Episodes
Andrey Korytov gives the latest information on the Higgs data from CMS.
Published 04/22/13
Jonathan Hays describes the latest results from ATLAS on the Higgs.
Published 04/22/13
Stephen Sekula discusses the latest results on searches for new physics at ATLAS and CMS.
Published 04/22/13
Gordan Krnjaic discusses how to search for models of gauged minimal flavor violation.
Published 04/01/13
Roni Harnik describes how to search for new physics in Flavor and CP violating decays of the Higgs boson.
Published 03/22/13
After the recent discovery at the LHC of a Higgs-like particle with mass around 125 GeV, it is mandatory to reassess the viability of the proposed solutions to the hierarchy problem of the electroweak scale. In this talk, Javi Serra focuses on compositeness as the fundamental idea, with the Higgs arising as a Goldstone boson of the new strong dynamics and discuss its exciting phenomenological implications, including the prospect of non-minimal scalar sectors and its significance for Higgs...
Published 03/18/13
Zackaria Chacko discusses light dilators and how one could mimic the Higgs boson.
Published 03/11/13
Nathaniel Craig discusses general search strategies for new physics in the Higgs sector.
Published 03/06/13
Richard Holman describes how to calculate processes in time-dependent effective theories.
Published 03/04/13
Joe Polchinksi argues that the following three statements cannot all be true: (i) Hawking radiation is in a pure state, (ii) the information carried by the radiation is emitted from the region near the horizon, with low energy effective field theory valid beyond some microscopic distance from the horizon, and (iii) the infalling observer encounters nothing unusual at the horizon. Perhaps the most conservative resolution is that the infalling observer burns up at the horizon. Alternatives...
Published 02/25/13
Jessie Shelton describes how the LHC experiments can probe a model that explains the Tevatron anomaly in the forward-backward top asymmetry.
Published 02/11/13
If a black hole starts in a pure quantum state and evaporates completely by a unitary process, the von Neumann entropy of the Hawking radiation initially increases and then decreases back to zero when the black hole has disappeared. Here numerical results are given for an approximation to the time dependence of the radiation entropy under an assumption of fast scrambling, for large nonrotating black holes that emit essentially only photons and gravitons.
Published 01/28/13
This lecture offers a careful look at dark matter searches, especially focusing on problems in the DAMA analysis of the annual modulation in the dark matter "signal."
Published 01/25/13
A class of diffeomorphism invariant, physical observables (so-called astrometric observables) is introduced. A particularly simple example, the time delay, which expresses the difference between two initially synchronized proper time clocks in relative inertial motion, is analyzed in detail. It is found to satisfy some interesting inequalities related to the causal structure of classical Lorentzian space times. Some potential applications of astrometric observables in quantum gravity are...
Published 01/14/13
This lecture discusses how the Goldstone boson of spontaneously broken scale symmetry can mimic the behavior of the Higgs boson.
Published 01/07/13
Shape dynamics is a theory of gravity that is generically dynamically equivalent to general relativity and yet sheds refoliaiton invariance in favor of spatial Weyl invariance. The different invariance groups has caused some puzzlement regarding the theory. In this talk, we will show how shape dynamics reproduce Poincare symmetry for a Minkowski-like curve in phase space. The asymptotic algebra is the same, but the charges for this theory acquire a new contribution to the energy that makes it...
Published 12/10/12
Loading a water Cherenkov detector with a water soluble gadolinium compound makes possible the detection of thermal neutrons, dramatically improving such an enhanced detector's sensitivity to anti-neutrinos fluxes from both nuclear reactors and supernova explosions. But how can the Gd-loaded water be continuously repurified, maintaining its excellent optical properties, without also removing the dissolved gadolinium? A new technology - the molecular band-pass filter - has recently been...
Published 12/04/12
One of the strongest evidences of the AdS/CFT correspondence is provided by three-dimensional gravity with a negative cosmological constant, whose asymptotic symmetry group is the conformal one. As a further example, one can consider gravity coupled to self-interacting scalar field having a slow fall-off at infinity. In these cases, the metric describes an asymptotically AdS spacetime in a relaxed sense as compared with the one of Brown and Henneaux. Nevertheless, the asymptotic symmetry...
Published 12/03/12
The physics reach of the LHC can be extended by detecting events in which the beam protons interact via the gamma-gamma or gluon-gluon process and remain intact. Since there is no "underlying event" background from the breakup of the protons, which occurs in typical proton interactions, this central exclusive production (CEP) mode can be used as an experimentally clean way to observe many new physics channels, such as a low-mass SUSY lepton, the Higgs boson, and anomalous production of W and...
Published 11/27/12
Resolving the problems with instantons and renormalons.
Published 11/26/12
Xenon is increasingly popular for both direct WIMP and 0-nu-beta-beta decay searches. Although the current trend has exploited the liquid phase, gas phase xenon offers some remarkable performance advantages for energy resolution, topology visualization, and discrimination between electron and nuclear recoils. I will describe recent results with small prototypes, indicating that NEXT-100 can provide about 0.5% FWHM energy resolution at the decay Q-value, as well as topological rejection of...
Published 11/20/12
An update on mini-split supersymmetry.
Published 11/19/12
Thinking about dark energy using 3D gravity as a toy model.
Published 11/16/12
We use modern jet-substructure techniques to propose LHC searches for multijet-resonance signals without leptons or missing energy. We focus on three-jet resonances produced by R-parity-violating decays of boosted gluinos, showing that shape analyses searching for a mass peak can probe such gluinos up to masses of 750 GeV (650 GeV) with 20/fb (5/fb) at the LHC at 8 TeV. This complements existing search strategies, which also include counting methods that are inherently more prone to...
Published 11/13/12