Asymptotic Safety meets Particle Physics & Friends

Europe/Zurich
FLASH experimental hall "Albert Einstein" (DESY Hamburg)

FLASH experimental hall "Albert Einstein"

DESY Hamburg

Description

Welcome to the homepage of the 2024 edition of the  'Asymptotic Safety meets Particle Physics and Friends' workshop, taking place on Dec 16th - 19th at DESY, Hamburg.

The aim of this informal workshop is to bring together QFT practitioners from different areas to discuss new ideas, progress, and challenges at the interface between formal theory and model building and data. Topics to be covered range from critical phenomena,  particle physics, condensed matter, gravity, to new directions in model building and LHC phenomenology, and more. This is the 11th event of this kind. The previous workshop is found here.

 

There is no conference fee! Registration will soon open for invited participants, with further information to follow shortly. 

We have reserved 30 rooms at the DESY hostel from Dec 15 to Dec 19.

 

 

The workshop will take place "Im Quantenfeld" at the Albert Einstein Hall, DESY, Hamburg. The building is marked as 28c in sector 1c on the DESY map. Please head to the seminar room on the second floor.

 

 

 

 

The conference dinner will take place Tuesday 19:00 at Dübelsbrücker Kajüt, Elbchaussee 303, 22605 Hamburg. To get there, take bus line 1 outside DESY main entrance towards “Rissen” or “Sieversstücken”. Exit at “Elbe-Einkaufzentrum” and take the bus line 21 to Teufelsbrück.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This workshop is supported by the Helmholtz Alliance ``Physics at the Terascale". 

The workshop is also supported by the MERCUR project to bring together theoretical particle and solid state physics.

Registration
Participants
  • Andreas Ringwald
  • Angelo Portas Chiesa
  • Bilal Hawashin
  • Charlie Cresswell-Hogg
  • Christian Schwanenberger
  • Christopher Herzog
  • Daniel Litim
  • David Dullaway
  • Diego Buccio
  • Emmanuel Stamou
  • Enrico Maria Sessolo
  • Gabriel Picanço Costa
  • Geraldine Servant
  • Gudrun Hiller
  • Joachim Brod
  • João Viana
  • Juri Smirnov
  • Kamila Kowalska
  • Katerina Lipka
  • Latham Boyle
  • Manuel Reichert
  • Marc Schiffer
  • Mireia Tolosa Simeón
  • Moritz Bosse
  • Renata Ferrero
  • Riccardo Martini
  • Roberto Percacci
  • Simone Blasi
  • Tania Natalie Robens
  • Tom Steudtner
  • Yannick Kluth
  • +4
    • 13:45 18:15
      Talks: BSM I
      • 13:45
        Welcome 15m
        Speaker: Daniel Litim (University of Sussex)
      • 14:00
        Probing Quantum Gravity Effects via Magnetic Conversion of Electromagnetic Waves into Gravitational Waves and Vice Versa? 45m
        Speaker: Andreas Ringwald
      • 14:45
        The cosmological constant problem and the effective potential of a gravity-coupled scalar 30m
        Speaker: Roberto Percacci
      • 15:15
        Coffee 30m
      • 15:45
        Exploring the Majorana Landscape: Planck Safe Models with Majorana Fermions 45m
        Speaker: Kai Jürgen Spychala
      • 16:30
        Avoiding quantum gravity-induced chiral symmetry breaking 30m
        Speaker: Gabriel Picanco Costa
      • 17:00
        Asymptotic Safety and a CPT-Symmetric Universe 45m

        I will present the idea that the big bang is a type of mirror -- in particular a "CPT mirror". I will review the evidence for this idea, its explanatory power, and its predictions. Recently, we have come to think this idea is closely tied to the asymptotic safety idea, and I will present a new result to this effect (in collaboration with Neil Turok and Vatsalya Vaibhav -- to appear soon).

        Speaker: Latham Boyle (Higgs Centre for Theoretical Physics, University of Edinburgh)
      • 17:45
        Discussion 15m
    • 09:30 12:30
      Talks: QFT / CFT
      • 09:30
        A Nonlocal Schwinger Model 45m
        Speaker: Christopher Herzog
      • 10:15
        Emergent Symmetries in 2D Dirac Systems 30m
        Speaker: Max Uetrecht (TU Dortmund University)
      • 10:45
        Coffee 30m
      • 11:15
        Dilaton Physics from Asymptotic Freedom 45m
        Speaker: Charlie Cresswell-Hogg
      • 12:00
        Quantum critical Dirac semimetals and finite-temperature effects 30m

