Particle Pheno Seminar

This is our bi-weekly seminar on particle physics at the intersection of theory and experiment. It takes place on Wednesdays from 14:00 - 15:00 in the Hilbert room, HG 02.802.
We discuss topics related to our research in a relaxed setting, with lots of time for discussion. If you would like to give a talk, please contact me: susanne.westhoff@ru.nl.

2023-2024: Semester 2 - KW4

17 April 2024: David Venhoek (RU)
Acceleration and Decay: A road to measuring the Unruh effect?

I will discuss the use of Unruh detectors, a very simple theoretical model for particle detectors, as a simplified model for the decay of radioactive nuclei. Through this model, the effects of acceleration on the lifetime of unstable nuclei can be calculated. This turns out to give a non-trivial dependence between acceleration and lifetime. This acceleration-dependent decay width could potentially be used as an avenue for experimental verification of the Unruh effect, though there remain some open questions that will need to be answered to make the model better match reality.

8 May 2024: Lukas Graf (Nikhef)
22 May 2024: Tina Pollmann (Nikhef)
5 June 2024: TBA

Past seminars

2023-2024: Semester 2 - KW3

6 February 2024: Juraj Klaric (Nikhef)
Non-perturbative production of fermionic dark matter from fast preheating

In this talk we will discuss non-perturbative production of fermionic dark matter in the early universe, during the transition between inflation and radiation domination known as (p)-reheating. Specifically, I will focus on the gravitational production mechanism accompanied by the coupling of fermions to the background inflaton field. The latter leads to the variation of effective fermion mass during preheating and makes the resulting spectrum and abundance sensitive to its parameters. Assuming fast preheating that completes in less than the inflationary Hubble time and no oscillations of the inflaton field after inflation, we find an abundant production of particles with energies ranging from the inflationary Hubble rate to the inverse duration of preheating. The produced fermions can account for all observed dark matter in a broad range of parameters. As an application, we discuss the non-perturbative production of heavy Majorana neutrinos in the model of Palatini Higgs inflation.

20 February 2024: Rahul Balasubramanian (Nikhef)
Effectively going beyond the Standard Model with the ATLAS Experiment

The Higgs boson discovery in 2012 during the Run-I of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) kickstarted a rich exploration of fundamental physics. Ten years later and with five times more data, the LHC Run-2 has enabled us to study this central constituent of the Standard Model (SM) in great detail. The large dataset enables us to take a generic approach to uncover signatures beyond the SM physics. The Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT) allows us to look for all possible new interactions that are too heavy to be directly produced at the LHC. I will present the latest Higgs boson measurements from the ATLAS experiment and its role in constraining the SMEFT parameter space. I will also discuss a global SMEFT interpretation within the ATLAS experiment looking at the electroweak and the Higgs sector. These results demonstrate that a precision era at the high-energy frontier of particle physics is genuinely underway.

12 March 2024: Edwin Chow (RU)
D meson measurement and prospect of LFV tau decay with the ATLAS detector

Measurement of D meson production is one of the most fundamental and important measurements in heavy flavour physics. The production of D meson is a crucial background in searches for new physics phenomena, and the measurement of D meson production cross section provides a direct constraint on perturbative quantum chromodynamics (QCD). On the other hand, such measurements are in particular important for searches for new physics appearing in heavy flavour decays such as lepton flavour violating tau decays at the LHC, which uses the D meson as a source of tau. In this seminar, the current analysis performed using the ATLAS detector will be presented; the prospect in the HL-LHC will also be discussed.

19 March 2024: Jaco ter Hoeve (VU)
Global SMEFT interpretations at the LHC and future colliders

In the absence of any clear signs of new physics, the Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT) provides a model independent picture by combining the largest possible datasets at the LHC and beyond with state-of-the-art theory predictions parameterized in terms of Wilson coefficients. In this talk, I will present recent work in this direction, focusing especially on the impact of the FCC-ee and HL-LHC on the combined top, Higgs and EW sectors. I will also demonstrate how Machine Learning (ML) assisted optimal observables help to increase our sensitivity to new physics. Finally, I will briefly cover the automatized matching of UV models and its related bounds as obtained from a global fit.

