Gravitational Probes of the Early Universe
from
Wednesday 4 June 2025 (10:00)
to
Friday 6 June 2025 (14:20)
Monday 2 June 2025
Tuesday 3 June 2025
Wednesday 4 June 2025
10:00
10:00 - 10:30
Room: TBC
10:30
Opening Words
Opening Words
10:30 - 10:35
Room: TBC
10:35
Axion phenomenology from string theory to the lab
-
David Marsh
(
King's College London
)
Axion phenomenology from string theory to the lab
David Marsh
(
King's College London
)
10:35 - 11:30
Room: TBC
Axions are a hypothetical class of particle predicted in a variety of settings and of utility in solving many mysteries of theoretical physics, most notably as dark matter candidates and solving the strong CP problem. I will describe recent dramatic progress in understanding what string theory predicts about the properties of axions, and the door this opens to test quantum gravity with cosmological observations, and in the lab. I will thus describe the cosmology of axions, how they differ from other dark matter candidates, and how we might discover evidence for them. Axion stars and axion miniclusters are novel sources of grvitational waves and multimessenger probes of the pre-reionization Universe. Axion haloscopes experiments can be repurposed for high frequency gravitational wave searches. Recently discovered axion quasiparticles can be used not only to detect axion dark matter but also as "analogue" laboratories for exotic physics, such as the gravitational Chern-Simons interaction.
11:30
Lunch at Bushouse Restaurant
Lunch at Bushouse Restaurant
11:30 - 12:45
Room: TBC
12:45
David Tong
David Tong
12:45 - 14:15
Room: TBC
14:15
Open effective field theories for primordial gravitational waves
-
Thomas Colas
(
DAMTP - University of Cambridge
)
Open effective field theories for primordial gravitational waves
Thomas Colas
(
DAMTP - University of Cambridge
)
14:15 - 15:00
Room: TBC
15:00
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
15:00 - 15:30
Room: TBC
15:30
WIMPs and New Physics Interpretations of the PTA Signal are Incompatible
-
Yann Gouttenoire
(
MITP
)
WIMPs and New Physics Interpretations of the PTA Signal are Incompatible
Yann Gouttenoire
(
MITP
)
15:30 - 16:15
Room: TBC
16:15
Gravitational microlensing and the dark (and early) Universe
-
Djuna Croon
(
IPPP Durham
)
Gravitational microlensing and the dark (and early) Universe
Djuna Croon
(
IPPP Durham
)
16:15 - 17:15
Room: TBC
17:15
17:15 - 19:15
Room: TBC
Thursday 5 June 2025
09:00
Practical challenges in stochastic inflation
-
Andrew Gow
(
Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth
)
Practical challenges in stochastic inflation
Andrew Gow
(
Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth
)
09:00 - 09:45
Room: TBC
09:45
Harvesting primordial black holes from stochastic trees
-
Vincent VENNIN
(
LPENS Paris
)
Harvesting primordial black holes from stochastic trees
Vincent VENNIN
(
LPENS Paris
)
09:45 - 10:45
Room: TBC
10:45
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
10:45 - 11:15
Room: TBC
11:15
Cosmic Stasis
-
Lucien Heurtier
Cosmic Stasis
Lucien Heurtier
11:15 - 12:00
Room: TBC
12:00
New cosmological results from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope
-
Jo Dunkley
New cosmological results from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope
Jo Dunkley
12:00 - 13:00
Room: TBC
I will show new results from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT), including cosmological constraints from the sixth data release. Using data gathered from 2017 - 2022, the new maps cover 40% of the microwave sky with five times the angular resolution and three times the depth in polarization as the Planck satellite. The improved cosmic microwave background (CMB) measurements at small scales complement the larger-scale information from Planck. I will describe how we use these datasets, along with tracers of large-scale-structure, to test the cosmological model and probe fundamental physics.
13:00
Lunch at Bushouse Restaurant
Lunch at Bushouse Restaurant
13:00 - 14:00
Room: TBC
14:00
Induced gravitational wave probes of the primordial black hole reheating scenario
-
Yann MAMBRINI
Induced gravitational wave probes of the primordial black hole reheating scenario
Yann MAMBRINI
14:00 - 15:00
Room: TBC
15:00
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
15:00 - 15:30
Room: TBC
15:30
Superstring Phases in the Early Universe
-
Joseph Conlon
(
Oxford University
)
Superstring Phases in the Early Universe
Joseph Conlon
(
Oxford University
)
15:30 - 16:30
Room: TBC
16:30
Cosmological trackers from perturbations
-
Martin Mosny
(
University of Oxford
)
Cosmological trackers from perturbations
Martin Mosny
(
University of Oxford
)
16:30 - 17:00
Room: TBC
17:00
Inflation with Numerical Relativity
-
Panagiotis Giannadakis
(
King's College London
)
Inflation with Numerical Relativity
Panagiotis Giannadakis
(
King's College London
)
17:00 - 17:30
Room: TBC
19:30
19:30 - 21:30
Room: TBC
Friday 6 June 2025
09:30
Inflationary Gravitational Waves as a Probe of the Unknown Expansion History of the early Universe
-
Swagat Saurav Mishra
(
University of Nottingham, UK
)
Inflationary Gravitational Waves as a Probe of the Unknown Expansion History of the early Universe
Swagat Saurav Mishra
(
University of Nottingham, UK
)
09:30 - 10:15
Room: TBC
10:15
Coffee Break
Coffee Break
10:15 - 10:45
Room: TBC
10:45
Mapping inflationary loop corrections to boundary terms
-
Laura Iacconi
(
Queen Mary University of London
)
Mapping inflationary loop corrections to boundary terms
Laura Iacconi
(
Queen Mary University of London
)
10:45 - 11:45
Room: TBC
11:45
Stability of ghostly interactions in classical field theories
-
Aaron Held
Stability of ghostly interactions in classical field theories
Aaron Held
11:45 - 12:30
Room: TBC
I will demonstrate that opposite-sign kinetic terms are no obstruction for long-lived classical motion. I start with a class of polynomial point-particle models for which integrability allows to prove global stability despite the presence of opposite-sign kinetic terms and identify respective physical criteria for the interaction potential. I then generalise to (1+1) dimensional scalar field theories to clarify that (i) even the unquenched classical instability is not instantaneous, (ii) higher frequency modes become more not less stable, and (iii) heavy ghosts can be integrated out. Finally, I connect the above insights to recent progress concerning well-posed classical time evolution in higher-derivative theories of gravity. The latter opens up a novel pathway to access the strong-field regime in gravitational effective field theories. I look forward to discussing implications for cosmology.
12:30
12:30 - 12:35
Room: TBC
12:40
Lunch at Bushouse Restaurant
Lunch at Bushouse Restaurant
12:40 - 14:10
Room: TBC