        The chiral Ising-, XY-, and Heisenberg models serve as effective descriptions of Dirac semimetals undergoing a quantum phase transition into a symmetry-broken ordered state. Interestingly, their quantum critical points govern the physical behavior of the system in the vicinity of the transition even at finite temperatures. In this contribution, we explore the chiral models at zero and finite temperature, both in the Dirac phase as well as in the symmetry-broken phases. To that end, we set up a functional renormalization group approach, which allows us to systematically track (1) the phenomenon of pre-condensation, (2) the manifestation of the Mermin-Wagner-Hohenberg theorem due to pseudo-Goldstone fluctuations at finite temperatures, and (3) the quantitative behavior of the system in the quantum critical fan, e.g., by calculating the quasiparticle weight. Our work aims at a more holistic understanding of chiral models near their quantum critical point, including, e.g., the description of non-Dirac-liquid behavior, in analogy to the non-Fermi-liquid behavior in metallic quantum critical points.

        Speakers: Mireia Tolosa Simeon (Ruhr-Universität Bochum), Mireia Tolosa Simeón
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch
    • 14:00 18:00
      Talks: Quantum Gravity with and beyond Perturbation Theory
      • 14:00
        Fixed Points of Quantum Gravity from Dimensional Regularisation 45m

        We investigate $\beta$-functions of quantum gravity using dimensional regularisation. In contrast to minimal subtraction, a non-minimal renormalisation scheme is employed which is sensitive to power-law divergences from mass terms or dimensionful couplings. By construction, this setup respects global and gauge symmetries, including diffeomorphisms, and allows for systematic extensions to higher loop orders. We exemplify this approach in the context of four-dimensional quantum gravity. By computing one-loop $\beta$-functions, we find a non-trivial fixed point. It shows two real critical exponents and is compatible with Weinberg's asymptotic safety scenario. Moreover, the underlying structure of divergences suggests that gravity becomes, effectively, two-dimensional in the ultraviolet. We discuss the significance of our results as well as further applications and extensions to higher loop orders.

        Speaker: Mr Yannick Kluth (University of Manchester)
      • 14:45
        Asymptotic Safety within on-shell perturbation theory 45m
        Speaker: Renata Ferrero
      • 15:30
        Coffee 30m
      • 16:00
        Exploring Asymptotically Safe Quantum Gravity on the lattice 45m
        Speaker: Marc Schiffer (Radboud University Nijmegen)
      • 16:45
        Substructures of the Weyl group 45m

        I will introduce the concept of restricted Weyl invariances and discuss their advantages for matter fields in curved space and their disadvantages for quantum gravity.

        Speaker: Riccardo Martini (UniBo and INFN - Bologna)
      • 17:30
        Discussion 30m
    • 19:00 21:00
      Dinner
    • 09:30 12:30
      Talks: QFT at finite Temperature
      • 09:30
        A seeded electroweak phase transition 45m DESY Main Auditorium

        DESY Main Auditorium

        Main Auditorium
        Speaker: Dr Simone Blasi (DESY)
      • 10:15
        UV complete local field theory of persistent symmetry breaking in 2+1 dimensions 30m DESY Main Auditorium

        DESY Main Auditorium

        Spontaneous symmetry breaking can persist at all temperatures in certain biconical $\mathrm{O}(N)\times \mathbb{Z}_2$ vector models when the underlying field theories are ultraviolet complete. So far, the existence of such theories has been established in fractional dimensions for local but nonunitary models or in 2+1 dimensions but for nonlocal models. Here, we study local models at zero and finite temperature directly in 2+1 dimensions employing functional methods. At zero temperature, we establish that our approach describes the quantum critical behaviour with high accuracy for all $N\geq 2$. We then exhibit the mechanism of discrete symmetry breaking from $\mathrm{O}(N)\times \mathbb{Z}_2\to \mathrm{O}(N)$ for increasing temperature near the biconical critical point when $N$ is finite but large. We calculate the corresponding finite-temperature phase diagram and further show that the Hohenberg-Mermin-Wagner theorem is fully respected within this approach, i.e., symmetry breaking only occurs in the $\mathbb{Z}_2$ sector. Finally, we determine the critical $N$ above which this phenomenon can be observed to be $N_c \approx 15$.

