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HEP Seminars & Vivas

14 Nov 2024

UCL HEP Seminars 2024

(D17, Physics)

Xie Cheng PhD Viva

Examiners: Anthony Brown (Durham) and Jon Butterworth (UCL)

Everyone is invited for drinks in E7, Physics after the viva.

(A1/3, Physics)

PhD Upgrade Talks

Reception afterwards in E3/7

(D17, Physics)

Judita Beinortaite PhD Viva

Examiners: Nikos Konstantinidis (UCL) and Simon Hooker (Oxford)

Everyone is invited for drinks in E7, Physics after the viva.

(D17, Physics)

Yoran Yeh PhD Viva

Examiners: Ryan Nichol (UCL) and Darren Price (Manchester)

Everyone is invited for drinks in E7, Physics after the viva.

: Xin Wang (Southampton) -- A1/3

Quantum gravity effects on Dark Matter and gravitational waves

In this talk, I will discuss testing quantum gravity effects via the no-global-symmetry conjecture. We assume that the quantum gravity scale is responsible for breaking the discrete symmetries associated with Dark Matter and Domain Walls, which can then have observational effects through Dark Matter indirect detections and gravitational waves. To illustrate this concept, we consider a simple model involving either two scalar fields or a combination of one fermion field and one scalar field, along with two Z_2 symmetries. One of these symmetries ensures the stability of Dark Matter, while the other is spontaneously broken and responsible for the formation of Domain Walls. Additionally, we explore the possibility that the collapse of domain walls could directly generate primordial black hole dark matter. We demonstrate that the recent gravitational wave spectrum observed by several pulsar timing array projects can help constrain these effects.

: Breese Quinn (University of Mississippi) -- G21 Ramsey Lecture Theatre

Search for CPT and Lorentz Invariance Violation in Muon g-2

Lorentz symmetry and CPT (Charge-Parity-Time) symmetry are absolute bedrock foundational assumptions of both relativity and quantum field theory. The invariance of these symmetries is axiomatic to our entire structure of modern physics. However, these principles may not be as sacrosanct as we tend to treat them in practice. Violations of CPT and/or Lorentz invariance could be the key to the seeming incompatibility of quantum physics and relativity and could also be responsible for phenomena such as the muon g-2 discrepancy and neutrino oscillations. I will present the formalism for including CPT and Lorentz violating interactions in the Standard Model of particle physics and describe the searches for this physics in the first three years of data from the Fermilab Muon g-2 experiment. Time permitting, I will also preview the first ever search for ultralight dark matter using storage ring muon data.

: Sougato Bose (UCL) -- Ramsey Lecture Theatre

Quantum nature of gravity in the laboratory

I will first justify a specific method for ascertaining the quantum nature of gravity in the laboratory. Subsequent to that, I will describe a scheme, and highlight the major challenges (what needs to be done before an experiment can be realized). Comments will be made to clarify the comparable difficulties of almost any other method. How to probe some other aspects of the quantum behaviour of gravity will be highlighted. Benefits of developing technology in this direction in general to obtain extreme quantum sensors will also be discussed.

: Jack Araz (Jefferson Lab) --Physics A1/3

Two-way communication between physics and quantum machine learning

: Jonathan Oppenheim (UCL) --Physics A1/3

A postquantum theory of classical gravity?

: Karol Lang (UT, Austin) -- Physics A1/3

Image-guided FLASH Proton Therapy

Image-guidance and dosimetry of the in-vivo proton range verification is perhaps one of the most underinvested aspects of radiation cancer treatment. The scarcity of sensitive instruments and treatment protocols for precision monitoring of effects of beam radiation leaves much room for improvement. This is despite that such measurements may dramatically enhance the treatment accuracy and lower the post-exposure toxicity thus improving the entire outcome of cancer therapy. In this talk, we will discuss our effort on designing and building of an in-beam time-of-flight positron-emission-tomography (PET) scanner to be tested in pre-clinical studies at Proton Therapy Center of MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. We will also discuss selected results of recent experiments with FLASH proton beam irradiations of phantoms and other related ideas towards improving and expanding the use of PET detectors, including the total body imaging. This endeavor has been made possible by the support of the U. of Texas – Portugal program at the University of Texas at Austin.

