Workshop on Higgs and Cosmology connection: Yonsei-APCTP-France-Korea Star collaboration project

Asia/Seoul
Science Hall #327

Science Hall #327

Seong Chan Park (Yonsei University)
Description

Workshop on Higgs and Cosmology connection: Yonsei-APCTP-France-Korea Star collaboration project

- Place: Yonsei University, Science Hall #327

- Date: 12/11 - 12/17 (Sun~Sat) 

 


Invited speakers

  • Aldo Deandrea (Lyon, France)
  • Benjamin Fuks (Sorbonne, France) 

  • Donghui Jeong (Penn State Univ., USA) 

  • Yongsoo Jho (Weizmann, Israel) 

  • Jay Hyun Jo (Brookhaven National Lab., USA)
  • Sunghoon Jung (Seoul National University, Korea)

  • Jinsu Kim (Tongji Univ., China)

  • Tae Jeong Kim (CMS, Hanyang University, Korea) 

  • Taysun Kimm (Yonsei University, Korea)
  • Chan Beom Park (Chonnam Nat'l Univ., Korea) 

  • Eunil Won (Korea Univ., Korea)

  • Haibo Yu (UC Riverside, USA)

Registration
Registration
Participants
  • Adil Jueid
  • Aldo Deandrea
  • Anna Antonova
  • Benjamin Fuks
  • Chan Beom Park
  • Chang Sub Shin
  • Choong Sun Kim
  • Dhong Yeon Cheong
  • Dong-Won Jung
  • Dong-Woon Kim
  • Donghui Jeong
  • Erdenebulgan Lkhagvadorj
  • Eunil Won
  • Giacomo Cacciapaglia
  • Guk Cho
  • Haeun Jang
  • Haibo Yu
  • Haiying Cai
  • Han Gil Choi
  • Hwidong YOO
  • Jay Hyun Jo
  • Jeonghyeon Song
  • JINHEUNG KIM
  • Jinsu Kim
  • Joern Kersten
  • Jong Chul Park
  • Junghoon Joh
  • Kayoung Ban
  • Ki-Young Choi
  • Kyuyeong Hwang
  • Minseok Ryu
  • Myeonghun Park
  • Prasenjit Sanyal
  • Pyungwon Ko
  • Sang-Chul Hyun
  • Seodong Shin
  • Seong Chan Park
  • Seong Moon Yoo
  • Seoyun Jang
  • Seung J. Lee
  • Seungkyu Ha
  • Son Juhoon
  • SooJin Lee
  • Sunghoon Jung
  • Sungwon Kim
  • Tae-Geun Kim
  • Taysun Kimm
  • Thomas Flacke
  • Wanda Isnard
  • Wonsub Cho
  • Yeji Park
  • Yongsoo Jho
  • Youngjoon Kwon
  • Yun Eo
    • 17:00 19:00
      Registration 2h
    • 14:00 16:40
      Session: 1
      • 14:00
        Revealing the local cosmic web from galaxies by Deep Learning 40m

        The 80% of the matter in the Universe is in the form of dark matter that comprises the skeleton of the large-scale structure called the Cosmic Web. As the Cosmic Web dictates the motion of all matter in galaxies and inter-galactic media through gravity, knowing the distribution of dark matter is essential for studying the large-scale structure. However, the Cosmic Web's detailed structure is unknown because it is dominated by dark matter and warm-hot inter-galactic media, both of which are hard to trace. Here we show that we can reconstruct the Cosmic Web from the galaxy distribution using the convolutional-neural-network-based deep-learning algorithm. We find the mapping between the position and velocity of galaxies and the Cosmic Web using the results of the state-of-the-art cosmological galaxy simulations, Illustris-TNG. We confirm the mapping by applying it to the EAGLE simulation. Finally, using the local galaxy sample from Cosmicflows-3, we find the dark-matter map in the local Universe. We anticipate that the local dark-matter map will illuminate the studies of the nature of dark matter and the formation and evolution of the Local Group. High-resolution simulations and precise distance measurements to local galaxies will improve the accuracy of the dark-matter map.

