26–30 Nov 2018
Europe/Vienna timezone

Session

Plenary

26 Nov 2018, 09:00
Festsaal

Festsaal

Austrian Academy of Sciences, Dr.-Ignaz-Seipel-Platz 2, 1010 Vienna, AUSTRIA

Conveners

Plenary

  • Jose Bernabeu (IFIC)

Plenary

  • Eberhard Widmann (Austrian Academy of Sciences (AT))

Plenary

  • Johann Marton (Austrian Academy of Sciences (AT))

Plenary

  • Claude Amsler (Austrian Academy of Sciences (AT))

Plenary

  • Antonio Di Domenico (Sapienza Universita e INFN, Roma I (IT))

Plenary

  • Niki Saoulidou (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (GR))
  • Jeanette Miriam Lorenz (Ludwig Maximilians Universitat (DE))

Plenary

  • Vasiliki Mitsou (Univ. of Valencia and CSIC (ES))

Plenary

  • Margarida Nesbitt Rebelo (Instituto Superior Tecnico (IST))
  • Margarida Nesbitt Rebelo Da Silva (Universidade de Lisboa (PT))

Plenary

  • Gustavo Branco (Instituto Superior Tecnico)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. Albino Perego (INFN - National Institute for Nuclear Physics)
    26/11/2018, 09:00
    [10] Multimessenger probes of the universe
    Invited Talk

    Compact binary mergers are cosmic laboratory for fundamental physics.
    All four fundamental interactions play a key role in setting the properties of the
    observables associated with these powerful stellar collisions. Thus, they need to
    be taken into account to provide reliable multimessenger predictions. In this talk,
    I will present the results obtained by the Ligo-Virgo collaborations for...

    Go to contribution page
  2. Prof. Peter Fierlinger (TU München)
    26/11/2018, 09:35
    [1] T, C, P, CP and CPT symmetries
    Invited Talk

    Since several decades people search for the electric dipole moment (EDM) of the neutron, an unambiguous manifestation of parity (P) and time reversal symmetry (T) violation. Assuming the conservation of CPT, T violation in a fundamental system also means CP violation. This has only been observed in very few systems in the Standard Model of particle physics (SM) as a tiny effect. However, it...

    Go to contribution page
  3. Prof. Livia Ludhova (IKP FZJ)
    26/11/2018, 10:10
    [1] T, C, P, CP and CPT symmetries
    Invited Talk
  4. Prof. Gerald Gabrielse (Harvard University (US))
    26/11/2018, 11:15
    [1] T, C, P, CP and CPT symmetries
    Invited Talk

    Electron EDM tests at ACME.

    Go to contribution page
  5. Prof. Anton Zeilinger
    26/11/2018, 11:50
    [1] T, C, P, CP and CPT symmetries
    Invited Talk
  6. Albert De Roeck (CERN)
    26/11/2018, 14:00
    [8] New results from LHC, new facilities
    Invited Talk

    October 2018 the European Strategy Update study for the particle
    physics program has been launched. This study will evaluate the options and
    priorities of proposed particle physics facilities for the next five
    years and beyond.

    This presentation will report on the planned steps and milestons of the
    European Strategy Update study, and describe some of the proposed key
    projects that are being...

    Go to contribution page
  7. Chris Rasmussen (CERN)
    26/11/2018, 14:35
    [1] T, C, P, CP and CPT symmetries
    Invited Talk

    CPT symmetry demands that the spectrum of antihydrogen be identical to that of its ordinary matter counterpart. Performing laser spectroscopy on antihydrogen atoms and comparing to the hydrogen spectrum therefore allows for unique and very precise tests of this fundamental symmetry. The most precise such comparison so far is of the 1S-2S transition, which has been recently measured in...

    Go to contribution page
  8. Prof. Klaus Jungmann
    26/11/2018, 15:10
    [1] T, C, P, CP and CPT symmetries
    Invited Talk

    Observation Atomic Parity Violation (APV) in atoms was crucial for the acceptance of the Standard Model as a general theory in physics. So far APV has been determined most precisely in Cs atoms. This measurement provides for a precise value of the weak mixing (Weinberg) angle at the lowest accessible energies with sub % accuracy. A significant deviation of this number from predictions based on...

    Go to contribution page
  9. Dr Mauricio Bustamante (Niels Bohr Institute)
    26/11/2018, 15:45
    [10] Multimessenger probes of the universe
    Invited Talk

    The astrophysical neutrinos recently discovered by IceCube have the highest detected neutrino energies --- from TeV to PeV --- and travel the longest distances --- up to a few Gpc, the size of the observable Universe. These features make them naturally attractive probes of fundamental particle-physics properties, possibly tiny in size, at energy scales unreachable by any other means. The...

    Go to contribution page
  10. Marco Zito (Université Paris-Saclay (FR))
    27/11/2018, 09:00
    [4] Neutrino masses, mixing and discrete symmetries
    Invited Talk

    The measurement of a relatively large theta13 angle has opened the possibility to study CP violation phenomena in the leptonic sector, related to the phase delta of the PMNS neutrino mixing matrix.

    Today, the current generation of long baseline experiments with T2K and Nova has started probing this sector, with interesting first indications that will be followed by more precise measurements...

    Go to contribution page
  11. Dr Miguel Nebot Gomez (CFTP-IST Lisbon)
    27/11/2018, 09:35
    [5] Discrete symmetries and models of flavour mixing
    Non-Invited Talk

    A viable minimal model with spontaneous CP violation in the framework of a Two Higgs Doublet Model is introduced. The model is based on a generalised Branco-Grimus-Lavoura model with a flavoured $Z_2$ symmetry, under which two of the quark families are even and the third one is odd. The lagrangian respects CP invariance, while the vacuum has a CP violating phase, which is able to generate a...