: Sarah Mancina (Padova) -- Physics A1/3

Searches for Galactic and Extragalactic Neutrino Sources using IceCube Starting Tracks

: Xin Ran Liu (UNDO)

Climate Change Special: UNDO

: Bruce Mellado Garcia (University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg) -- Physics A1/3

Growing excesses of new scalars at the Electro-weak scale at the LHC

With the discovery of a Higgs boson at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), great deal of attention has shifted towards the search for new bosons. The multi-lepton anomalies at the LHC are a strong indication of underlying new bosons in the data. These include excesses above the Standard Model (SM) predictions two opposite sign and same sign leptons, and three leptons, with and without $b$-jets, far surpassing the 5$\sigma$ mark. The anomalies can be accommodated by the decay of a heavy scalar $H$ into $SS^*, SS^\prime$, where $S$ and $S^\prime$ are Higgs-like bosons. Using the invariant mass of the two opposite sign leptons with Run 1 data, the mass of $S$ was predicted to be $m_S=150\pm 5$\,GeV. This estimate was further corroborated with Run 2 data. In this paper we report a large resonant excess in the $\gamma\gamma, Z\gamma$ and $WW$ spectra in associated production with a mass of $152\pm 1$\,GeV with a significance above $5\sigma$. This has the potential to serve as the first evidence of a narrow resonance beyond the SM at the LHC.

: Paul Newman (Birmingham) -- Bentham House, 124 Gideon Schreier LT

The Electron-Ion Collider

An early perspective is presented on the Electron-Ion Collider, which is currently under intense development towards realisation in the early 2030s at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in the USA . After an introduction to Deep Inelastic Scattering, overviews of the physics motivation, accelerator and detector concepts are given. Finally, the status of the international ‘ePIC’ collaboration and its UK contributions are discussed.

: Alex Keshavarzi (Manchester) -- Physics A1/3

From Muon g-2 to proton EDM

The Muon g-2 Experiment at Fermilab has been an undeniable success, with its most recent results having an overall unprecedented precision of 190 parts-per-billion. The case for new physics rests upon the Standard Model (SM) prediction, also at sub-percent precision, where tensions exist between data-driven dispersive and lattice QCD evaluations of the hadronic vacuum polarisation (HVP) contributions. The former favours a signal of new physics at > 5 sigma when comparing the SM prediction to the Muon g-2 Experiment; the latter is in closer agreement with the experimental measurement. I will review the status of the Muon g-2 Experiment and the theoretical SM predictions, highlighting the efforts to resolve and understand the current discrepancies. I will then propose using the Muon g-2 Experiment's successful techniques to perform the first direct search for a proton EDM. This would improve on the current limit by at least 4 orders of magnitude and is the most promising effort to solve the strong CP problem. It will also probe axionic dark matter, CP-violation for baryon asymmetry, and new physics scenarios covering a wide range of energy scales and interactions.

: Doug Cowen (Penn State) -- Physics A1/3

Detection of Astrophysical Tau Neutrinos with IceCube

Neutrinos are known to be very reticent fundamental particles, but tau neutrinos make electron and muon neutrinos look positively gregarious. The IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole has sensitivity to all three active neutrino flavors created by atmospheric and astrophysical sources, spanning six orders of magnitude in energy. Using ten years of data and convolutional neural networks to identify astrophysical tau neutrino morphologies, we detected seven tau neutrino candidates on an estimated background of approximately 0.5 events, dominated by other astrophysical neutrino flavors. The estimated average energy of the candidate tau neutrinos is approximately 200 TeV. This is the first high-significance measurement of the most energetic astrophysical tau neutrino candidates ever observed.

: Jessica Turner (Durham, IPPP) -- Physics A1/3

Proton Decay and Gravitational Waves as Complementary Tests of Grand Unification

I will discuss how proton decay, combined with gravitational waves, can be used to test Grand Unified Theories (GUTs). In particular, proton decay searches by large multipurpose neutrino experiments such as DUNE, Hyper-Kamiokande, and JUNO will either discover proton decay or further push the symmetry-breaking scale above 10^16 GeV. Another possible observational consequence of GUTs is the formation of a cosmic string network produced during the breaking of the GUT to the Standard Model gauge group, which can produce a stochastic background of gravitational waves. Several gravitational wave detectors will be sensitive to this over a wide frequency range. I will demonstrate the non-trivial complementarity between the observation of proton decay and gravitational waves produced from cosmic strings in determining SO(10) GUT breaking chains and their compatibility with leptogenesis as a means of producing the observed matter-antimatter asymmetry. Additionally, I will extend this discussion to include supersymmetric GUTs, taking into account recent findings from Pulsar Timing Arrays that have detected gravitational waves in the nanoHertz frequency range.

