School on the Future of Collider Physics

Asia/Tokyo
Lecture hall (<font size="3"> Kavli IPMU, The University of Tokyo</FONT>)

Lecture hall

<font size="3"> Kavli IPMU, The University of Tokyo</FONT>

<font size="3">5-1-5 Kashiwanoha, Kashiwa, 277-8583, Japan
Description
The following school will be held at Kavli IPMU, The University of Tokyo.
Participants
  • AMIT CHAKRABORTY
  • Arghya Choudhury
  • Atsushi Ogasahara
  • AVIRUP SHAW
  • Biplob Bhattacherjee
  • Chun-peng Chang
  • Da Liu
  • DongWoo Kang
  • Eriko Kato
  • Fumiyo Uchiyama
  • Hirohisa Kubota
  • Hiroki Matsui
  • Hiroyuki Umeeda
  • Jinsu Kim
  • Jongkuk Kim
  • Junya Nakamura
  • Kai Ma
  • Kazuya Ishikawa
  • Keisuke Harigaya
  • Kentarou Mawatari
  • Kohsaku Tobioka
  • Koichi Hamaguchi
  • Koji Ichikawa
  • Kunio Kaneta
  • Manimala Chakraborti
  • Martin Stoll
  • Natsumi Nagata
  • Satyanarayan Mukhopadhyay
  • Sayaka Kawabata
  • Seng Pei Liew
  • SeungHak Lee
  • shingo mori
  • Sho Iwamoto
  • Takafumi Igari
  • Takahiro Terada
  • Tomohiro Abe
  • Toshifumi Yamada
  • Weicong Huang
  • Ya-Juan Zheng
  • Yasuhiro Yamamoto
  • Yasuhito Sakaki
  • Yifan Cheng
  • Yuta Sato
    • 09:00 10:30
      Introduction to ILC 1h 30m Lecture hall

      Lecture hall

      Speaker: Prof. Hitoshi Murayama (Kavli IPMU)
      Slides
    • 10:30 10:50
      Break 20m
    • 10:50 12:20
      Event Generation for the Large Hadron Collider 1h 30m
      Tests of the Standard Model and searches for new phenomena at the LHC depend heavily on computer simulations of signal and background processes. Monte Carlo event generators aim to simulate the final states of high-energy collisions in full detail, down to the level of individual stable particles. I will review the physics behind these programs, their main ingredients and theoretical status, with emphasis on recent work to improve their precision, especially for top-quark and Higgs physics. There will be extensive comparisons with the latest data and predictions for the next LHC run.
      Speaker: Prof. Bryan Webber (U. Cambridge)
      Slides
    • 12:20 13:30
      Lunch 1h 10m
    • 13:30 15:00
      Some Aspects of Higgs Physics, after July 2012 1h 30m
      Speaker: Prof. C. -P. Yuan (Michigan State U./Peking U.)
      Slides
    • 15:00 15:30
      Break 30m
    • 15:30 17:00
      Top physics after Higgs boson discovery 1h 30m
      In this talk, aimed at PhD students and postdocs, I will argue that after the discovery of a very Standard-Model-like scalar resonance the top quark is the most exciting particle in the Standard Model. It couples to all Standard Model gauge bosons and is integral to the so-called Hierarchy problem. While the LHC was built to discover and study the Higgs boson, it is by construction a top quark factory. With the large amount of data at high energies being collected within the coming years precision studies of the top quark can guide the way to extensions of the Standard Model.
      Speaker: Prof. Michael Spannowsky (U. Durham)
      Slides
    • 09:00 10:30
      The Higgs Boson 1h 30m
      After only two years of running the ATLAS and CMS experiments have delivered on the main task of the LHC program: the discovery of a Higgs boson arising from the spontaneous breaking of the electroweak symmetry, as proposed almost 50 years ago. I will introduce the Higgs mechanism and illustrate its role in the Standard Model of particle physics and discuss what constitutes the `discovery'. Since July 4th 2012 the LHC experiments have studied many facets of this new particle, leading CERN to move from the official categorization as `Higgs-like particle' to `Standard-Model-like Higgs particle'. I will discuss which tests and measurements are in the focus of such studies, what the impact of theoretical physics is, and what theorists expect from the LHC once it starts up again with almost twice its previous energy.
      Speaker: Tilman Plehn (U. Heidelberg)
      Slides
    • 10:30 10:50
      Break 20m
    • 10:50 12:20
      Physics at the International Linear Collider 1h 30m
      Speaker: Tomohiko (EX) Tanabe (ICEPP, U. Tokyo)
      Slides
    • 12:20 13:30
      Lunch 1h 10m
    • 13:30 15:00
      Mass hierarchy and physics beyond the Standard Model 1h 30m
      Speaker: Ignatios Antoniadis (CERN)
      Slides
    • 09:00 10:30
      ILC Main Linac accelerator development 1h 30m
      The main part of the ILC accelerator is 11km + 11km Superconducting Main Linac for electron, positron acceleration. The key technology is the use of RF superconductivity to make efficient power transfer from the microwave to the beams. The seminar describe the design, issues and the solutions to make ILC accelerator realize with very low-cost.
      Speaker: Hitoshi (A) Hayano (KEK)
      Slides
    • 10:30 10:50
      Break 20m
    • 10:50 12:20
      Higgs Statistics 1h 30m
      The statistical methods used to discover the Higgs, to set limits on its mass, to test the Spin hypothesis and to measure its couplings.
      Speaker: Eilam (EX) Gross (Weizman)
      Slides
    • 12:20 12:25
      Group photo shoot 5m The outside stairs by the entrance door of Kavli IPMU building.

      The outside stairs by the entrance door of Kavli IPMU building.

    • 12:25 13:30
      Lunch 1h 5m
    • 13:30 15:00
      Long term prospects for the LHC 1h 30m
      Speaker: Jordan (EX) Nash (Imperial College London ICL)
      Slides
    • 15:00 15:30
      Break 30m
    • 15:30 17:45
      Poster session 2h 15m Seminar room B

      Seminar room B

    • 18:00 20:00
      Banquet 2h Cafeteria

      Cafeteria

    • 09:00 10:30
      High Luminosity LHC Upgrade 1h 30m
      Speaker: Tatsushi (A) Nakamoto (KEK)
      Slides
    • 10:30 10:50
      Break 20m
    • 10:50 12:20
      The Higgs Boson 1h 30m
      The search for the Higgs, it's discovery and measurement of its properties with the Atlas detector at the LHC.
      Speaker: Eilam (EX) Gross (Weizman)
      Slides
    • 12:20 13:30
      Lunch 1h 10m
    • 13:30 15:00
      Discussion 1h 30m
    • 15:00 15:30
      Break 30m
    • 15:30 17:00
      Effective Lagrangian for the Higgs 1h 30m
      I will discuss a general effective theory framework to describe the Higgs couplings to the rest of the standard model. Then I will present the up-to-date constraints on the parameters of the effective lagrangian derived from the existing Higgs data and from electroweak precision tests.
      Speaker: Adam Falkowski (Université de Paris-Sud)
      Slides