    Go to contribution page
  12. Vincenzo Branchina (University of Catania)
    27/11/2018, 10:40
    [2] Emergence of symmetries from entanglement
    Invited Talk

    The EW vacuum, the state where our universe has settled, is a metastable state (false vacuum), and if only Standard Model interactions are considered, its lifetime turns out to be much larger than the age of the universe. It is well known, however, that the EW vacuum lifetime is extremely sensitive to unknown (but necessarily present) high enery new physics: the latter can enormously lower the...

    Go to contribution page
  13. Dr Eryk Czerwiński (Institute of Physics, Jagiellonian University)
    27/11/2018, 11:15
    [2] Emergence of symmetries from entanglement
    Invited Talk

    Positronium is the lightest purely leptonic object decaying into photons. As an atom bound by a central potential, it is a parity eigenstate, and as an atom built out of an electron and an anti-electron, it is an eigenstate of the charge conjugation operator. Therefore, the positronium is a unique laboratory to study discrete symmetries whose precision is limited, in principle, only by the...

    Go to contribution page
  14. Dr Javier Fuentes-Martin (University of Zurich)
    28/11/2018, 09:00
    [8] New results from LHC, new facilities
    Invited Talk

    In this talk I will review the theoretical status of the NP interpretations of the recent hints of Lepton Flavor Universality Violation in semileptonic B decays. The interplay with other observables will also be discussed.

    Go to contribution page
  15. Federico Meloni (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE))
    28/11/2018, 09:35
    [8] New results from LHC, new facilities
    Invited Talk

    The LHC results have set the stage for the discussion of future high-energy physics facilities. The Higgs boson discovery, with the need of precise measurements of its properties, and the current absence of experimental evidence of new physics open a discussion on the best ways to move forward. I will summarise recent sensitivity studies for the HL-LHC physics programme and compare it with the...

    Go to contribution page
  16. Roberto Salerno (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (FR))
    28/11/2018, 10:10
    [1] T, C, P, CP and CPT symmetries
    Invited Talk

    A selection of the most recent results of Higgs boson physics from the ATLAS and CMS Collaborations using the LHC Run 2 data will be reported. The measurements of properties of the Higgs boson in the Standard Model analyses will be presented and an overview of the beyond Standard Model Higgs boson searches will be given.

    Go to contribution page
  17. John Ellis
    28/11/2018, 11:15
    [6] Supersymmetry
    Invited Talk

    This is a place holder abstract for the supersymmetry talk of Dr John Ellis.

    Go to contribution page
  18. Marcin Badziak
    28/11/2018, 11:50
    [6] Supersymmetry
    Invited Talk

    Twin Higgs (TH) models explain the lack of discovery of new colored particles responsible for natural electroweak symmetry breaking. A new type of supersymmetric Twin Higgs model is presented in which the TH mechanism is introduced by an extra gauge symmetry. This class of models feature natural electroweak symmetry breaking for squarks and gluino heavier than 2 TeV. The new gauge interaction...

    Go to contribution page
  19. Dr Mariam Tórtola (IFIC, Valencia University/CSIC)
    29/11/2018, 09:00
    [4] Neutrino masses, mixing and discrete symmetries
    Invited Talk

    In this talk, I will describe the current status of global analyses of neutrino oscillation data in the three-flavour framework, focusing on the current knowledge of the oscillation parameters as well as on the improvements that can be expected in the near future. The recent hints pointing towards a preferred value for the leptonic CP phase and a preferred ordering for the neutrino spectrum...

    Go to contribution page
  20. Prof. Carl Bender (Washington University)
    29/11/2018, 09:35
    [9] PT symmetric Hamiltonians
    Invited Talk

    The field of PT-symmetric quantum mechanics began with a study of the
    Hamiltonian $H=p^2+x^2(ix)^\epsilon$. A surprising feature of this non-Hermitian
    Hamiltonian is that its eigenvalues are discrete, real, and positive when $\epsilon\geq0$. This talk examines the corresponding quantum-field-theoretic
    Hamiltonian $H=\half(\partial\phi)^2+\half\phi^2(i\phi)^\epsilon$ in
    $D$-dimensional...

    Go to contribution page
  21. Prof. A. Douglas Stone (Yale University, Dept of Applied Physics)
    29/11/2018, 10:10
    [9] PT symmetric Hamiltonians
    Invited Talk

    Generically the only time-independent solutions to open electromagnetic problems are scattering states, consisting of an input wave and a scattered wave, which typically contains flux in all physically accessible channels. If restrictions are placed on which scattering channels may contain outgoing flux, in general no solutions exist. However, in certain circumstances such solutions may...

    Go to contribution page
  22. Prof. Alon Faraggi (University of Liverpoll)
    29/11/2018, 11:15
    [7] Strings, branes, extra dimensions and discrete symmetries
    Invited Talk

    The MiniBooNE collaboration recently reported results that support the existence of sterile neutrinos in nature. In the talk I will discuss the incorporation of sterile neutrinos in string derived models. While large volume string-brane scenarios may naturally accommodate sterile neutrinos, they are much harder to reconcile with the high scale heterotic-string GUT models. I will argue that...

    Go to contribution page
  23. Mirjam Cvetic (University of Pennsylvania)
    29/11/2018, 11:50
    [7] Strings, branes, extra dimensions and discrete symmetries
    Invited Talk

    We present recent developments in F-theory compactifications. We focus on advances in constructions of globally consistent F-theory compactifications with continuous and discrete gauge symmetries and emphasize new insights into global constraints on allowed matter representations. We highlight the first example of the three family Standard Model with Z2 matter parity and a subsequent...

    Go to contribution page
Building timetable...