: Frank Close (Oxford) -- G08 Chadwick Building

Half Life - the two lives of Bruno Pontecorvo: "Mr Neutrino"

Bruno Pontecorvo is credited with the idea of solar neutrinos, of neutrinos with flavour, of neutrino oscillations and of neutrinos from supernovae. Halfway through his life, in 1950, he vanished from Harwell where he was based, and reappeared years later in the Soviet Union. Folklore is that while there, Soviet paranoia prevented him from discovering the neutrino at a nuclear reactor and of demonstrating the correctness of neutrino flavours at CERN. It is also claimed he invented strangeness but this was suppressed by Soviet secrecy. How much of this is true? Could Pontecorvo have shared in two Nobel Prizes had he not fled to the USSR? And why did he do so anyway? Was he involved in espionage? Frank Close examined his classified logbooks at Dubna, including evidence he was consulted on aspects of thermonuclear weapons. As for Pontecorvo’s defection, Frank’s investigations led to The Observer headline: “Revealed: X led to flight of nuclear scientist” ; the talk will reveal the identity of X.

: Maria Olalla Romacho (LPENS Paris) -- Physics A1/3

Exploring Cosmological Phase Transitions in the upcoming decades: from the LHC to LISA

In this seminar, we investigate the potential for probing cosmological phase transitions using the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) in the upcoming decades. The LHC is expected to remain in operation until 2025, before undergoing a high-luminosity upgrade and operating until 2039. Additionally, LISA, set for launch in the mid-2030s, offers sensitivity to primordial stochastic Gravitational Wave (GW) backgrounds, generated during a First-Order Phase Transition (FOPT) in the early universe. Economical additions of the Standard Model (SM), such as Higgs doublet extensions, are capable of accommodating a first-order electroweak (EW) phase transition, while predicting new particles at the EW scale that may be detectable at the LHC. We demonstrate that the LHC plays a crucial role in shaping the prospects for detecting GW signals from such scenarios. Furthermore, even if new physics resides at higher energy scales inaccessible to the LHC, we can use LISA to probe models incorporating extra B-L gauge forces, explaining dark matter as primordial black holes and accommodating leptogenesis and neutrino masses.

: Josh McFayden (Sussex) -- Physics A1/3

First results from FASER(v): Observation of collider neutrinos and a new search for Dark Matter

There are a billion ghost-like particles passing through an area the size of your thumbnail every second. These neutrinos play a crucial role in our understanding of the Universe, from how the Sun shines, to exploding supernovae. There are also lots of open questions about neutrinos - we know they have mass, but the Standard Model predicts them to be massless. FASER is adding to the long history of neutrino physics by being the first experiment to observe directly neutrinos produced in a collider (the Large Hadron Collider). New measurements from FASER open up a new window to look for beyond the Standard Model physics. FASER stands for “ForwArd Search ExpeRiment” so one of its other aims is to search exotic long-lived new particles that are candidates to explain the existence of Dark Matter. If they exist, these exotic particles would be produced in collisions inside the ATLAS detector and be detected nearly 500m away in FASER. FASER is able to look for a type of these Dark Matter particles that no experiment until now has had sensitivity to. I will present the first results from FASER, including the first observation of collider neutrinos and our first search for Dark Photons. I will finish with a description of a proposal for a new dedicated facility at CERN to expand the physics potential of detectors such as FASER in the far-forward region.

: Chayan Majumdar (UCL) -- Physics A1/3

Constraining the SMEFT with Right-Handed Neutrinos at FCC-ee

The existence of right-handed neutrinos (RHNs), or heavy neutral leptons (HNLs), is strongly motivated by the observation of small but finite neutrino masses and mixings. In this work, we have extended the Standard Model (SM) particle content with a pair of gauge-singlet fermions, which can be Dirac or Majorana in nature. Adopting a model-independent effective field theory (EFT) framework, more specifically NRSMEFT, we consider all possible operators of different Lorentz structures i.e., scalar-pseudoscalar (SP), vector-axial vector (VA), and tensor-axial tensor (TAT) types upto mass dimension 6. With these operators, we analyze the future electron positron circular collider (FCC-ee) prospects and constrain the corresponding new physics (NP) cut-off scale ΛNP in the monophoton channel with √s = 91.2 GeV at 100 ab−1 as well as √s = 240 GeV at 5 ab−1 integrated luminosities.