2023-2024: Semester 1 - KW2

7 November 2023: Thijs van Rossum (RU)
Solving the Hubble tension with a curvature dependent dark energy
5 December 2023: Rohini Godbole (IISc Bangalore)
Status of the Light neutralino Dark Matter in the PMSSM

We have explored the parameter space for the phenomenological minimal supersymmetric standard model (PMSSM) with specific focus on the region with a light neutralino dark matter (with mass less than half the mass of the Higgs), which is consistent with current collider and astrophysical constraints. We show that the latest results from the LHC searches for sparticles and direct detection constraints from XENON and LUX-ZEPLIN , basically rule out all the region for positive sign of the Higgsino mass parameter mu whereas for the negative sign only a very narrow region with light electro-weakinos is allowed. We further show that it should be possible to explore this region conclusively in the Run-3 of the LHC. We have also studied the impact of a possible light stau on our results. Time permitting I shall make some preliminary statements about the next to minimal PMSSM, viz. the NMSSM as well.

12 December 2023: Jochem Kip (RU)
Delightful Diagrammatic Derivations

One of the cornerstones of the Standard Model is the breaking of the $SU(2)_L \times U(1)_Y$ symmetry groups to $U(1)_{EM}$ via the Higgs mechanism. This mechanism, spontaneous symmetry breaking (SSB), is traditionally discussed and taught in the Lagrangian formalism. However, in this talk SSB and all its consequences will be derived in a purely diagrammatic manner without resorting to Lagrangians or Lie groups.

19 December 2023: Lydia Brenner (Nikhef)
The first results from the new FASER experiment at the LHC

FASER, an experiment at the LHC, was designed to explore the existence of light, weakly interacting particles that are generated in proton-proton collisions at the ATLAS interaction point and travel in the far-forward direction. The initial data analysis focused on two searches: the decay of dark photons into an electron-positron pair and the charged-current interaction of muon neutrinos leading to the production of muons. The outcomes of these searches, with a dataset collected during LHC Run 3 in 2022, will be presented.

2023-2024: Semester 1 - KW1

26 september 2023: Dirren van Vlijmen (RU)
Learning the phases of the CPMSSM
3 october 2023: Anh Vu Phan (RU)
Direct probes of the axion coupling to tops
10 october 2023: Miriam Lucio Martinez (Nikhef)
b -> s l+ l- measurements at LHCb

The Standard Model of particle physics (SM) is a very successful theory. However, it fails to predict several phenomena observed in the Universe, like the origin of Dark Matter or the matter-antimatter asymmetry. Experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN look for Physics Beyond the Standard Model (BSM) that could explain these. One of such experiments, LHCb, searches for rare decays, that SM predicts to happen very rarely, but that are severely enhanced within several BSM theories. An example of such decays are b → sl+l- transitions, which will be the focus of my talk. I will discuss several ways in which these are studies, as well as possible BSM implications and the latest results from LHCb.

24 october 2023: Melissa van Beekveld (Nikhef)
Frontiers of parton-shower accuracy

2022-2023: Semester 2 - KW4

18 april 2023: Andrii Usachov (Nikhef)
Searching for Long-Lived particles in a heavy flavour experiment

The unique design of the LHCb detector, with its flexible trigger and precision vertex tracker, offers the possibility to search for long-lived particles with low masses and short lifetimes, in complementarity with other general-purpose detectors at the LHC. In this talk, I will discuss the searches that have been performed at LHCb and their future prospects. Although searches for low-mass LLPs decaying hadronically are particularly challenging, they can benefit from the upgrade of the LHCb’s online trigger. I will also discuss suggested phenomenological models for these searches, as well as the opportunities available during the LHC Run 3.