        Speaker: Donghui Jeong
      • 14:40
        Coffee Break 20m
      • 15:00
        A new mechanism for symmetry breaking from nilmanifolds 40m
        Speaker: Aldo Deandrea
      • 15:40
        Coffee Break 20m
    • 10:00 12:00
      Session: 2
      • 10:00
        Baryonic solutions to dark matter problems in dwarf galaxies 40m

        It has been argued that the number density and matter distribution in the local dwarf galaxies pose a real challenge to the cold dark matter scenario. However, it is not yet clear how visible matter evolves and shapes the distribution of dark matter, potentially limiting the use of dwarf galaxies as a testbed. In this talk, I will give a brief overview of the well-known missing satellite and cusp-core problems in dwarf galaxies and discuss baryonic processes as a potential solution.

        Speaker: Taysun Kimm
      • 10:40
        Coffee Break 20m
      • 11:00
        Cosmology with polarized CMB: GroundBIRD telescope 40m

        The standard, a spatially-flat six-parameter model of the universe, having a cosmological constant and dark matter as dominant forms of the energy density in the universe at present, agrees remarkably well with observational data to date. Along with it, a model of rapid accelerated expansion of the very early universe predicts distinct polarized patterns in CMB. In this presentation, we discuss observational cosmology with polarized CMB through the GroundBIRD telescope.

        Speaker: Eunil Won
      • 11:40
        Coffee Break 20m
    • 14:00 16:00
      Session: 3
      • 14:00
        KCMS and some updates from the LHC 40m
        Speaker: Hwidong YOO (Yonsei University)
      • 14:40
        Coffee Break 20m
      • 15:00
        New approaches to semi-invisible tau and B decays 40m

        New particles in the MeV-GeV range produced at colliders and escaping detection can be searched for at operating B and tau factories such as Belle II. A typical search channel involves pair-produced taus (or mesons), one of which decaying to invisible particle(s), and the other providing a tag. One crucial impediment of these searches is the limited ability to reconstruct the parents' separate boosts. This is the case in the typical topology where both decay branches include invisible particles. We observe that such topology lends itself to the use of kinematic variables such as M2, designed for pairwise decays to visible plus invisible particles. Starting from this observation, we construct several kinematic quantities able to discriminate signal from background and apply them to some benchmark searches in tau and B decays.

        Speaker: Chan Beom Park
      • 15:40
        Coffee Break 20m
    • 17:00 19:00
      Conference dinner 2h
    • 10:00 12:00
      Session: 4
      • 10:00
        Composite dark matter: simplified models, non-minimality and overlooked channels 40m
        Speaker: Benjamin Fuks
      • 10:40
        Coffee Break 20m
      • 11:00
        Astrophysical Probes of Dark Matter 40m

        I will give an overview on astrophysical probes of dark matter, which seek to determine fundamental properties of dark matter through observations of galaxies. In particular, I will discuss implications of strong dark matter self-interactions on cosmic structure formation and observational tests for such a scenario.

        Speaker: Haibo Yu
      • 11:40
        Coffee Break 20m
    • 12:00 17:00
      Excursion 5h
    • 17:00 18:00
      Special Colloquium 1h Science Hall B101

      Science Hall B101

      Speaker: Donghui Jeong (Penn State University)
    • 18:30 20:30
      Banquet 2h Hyeongje Galbi

      Hyeongje Galbi

      Hyeongje Galbi, 2 Myeongmul 1-gil, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul
    • 10:00 12:00
      Session: 5
      • 10:00
        Probing sub-parsec scale matter power spectrum with diffractive lensing of gravitational waves 40m

        Gravitational waves (GW) radiated by compact binary coalescences can be diffracted by astrophysical-size objects due to long wavelength.
        This is so called diffractive lensing. The length scale of the diffraction is determined by the geometric mean of GW wave length and the effective distance to lens, and it becomes O(1 pc) assuming GW frequency ~ 1Hz and the distance to lens ~ 1 Gpc. Therefore, diffractive lensing phenomena can be used to probe cosmological structures around parsec length scales assuming proper GW sources and detectors. I'll show the prospect for probing very light dark matter (sub-) halo with this phenomena. Furthermore, I will discuss how can we constrain sub-parsec matter power spectrum even when we can not detect single diffractive lensing event.