        Speaker: Bilal Hawashin (RUB)
      • 10:45
        Coffee 30m FLASH experimental hall "Albert Einstein" (DESY Hamburg)

        FLASH experimental hall "Albert Einstein"

        DESY Hamburg

      • 11:15
        BSMPT v3 A Tool for Phase Transitions and Primordial Gravitational Waves in Extended Higgs Sectors 45m DESY Main Auditorium

        DESY Main Auditorium

        Strong first-order phase transitions (SFOPT) during the evolution of the Higgs potential in the early universe not only allow for the dynamical generation of the observed matter-antimatter asymmetry, they can also source a stochastic gravitational wave (GW) background possibly detectable with future space-based gravitational waves interferometers. As SFOPTs are phenomenologically incompatible with the Standard Model (SM) Higgs sector, the observation of GWs from SFOPTs provides an exciting interplay between cosmology and particle physics in the search for new physics. With the C++ code BSMPTv3, we present for the first time a tool that performs the whole chain from the particle physics model to the gravitational wave spectrum. Extending the previous versions BSMPTv1 and v2, it traces the phases of beyond-SM (BSM) Higgs potentials and is capable of treating multiple vacuum directions and multi-step phase transitions. During the tracing, it checks for discrete symmetries, flat directions, and electroweak symmetry restoration, and finally reports the transition history. The transition probability from the false to the true vacuum is obtained from the solution of the bounce equation which allows for the calculation of the nucleation, percolation and completion temperatures. The peak amplitude and frequency of the GWs originating from sound waves and turbulence, are evaluated after the calculation of the thermal parameters at the transition temperature, and finally the signal-to-noise ratio at LISA is provided. The code BSMPTv3 is a powerful self-contained tool that comes more than timely and will be of great benefit for investigations of the vacuum structure of the early universe of not only simple but also complicated Higgs potentials involving several vacuum directions, with exciting applications in the search for new physics.

        Speakers: João Viana (Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa), João Viana
      • 12:00
        Planck Safe Phase Transitions in a Complex Singlet Model 30m DESY Main Auditorium

        DESY Main Auditorium

        Speaker: Moritz Bosse (TU Dortmund)
    • 12:30 14:00
      Lunch
    • 14:00 18:00
      Talks: Quantum Gravity / Scattering
      • 14:00
        Entanglement in flavored scalar scattering 45m
        Speaker: Enrico Maria Sessolo
      • 14:45
        Multiloop calculations (with MaRTIn) 30m
        Speaker: Joachim Brod (University of Cincinnati)
      • 15:15
        Coffee 30m
      • 15:45
        Extended scalar sectors 45m
        Speaker: Tania Natalie Robens (Rudjer Boskovic Institute (HR))
      • 16:30
        Physical running in higher derivative gravity 30m

        Running coupling were introduced in quantum filed theory in order to preserve perturbativity in scattering amplitudes, despite the appearance of large logs of external momenta. It is commonly believed that these logarithms are directly related to UV divergencies in one-loop perturbation theory, however this is not completely true in higher derivative theories. On one hand, large logs can emerge also from UV finite loop integrals due to IR effects, on the other hand, some UV divergent diagrams do not depend on external momenta. We define a new set of beta functions for quadratic gravity based on the explicit computation of large logs of momenta and discuss their features concerning the asymptotic UV behavior of the theory. In particular, we observe the existence of a unique trajectory of the perturbative RG leading to asymptotic freedom without presence of tachyons.

        Speaker: Diego Buccio (SISSA)
      • 17:00
        Spectral Functions of Lorentzian Quantum Gravity 30m
        Speaker: Gabriel Assant
      • 17:30
        Discussion 30m
    • 09:30 13:00
      Talks: BSM II
      • 09:30
        Vacuum Stability in the Standard Model and Beyond 30m
        Speaker: Tom Steudtner
      • 10:00
        Extraction of top quark mass and strong coupling in experiment 45m
        Speaker: Katerina Lipka (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE))
      • 10:45
        Coffee 30m
      • 11:15
        TBD 45m
        Speaker: Geraldine Servant (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron (DE))
      • 12:00
        Searching for a dark matter induced galactic axion gradient 30m

        An ultra-light axion with CP violating interactions with a dark sector and CP preserving interac- tions with the visible sector can act as a novel portal between dark matter and the Standard Model. In such theories, dark matter sources an axion field extending over the entire galaxy, the gradient of which can be searched for with precise spin precession experiments. A reinterpretation of existing co-magnetometer data already constrains theories that are consistent with astrophysical bounds, and near-future experiments will begin probing well-motivated models. The required interactions can arise from a confining hidden sector without necessitating fine-tuning of the axion’s mass.

        Speaker: Juri Smirnov
      • 12:30
        Discussion and Goodbye 30m
    • 13:00 14:00
      Lunch