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From: Shinya KANEMURA
Date: Wed, 10 Feb 2021 09:09:32 +0900
To: sg-l__AT__yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp
Subject: [Sg-l:5598] Unveiling hidden Physics Beyond the Standard Model at the LHC

素粒子論グループの皆様、

依頼により、3月1-3日に催されるオンラインのワークショップ
"Unveiling hidden Physics Beyond the Standard Model at the LHC"
の案内をお送りいたします。

兼村晋哉
大阪大学大学院理学研究科

Shinya Kanemura
Department of Physics, Osaka University
Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, JAPAN
E-mail: kanemu__AT__het.phys.sci.osaka-u.ac.jp
TEL: +81-6-6850-5340 (Secretary -5343)

=====================================================


Dear Colleague,

We cordially invite you to attend the workshop  “Unveiling hidden Physics
Beyond the Standard Model at the LHC”. The workshop will take place March
1-3, 2021 and will comprise three sessions from 1.30 pm to 5 PM Geneva
time. The workshop will be virtual and will include sessions with talks and
discussions. A panel discussion will conclude the workshop.

The workshop centres on the fact that model dependent LHC searches have not
provided evidence of new resonances, indicating that these could be driven
by more subtle topologies, hidden by large backgrounds. Phenomenologists
have found many classes of New Physics that are difficult to test with
current LHC analyses. In this light it is important to keep investigating
what theories could be further explored. In addition we need to elaborate
on methodologies that display less model dependencies. The use of Machine
Learning may play a critical role here.

The opportunity to test a wider range of New Physics than ever before
opened up very recently: CERN announced on the 11th of December 2020 a new
open data policy, which will "make scientific research more accessible to
the community”:

https://home.cern/news/press-release/knowledge-sharing/cern-announces-new-open-data-policy-support-open-science

CERN announces new open data policy in support of open science | CERN

home.cern
Geneva, 11 December 2020. The four main LHC collaborations (ALICE, ATLAS,
CMS and LHCb) have unanimously endorsed a new open data policy for
scientific experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which was
presented to the CERN Council today.  The policy commits to publicly
releasing so-called level 3 scientific data, the type required to make
scientific studies, collected by the LHC experiments. Data will start to be
released approximately five years after collection, and the aim is for the
full dataset to be publicly available by the close of the experiment
concerned. The policy addresses the growing movement of open science, which
aims to make scientific research more reproducible, accessible, and
collaborative. The level 3 data released can contribute to scientific
research in particle physics, as well as research in the field of
scientific computing, for example to improve reconstruction or analysis
methods based on machine learning techniques, an approach that requ


This is an excellent testing ground for new search strategies.

Please proceed to register at:

https://indico.tlabs.ac.za/event/100/

Unveiling hidden Physics Beyond the Standard Model at the LHC (1-3 March
2021): Overview · iThemba Labs Conferencing (Indico)

indico.tlabs.ac.za
Following the discovery of an SM-like Higgs boson at the Large Hadron
Collider the chief focus is on the observation of new phenomena beyond the
Standard Model. Such observations would provide clear guiding principles
for the future of the entire field that are, given the present discussions
on future colliders all over the world, more crucial than ever before. So
far, inclusive and model dependent searches have not provided evidence of
new resonances, indicating that these could be driven...


Looking forward to your participation


Stefan Antusch (University of Basel)
Nima Arkani-Hamed (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton)
Nicole Bell (University of Melbourne)
Eduard Boos (Moscow State University)
Kingman Cheung (National Tsing Hua University)
Andreas Crivellin (Paul Scherrer Institute)
Bhupal Dev (Washington University in St. Louis)
Belen Gavela (Autonomous University of Madrid)
Rohini Godbole (Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore)
Tao Han (University of Pittsburgh)
Rabindra Mohapatra (University of Maryland)
Biswarup Mukhopadhyaya (IISER Kolkata)
Tilman Plehn (Heidelberg University)
Yifang Wang (Institute of High Energy Physics, Beijing)
Oliver Fischer (University of Liverpool), co-chair
Bruce Mellado (University of the Witwatersrand and iThemba LABS), co-chair