29 November 2021 to 10 December 2021
Mainz Institute for Theoretical Physics, Johannes Gutenberg University
Europe/Berlin timezone

 

Programme:

The high-luminosity LHC will probe light new particles with masses below the electroweak scale with unprecedented sensitivity. In particular light new gauge bosons or axion-like particles could be discovered in a mass range which is well motivated by several extensions of the Standard Model. This includes direct production of such new particles, exotic Higgs or Z-decays and decays of heavy mesons, and is therefore an important focus of all LHC experiments. These searches are complementary to high precision experiments that can observe the effects of light particles in measurements of fundamental constants and direct searches for fifth forces. Atom interferometry and atomic clock experiments that can probe the same theories have made enormous progress over the last years. 

The goal of this workshop is to bring together experts from the experimental and theoretical communities working on searches for light new physics at the LHC and at high-precision experiments and to construct a comprehensive map of the parameter space of different models for light new physics that can be observed or constrained by these experiments. This workshop will explore the complementarity of these different experiments and discuss novel techniques for the discovery of light particles. This workshop will serve as a starting point to guide a program of searches at the LHC and beyond, to maximise the discovery potential for those particles in the upcoming years. 

 

Code of Conduct:

In this event, we will take example from the Snowmass 2021 community guidelines (https://snowmass21.org/cpcg/start) and abide by the American Physics Society code of conduct (https://www.aps.org/meetings/policies/code-conduct.cfm).
We pledge to conduct ourselves in a professional manner that is welcoming to all participants and free from any form of discrimination, harassment, or retaliation. Participants will treat each other with respect and consideration.
Any violation to this code of conduct should be reported to the meeting organisers (Caterina Doglioni as Diversity Officer, Martin Bauer and Andrea Thamm).
In addition, the Division of Particles and Fields has drafted a set of Core Principles and Community Guidelines that complements the above, please see this wiki page for more information https://snowmass21.org/cpcg/start. 

Starts
Ends
Europe/Berlin
Mainz Institute for Theoretical Physics, Johannes Gutenberg University
Virtual Workshop

Organized by Andrea Thamm (The ARC Centre of Excellence for Dark Matter Particle Physics), Martin Bauer (IPPP Durham), and Caterina Doglioni (Lund Univ.; Diversity Coordinator).

MITP supports equal opportunities in science.