25 april 2023: Anh Vu Phan and Bart Steeman (RU)
Dark Photons on the Radio
9 may 2023: Marrit Schutten (RU & RUG)
Low-energy observables and fine-tuning in the MSSM
23 may 2023: Marion Missio (RU)
Measurement of H-> bb in the VH production channel with the ATLAS detector
27 june 2023: Bas Slotema (RU)
KM3NeT

2022-2023: Semester 2 - KW3

24 january 2023: Keri Vos (Maastricht)
B mesons as a Telescope for New Physics

B meson decays are important players in the search for physics beyond the Standard Model (SM) of particle physics. Linked to the antimatter-matter asymmetry in the universe, a key interest in this is also improving the understanding of the mechanism of CP violation within the SM. The large amount of data gathered by the B factories and LHCb allows testing the SM with an unprecedented precision, probing scales much higher than the reach of direct searches at the LHC. In this sense, B mesons serve as a Telescope in the search for new interactions and particles. To do so, requires precise and reliable theoretical predictions. In this talk, I will present some of the challenges and new ideas to push the theoretical precision up. Specifically, I will focus on the determination of the CKM element Vcb, Vub and how to handle non-leptonic decays.

31 january 2023: Jordy de Vries (UvA, Nikhef)
Sterile neutrinos, neutrinoless double beta decay, and effective field theory
7 february 2023: Luca Franco (RU)
Measurements of the Higgs boson properties in the diphoton decay channel with the ATLAS experiment

Since the discovery of the Higgs boson in 2012 at CERN, particle physicists have studied its properties with higher and higher precision. If any significant deviation from the Standard Model predictions is present in the experimental data, it would be an important hint of new physics. To perform these studies, we use the Higgs decay into two photons, which, despite the very low branching ratio, represents one of the cleanest channels experimentally. In this talk, I will present the most recent measurements - and their interpretation - of the Higgs production cross sections in the diphoton decay channel using proton-proton collisions recorded by the ATLAS detector at the LHC.

14 february 2023: Jorinde van de Vis (Utrecht)
Gravitational waves from first order phase transitions: Using LISA to probe particle physics

In many extensions of the Standard Model, the electroweak phase transition is first order. Such a phase transition proceeds via the formation and collision of bubbles. The bubble collisions can source a stochastic gravitational wave background signal, with characteristic frequency right in the sensitivity band of LISA. We can thus use data from gravitational wave experiments to probe physics beyond the standard model. In this talk, I will focus on the contribution to the gravitational wave signal from sound waves that get formed in the interactions between the plasma and the bubble walls. I will discuss the parameters that describe the phase transition, and argue that the speed of sound plays a significant role. To quantify the importance of this effect, I will discuss the use of effective field theories for an accurate description of the phase transition parameters. I will then present the results of a recent accurate computation of the sound speed in a representative model.

7 march 2023: Inge van Rens (RU)
Ptolemy: detecting relic neutrinos on tritium

In PTOLEMY, we aim to develop a detector for the Cosmic Neutrino Background. This is done measuring the endpoint of the electron energy spectrum of tritium decay in great detail. Current experiments are reaching the limits of energy resolution for measurements with molecular tritium, and to improve the resolution even further we want to work with atomic tritium, which we will attach to a graphene base. Currently we are testing hydrogenation of graphene samples to gain understanding of this process before using tritium. In this talk I will introduce the PTOLEMY experiment and show the contribution of our group at Radboud.

14 march 2023: Kristian Gonzalez Barman
Can Large Language Models increase scientific understanding in physics?

It is starting to become apparent that physicists can use Large Language Models (like the model underlying ChatGPT) for a variety of tasks, such as helping with coding simulations, accurately summarising papers, helping to frame experimental designs, aiding hypothesis generation, or simply asking information retrieval questions. In our project we are evaluating the capabilities and limitations of these large models in the context of how they might increase or extend scientific understanding. This includes questions such as how to conceptualise/test possible discoveries made by these models, what are good ways to use these tools to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of scientific research, and whether these models at some point might contain scientific understanding in some meaningful way such that they might be able to translate this understanding onto human scientists. We are currently creating a framework useful towards generating understanding tests, which can be used to measure the degree of scientific understanding of agents. This can serve as a benchmark for different models, but it can also serve to establish whether a human can increase their understanding after interacting with these models.

