
Satoshi Shirai
(
Kavli IPMU
)
Osamu Jinnouchi
(
Tokyo Institute of Technology (JP)
)
Ryu Sawada
(
University of Tokyo (JP)
)
Hidetoshi Otono
(
Kyushu University (JP)
)
Opening
Natsumi Nagata
(
University of Tokyo
)
Hideyuki Oide
(
Tokyo Institute of Technology (JP)
)
Satoshi Shirai
(
Kavli IPMU
)
Osamu Jinnouchi
(
Tokyo Institute of Technology (JP)
)
Ryu Sawada
(
University of Tokyo (JP)
)
Hidetoshi Otono
(
Kyushu University (JP)
)
10:00 - 10:10
10:10
Dark photons: motivations, cosmological signatures and constraints
-
Graham White
(
TRIUMF
)
Graham White
(
Monash University
)
Dark photons: motivations, cosmological signatures and constraints
Graham White
(
TRIUMF
)
Graham White
(
Monash University
)
10:10 - 10:40
Dark matter is powerful evidence that the Standard Model is not complete. Dark matter can be a part of a hidden sector and Dark photons are a generic predictions of such sectors. They can be produced through a variety of mechanisms and I will give a brief overview of these mechanisms. I will give then discuss cosmological constraints and signals such as modifications to the light element abundances, broadening the surface of last scattering, modifying the cosmic microwave background and the production of a gravitational wave background. I will then discuss Super-Nova constraints before discussing beam dump experiments.
11:00
Long-lived particles at future collider experiments
-
Simone Pagan Griso
(
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US)
)
Long-lived particles at future collider experiments
Simone Pagan Griso
(
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. (US)
)
11:00 - 11:30
The recently-concluded European Strategy process and the currently ongoing US Planning Exercise (aka Snowmass) provide a good opportunity to look at the landscape of beyond-Standard-Model long-lived particle (LLP) searches at future experiments. After a high-level overview of the landscape of studies that have been planned for Snowmass, including physics beyond colliders, I will touch two main aspects that are particularly relevant for collider experiments and have emerged in the last years. Firstly, additional external detectors can complement existing collider and beam-dump experiments in probing a much wider parameter-space for a large variety of BSM models that include LLPs in their phenomenology. Secondly, the signatures of LLPs in the detectors can be substantially different from promptly-produced BSM signatures and the current collider detectors have not been designed with requirements that take this fully into account; it is therefore important to think ahead in the design of future collider experiments to identify which requirements might differ or need to be additionally imposed in order to fully exploit the rich penomenology behind models that incluide LLPs. I will review the state-of-the art on these two aspects, focusing on the items that have been most recently planned to be pursued in the context of the Snowmass effort.