Dear all,
On Thursday Mar 7 we will have an IIHE seminar from Dr. Richard Ruiz: "Vector Boson Scattering: Status and Prospects for the Large Hadron Collider and Beyond" at 15h00 in the Sacton seminar room (G.1.03)
Note the *unusual day and time* to accommodate the speaker's travel constraints.
Abstract and short bio are below; the event's agenda can be found here: https://indico.iihe.ac.be/event/1917/
Kind regards, Steven.
-----
Abstract: The scattering of electroweak bosons at TeV-scale super colliders is a powerful mechanism that probes spin and charge configurations inaccessible to quark and gluon scattering. Electroweak vector boson scattering (VBS) processes therefore give unique insights into the Standard Model's gauge and Higgs sectors, as well as into models of new physics. In this talk, we review experimental results and ongoing theoretical developments of VBS at the Large Hadron Collider, its high luminosity upgrade, and its potential successors.
Short Bio: Richard Ruiz is a specialist in collider physics, and particularly searches for violations of lepton symmetries using electroweak boson scattering as a probe of new physics at the Large Hadron Collider. After earning his PhD at the University of Pittsburgh in 2015 on the topic "hadron collider tests of neutrino mass models", Richard moved to Durham University's Institute for Particle Physics Phenomenology in the UK. In 2018, he moved to the Universite Catholique de Louvain's Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics Phenomenology and finally joined the Institute for Nuclear Physics Polish Academy of Science (IFJ PAN) in Krakow, in 2020. He is credited in his habilitation with "influential theoretical contributions to understanding and using vector boson scattering as a probe of new physics at the LHC, its high-luminosity upgrade, and future high-energy collider experiments," which is the topic of the talk. Despite being a theorist investigating fundamental aspects of collider theory, Richard is heavily involved in experimental activities at CERN due to his work on developing user-friendly simulation tools.
*Reminder*
IIHE Seminar tomorrow, 3pm!
Note the unusual day and time. All details below.
Best, Steven.
On 26/02/2024 14:28, Steven Lowette via allusers-iihe wrote:
Dear all,
On Thursday Mar 7 we will have an IIHE seminar from Dr. Richard Ruiz: "Vector Boson Scattering: Status and Prospects for the Large Hadron Collider and Beyond" at 15h00 in the Sacton seminar room (G.1.03)
Note the *unusual day and time* to accommodate the speaker's travel constraints.
Abstract and short bio are below; the event's agenda can be found here: https://indico.iihe.ac.be/event/1917/
Kind regards, Steven.
Abstract: The scattering of electroweak bosons at TeV-scale super colliders is a powerful mechanism that probes spin and charge configurations inaccessible to quark and gluon scattering. Electroweak vector boson scattering (VBS) processes therefore give unique insights into the Standard Model's gauge and Higgs sectors, as well as into models of new physics. In this talk, we review experimental results and ongoing theoretical developments of VBS at the Large Hadron Collider, its high luminosity upgrade, and its potential successors.
Short Bio: Richard Ruiz is a specialist in collider physics, and particularly searches for violations of lepton symmetries using electroweak boson scattering as a probe of new physics at the Large Hadron Collider. After earning his PhD at the University of Pittsburgh in 2015 on the topic "hadron collider tests of neutrino mass models", Richard moved to Durham University's Institute for Particle Physics Phenomenology in the UK. In 2018, he moved to the Universite Catholique de Louvain's Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics Phenomenology and finally joined the Institute for Nuclear Physics Polish Academy of Science (IFJ PAN) in Krakow, in 2020. He is credited in his habilitation with "influential theoretical contributions to understanding and using vector boson scattering as a probe of new physics at the LHC, its high-luminosity upgrade, and future high-energy collider experiments," which is the topic of the talk. Despite being a theorist investigating fundamental aspects of collider theory, Richard is heavily involved in experimental activities at CERN due to his work on developing user-friendly simulation tools.
Last reminder before I ring the bell at 14h55.
See you in <2h, Steven.
On 6/03/2024 14:07, Steven Lowette wrote:
*Reminder*
IIHE Seminar tomorrow, 3pm!
Note the unusual day and time. All details below.
Best, Steven.
On 26/02/2024 14:28, Steven Lowette via allusers-iihe wrote:
Dear all,
On Thursday Mar 7 we will have an IIHE seminar from Dr. Richard Ruiz: "Vector Boson Scattering: Status and Prospects for the Large Hadron Collider and Beyond" at 15h00 in the Sacton seminar room (G.1.03)
Note the *unusual day and time* to accommodate the speaker's travel constraints.
Abstract and short bio are below; the event's agenda can be found here: https://indico.iihe.ac.be/event/1917/
Kind regards, Steven.
Abstract: The scattering of electroweak bosons at TeV-scale super colliders is a powerful mechanism that probes spin and charge configurations inaccessible to quark and gluon scattering. Electroweak vector boson scattering (VBS) processes therefore give unique insights into the Standard Model's gauge and Higgs sectors, as well as into models of new physics. In this talk, we review experimental results and ongoing theoretical developments of VBS at the Large Hadron Collider, its high luminosity upgrade, and its potential successors.
Short Bio: Richard Ruiz is a specialist in collider physics, and particularly searches for violations of lepton symmetries using electroweak boson scattering as a probe of new physics at the Large Hadron Collider. After earning his PhD at the University of Pittsburgh in 2015 on the topic "hadron collider tests of neutrino mass models", Richard moved to Durham University's Institute for Particle Physics Phenomenology in the UK. In 2018, he moved to the Universite Catholique de Louvain's Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics Phenomenology and finally joined the Institute for Nuclear Physics Polish Academy of Science (IFJ PAN) in Krakow, in 2020. He is credited in his habilitation with "influential theoretical contributions to understanding and using vector boson scattering as a probe of new physics at the LHC, its high-luminosity upgrade, and future high-energy collider experiments," which is the topic of the talk. Despite being a theorist investigating fundamental aspects of collider theory, Richard is heavily involved in experimental activities at CERN due to his work on developing user-friendly simulation tools.