Conferences and Workshops 2023
RADCOR 2023
May 28 - June 02 2023
16th International Symposium on Radiative Corrections: Applications of Quantum Field Theory to Phenomenology . This conference is the 16th in the series of biennial RADCOR conferences on radiative corrections. It is devoted to the applications of quantum field theory to particle physics phenomenology. Subjects will include precision calculations for colliders; progress in higher-loop and higher-multiplicity calculations in the Standard Model; cross sections for new physics; interpretations of experimental data; new techniques for calculations; advances in computer-algebra methods; new theoretical developments. The conference will be held in Crieff, an attractive old market town in the heart of Perthshire in central Scotland.
Contributions from TTK:
Daniel Stremmer: ttjj - NLO QCD corrections to top quark pair production and decays at the LHC
Michal Czakon: Jet and Photon Physics at high perturbative orders in QCD
11th Large Hadron Collider Physics Conference (LHCP 2023)
May 22-26 2023
The main goal of the conference is to provide intense and lively discussions between experimenters and theorists in such research areas as the Standard Model Physics and Beyond, the Higgs Boson Physics, Heavy Quark Physics and Heavy Ion Physics, as well as to share recent progress in the high luminosity upgrades and future collider developments. The 11th edition of the LHCP Conference is hosted by the Faculty of Physics and Institute of Physics of the University of Belgrade, in Belgrade, Serbia.
Contributions from TTK:
Robert Harlander: Precision Higgs Physics
Spring meeting of the DPG
March 20-24 2023
The DPG Spring Meeting of the Matter and Cosmos Section (SMuK) takes place on the campus of the Technical University Dresden. It covers
- Extraterrestrial Physics
- Gravitation and Relativity
- Hadronic and Nuclear Physics
- Plasma Physics
- Radiation and Medical Physics
- Particle Physics
- Theoretical and Mathematical Physics
Contributions from TTK:
Hanno Jacobs: Unstable cosmic-ray nuclei constrain low-diffusion zones in the disk
Marie Hein: Using Density Estimation for Resonance Searches at the LHC
Jakob W. Linder: Projecting composite operators onto a unique basis
Philipp Mertsch: Galactic cosmic rays: What have we learned and what's next?
Vo Hong Minh Phan: From test particle simulations to cosmic-ray transport
Georg Schwefer: Diffuse Emission of Galactic High-Energy Neutrinos from a Global Fit of Cosmic Rays
Laurin Söding: Bayesian Inference of the 3D Galactic HI-Gas Density
Anton Stall: Stochastic modelling of cosmic ray sources for diffuse high-energy neutrinos
Malgorzata Worek: QCD at the LHC -- Precision for Discoveries
The Gradient Flow in QCD and other Strongly Coupled Field Theories
March 20-24 2023
The gradient flow field transformation is a continuous smoothing transformation that removes ultraviolet fluctuations. It can serve as a tool to renormalize quantum field theories, allowing numerical studies of strongly coupled systems. The flow has been used extensively in lattice gauge theory calculations, both in QCD and in beyond the standard model settings for applications including scale setting, the determination of the running coupling constant and the corresponding renormalization group beta function, and the topological structure of the vacuum. Many of the newly emerging applications of the gradient flow depend on the perturbative connection of the gradient flow and continuum renormalization schemes, requiring difficult perturbative calculations that match the non-perturbative lattice methods. This workshop will bring together experts in lattice and perturbative QCD to discuss recent progress in the application of the gradient flow, develop common ideas, identify needs and possibilities for the gradient flow and to spark collaborative efforts.
Contributions from TTK:
Janosch Borgulat: The Chromomagnetic Dipole Operator in the Gradient Flow
Robert Harlander: Selected aspects of the gradient flow in perturbation theory
Annual meeting of the CRC P3H
March 01-02 2023
The annual meeting of our CRC TRR 257 “Particle Physics Phenomenology after the Higgs Discovery'' in collaboration with KIT, University of Siegen, and University of Heidelberg takes place here in Aachen.