Upcoming Particle Seminars

March 13

Speaker: Georgia Karagiorgi, Columbia University

Title: "Neutrino Physics at the Dawn of the Liquid Argon TPC Era"

Abstract:

A tremendous amount of progress has been made in the field of neutrino physics over the past decade.  However, the questions of (1) sterile neutrinos, (2) leptonic CP violation, and (3) neutrino mass hierarchy still remain and form three of the most pressing issues in the field.  MicroBooNE is the first in line of next-generation experiments that aim to address those questions.  I will discuss the MicroBooNE liquid argon time projection chamber (TPC) experiment and its physics reach, and pay particular focus to its ability to address, within the next 3-5 years, the recent experimental hints for the existence of sterile neutrinos.  Finally, I will describe other ongoing efforts--both theoretical and experimental--which aim to further investigate the global picture of sterile neutrinos.

March 27

Speaker: Josh Spitz, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 

Title: “A new probe of the sterile neutrino”

Abstract:

A number of observed anomalies in neutrino oscillation experiments can be explained by the existence of a new fundamental particle called the sterile neutrino. A definitive experiment is needed in order to determine if such a particle exists or not. A detector placed ~100 m from an intense source of >3 GeV protons can be used to search for electron neutrino appearance with the monoenergetic 235.5 MeV muon neutrino flux from charged kaon decay-at-rest. Such an observation would be consistent with the existence of at least one sterile neutrino. The detector can also be used to concurrently search for the appearance and disappearance of neutrinos and antineutrinos from pion/muon decay-at-rest as well. The combination of these measurements would be a definitive probe of the sterile neutrino with neutrinos and antineutrinos and in both appearance and disappearance channels. I will present the kaon decay-at-rest sterile neutrino search idea and the possibility of experimentally pursuing it in the near future.

April 3

Speaker: Manel Martinez, IFAE Barcelona, Spain

Title: "VHE gamma-ray astronomy: from experiments to observatories"

Abstract:

The last decade has witnessed the down of VHE gamma ray astronomy thanks to the present generation of Imaging Air Cherenkov Telescopes. These instruments are running as experiments but the worldwide community is already well advanced in preparing a qualitative step: building the two Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) observatories. In this talk, as an example of present generation experiments,  the recent upgrade of MAGIC will be described and some physics highlights will be reported.  Then the status and plans of the CTA project will be discussed.

April 10

Speaker: Aaron Angerami, Columbia University

Title: “Results on Jet Quenching from ATLAS”

Abstract:

Jets produced in relativistic heavy ion collisions may lose energy or suffer modification of their parton showers through the phenomena of jet quenching. Thus jets provide an important tool to study the properties of the medium of deconfined, strongly-interacting quarks and gluons produced in these collisions. Conversely, medium-induced modifications to the nominal vacuum parton shower constitute a new domain in the study of jet phenomenology. In general, these jets provide a unique opportunity to study the universal physical phenomena of radiation and diffusion in a fundamental theory. Indirect measurements related to jet quenching have been performed at RHIC, however measurements of fully reconstructed jets in heavy ion collisions have only become tractable in the LHC era. In this talk, I will summarize the first series of jet measurements from the ATLAS experiment and discuss the implications of these results on our current understanding of the quenching mechanism.

April 16 **CANCELED** / 2:30PM at Mansion House, Nevis Labs

Speaker: Jose Alonso, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 

Title: "Pushing the Envelope of Cyclotron Technology: from Medical Applications to Neutrino Sources"

Abstract:

The Cyclotron, patented by E.O. Lawrence in 1934, has traditionally been a tool for nuclear physicists to study properties of nuclei.  Even from the earliest days, however, applications of the beams from these machines in other fields have played an important role.  Glenn Seaborg, in 1938 proposed the first use of an iodine isotope he discovered at the 27” cyclotron as a medical tracer, and in that same year Ernest’s brother John Lawrence developed a program of treating tumors with neutrons from cyclotron beams hitting beryllium targets. 

Today cyclotrons are in widespread use: for radioisotope production, for cancer therapy with proton beams, and for increasingly-diversified programs in nuclear and particle physics research.

This talk will cover the range of applications, and the evolution of machines optimized for each, and will explore new developments, from compact superconducting machines tailored for medical uses, up to and including a new project for development of very high-current cyclotrons as compact, cost-effective neutrino sources.

April 24

Speaker: Chris Sachrajda, University of Southampton

Title: "Prospects for Lattice Calculations of Rare Kaon Decay Amplitudes"

Abstract:

Precision Flavour Physics in general, and processes mediated by Flavour Changing Neutral Currents (FCNC) in particular, offer a particularly promising tool for exploring the limits of the standard model and searching for signatures of new physics in a way which is complementary to the high-energy searches being undertaken at the LHC. The very significant recent progress in lattice simulations is enabling the hadronic effects (non-perturbative QCD effects) to be quantified for many processes, allowing us to extract fundamental information from experimental measurements. In this talk I will discuss the prospects of applying recently developed techniques to an important class of FCNC processes, rare kaon decays K -> pi + leptons, where the kaon and the pion have the same electric charge. I will discuss both the phenomenology of such processes and the theoretical framework necessary for the evaluation of the amplitudes. The calculations are feasible but challenging and a dialogue with both the experimental and non-lattice theoretical communities will be helpful to proceed in the most effective way.