        Speaker: Han Gil Choi
      • 10:40
        Coffee Break 20m
      • 11:00
        Searching for nu-physics: Overview of Experimental Neutrino Physics 40m

        Neutrinos are the most elusive fundamental constituents of matter. And yet these particles may hold the keys to exotic new phenomena, which transcend our Standard Model of particle physics. In the last several decades neutrino experiments have given us a consistent picture of neutrino mass and mixing among three neutrino flavors. However, fundamental questions about the nature of the neutrino and matter itself remain unanswered. In order to probe these questions, various neutrino experiments with different objectives are currently under operation or being planned. In this talk, I will give an overview of the status and recent progress of the experimental neutrino physics.

        Speaker: Jay Hyun Jo
      • 11:40
        Coffee Break 20m
    • 14:00 17:20
      Session: 6
      • 14:00
        PBHs and GWs from a Supersymmetric Higgs Inflation (online) 30m

        I discuss the possibility of curvature perturbation enhancement in a supersymmetric version of the nonminimally-coupled Higgs inflation model. The large curvature perturbation not only leads to the formation of primordial black holes, but it also sources gravitational waves. Focusing on the two-field case, I present the parameter region where the produced primordial black holes may account for the whole dark matter abundance today. Finally, the detectability of the gravitational waves is discussed. The talk is based on 2209.15343.

        Speaker: Jinsu Kim
      • 14:30
        Lepton-flavor-violating light new physics search at rare muon decays (online) 30m

        We study the sensitivity of the existing MEG data to lepton flavor violating axion-like particles produced through μ→eaγ and estimate the discovery potential for the upcoming MEG II experiment in this channel. The MEG II signal efficiency can be improved significantly if a new trigger can be implemented in a dedicated run with a reduced beam intensity. This search would establish the world leading measurement in this channel with only 1 month of data taking.

        Speaker: Yongsoo Jho
      • 15:00
        Lepton portal dark matter at future electron-positron and muon colliders 30m

        In this talk, I discuss the phenomenology of a minimal lepton portal dark matter at high-energy electron-positron and muon colliders. The model consists of two extra gauge singlets: a charged scalar singlet and a right-handed Majorana fermion. The latter plays the role of a dark-matter candidate. After discussing the impact of all the existing theoretical and experimental constraints on the model parameter space, I illustrate the phenomenological implications at future colliders.

        Speaker: Adil Jueid
      • 15:30
        Coffee Break 30m
      • 16:00
        Tri-Higgs to distinguish the high- and low-cutoff scales 40m
        Speaker: Jeonghyeon Song
    • 10:00 12:00
      Session: 7
      • 10:00
        Primordial Black Holes: New Particle Factories! (online) 40m
        Speaker: Jong-Chul Park
      • 10:40
        Coffee Break 20m
      • 11:00
        Higgstrahlung, dark photons, and invisible particles at Belle & Belle II 40m

        In this talk, we present recent studies of semi-invisible final states of various processes in the Belle and Belle II experiments. In particular, we cover the following results: lepto-philic Z' decays to invisible final states and dark photon search in the dark-Higgsstrahlung process, both in the e+ e- continuum, search for invisible baryon-like dark matter particle in the B-mesogenesis scheme, search for invisible particle in tau decays, and search for heavy neutral lepton in tau decays.

        Speaker: Prof. Youngjoon Kwon (Yonsei University)
      • 11:40
        Coffee Break 20m
    • 14:00 16:00
      Session: Round Table on BSM
      Convener: Seong Chan Park & P. Ko
      • 14:00
        Round Table on BSM 30m
        Speaker: Aldo Deandrea (Lyon, France) Benjamin Fuks (Sorbonne, France) Donghui Jeong (Penn State Univ., USA) Yongsoo Jho (Weizmann, Israel) Jay Hyun Jo (Brookhaven National Lab., USA) Sunghoon Jung (Seoul National University, Korea) Jinsu Kim (Tongji Univ., China) Tae Jeong Kim (CMS, Hanyang University, Korea) Taysun Kimm (Yonsei University, Korea) Chan Beom Park (Chonnam Nat'l Univ., Korea) Eunil Won (Korea Univ., Korea) Haibo Yu (UC Riverside, USA)
    • 10:00 12:00
      Session: Collaboration Meeting