2022-2023: Semester 1

01 november 2022: Rhitaja Sengupta (IISc Bengaluru)
An overview of the various aspects of searching for long-lived particles

In our efforts to ensure that no hint of physics beyond the Standard Model (BSM) eludes us, the possibility and exotic signatures of long-lived BSM particles (LLPs) have recently attracted the attention of the HEP community. We discuss our studies exploring and addressing the various challenges faced from the very beginning at the triggering stage to dedicated search analyses. We also plan to discuss the multitude of new proposals and experiments coming up to explore the lifetime frontier.

08 november 2022: Jochem Kip (RU)
Non-Standard Neutrino Spectra From Annihilating Neutralino Dark Matter

Neutrino telescope experiments are rapidly becoming more competitive in indirect detection searches for dark matter. Neutrino signals arising from dark matter annihilations are typically assumed to originate from the hadronisation and decay of Standard Model particles. I will discuss a supersymmetric model, the BLSSMIS, that can simultaneously obey current experimental limits while still providing a potentially observable non-standard neutrino spectrum from dark matter annihilation.

15 november 2022: Jasper Jacobs (RU) - cancelled
Stau search at ATLAS

The (phenomenological) minimal supersymmetric SM predicts the existence of a supersymmetric partner particle to the tau; the supersymmetric tau particle, or stau for short. In my master’s internship I simulate the ATLAS detector at CERN to find possible signatures of stau pair production. In particular I try to make the argument for a lower luminosity LHC run to better observe or exclude the existence of staus in a certain mass range.

22 november 2022: Pieter Braat (Nikhef)
Resonant pionic dark matter

Despite ongoing experimental and theoretical efforts, the nature of DM remains elusive. Historically, most attention has been on weakly interacting particles (WIMPs), whose parameter space is increasingly constrained. This has caused the community to consider alternatives to the standard DM paradigm. One such alternative is strongly interactive particles (SIMPs). Moreover collisionless DM is in tension with cosmological observations, in the literature known as the cusp-core problem. A velocity-dependent self-interaction in the dark sector alleviates this problem. In this talk I will show that scattering via a massive resonant particle can provide the correct velocity dependence, and apply this in a dark sector consisting of dark pions and photons. I will then show the requirements for reproducing the correct relic density in a SIMP setup, as well as constraints on the kinetic mixing between the dark photon and standard model photons. I will conclude with the validity of the model.

29 november 2022: Zhongyi Zhang (RU)
Machine Learning Algorithms for Anomaly Detection

Machine Learning techniques are widely used for the analysis of collider events, especially for jet tagging (distinguishing jets originally hadronized from gluons, t-quark, b-quark, light quarks, W, etc.). It is also used for event classification between selected models (normally SM vs. one single BSM). We tried for years to extend the usage of ML techniques in a more general case, i.e. the signal could be a mix of various parameters of one single model, a mix of models, or even unknown models. Finally, we hope we can find some general methods to detect any anomalies in the real experimental data.

06 december 2022: Anh Vu Phan (RU)
Long-lived dark photons at e^+e^- colliders

The dark photon is a well-motivated new particle, arising from a renormalizable interaction with the photon field. This so-called vector portal can lead to a dark sector, which can contain candidates for dark matter. This dark photon can be long-lived for suitable values of the parameters and, therefore, escape searches using prompt signals. We propose a different strategy, namely displaced vertex search, that is viable at e^+ e^- colliders such as Belle II that can probe these long-lived particles. We found that Belle II has excellent sensitivity to such dark photon signals and can probe them in an unexplored region of the parameter space using already collected data. For those who have heard my talk before, to give you something new, I will go into more details on how I model the background for the search.