High energy physics theory seminar: Alexander J. Millar

Bloomberg 462

TITLE: Revisiting the axion-electron coupling  ABSTRACT: In the presence of axion dark matter, fermion spins experience an “axion wind” torque and an “axioelectric” force. We investigate new experimental probes of these effects and find that magnetized analogs of multilayer dielectric haloscopes can explore orders of magnitude of new parameter space for the axion-electron coupling. We also […]

Condensed Matter & Biological Physics Seminar: Debanjan Chowdhury (Cornell University)

Bloomberg 462

Title: The unreasonable effectiveness of optical sum-rules in quantum many-body physics   Abstract: Inspired by the discovery of a variety of correlated insulators in the moire universe, controlled by interactions projected to a set of isolated bands with a narrow bandwidth, we examine here a variety of partial optical sum-rules restricted to low-energies. Unlike standard […]

Experimental Particle Physics Seminar: Samantha Pagan (Yale University)

Bloomberg 475

TITLE: Investigating the Nature of Neutrinos and Dark Matter at the KeV Scale in CUORE ABSTRACT: The extremely low backgrounds, excellent energy resolution, and high exposure achieved by CUORE, the Cryogenic Underground Observatory for Rare Events, enables multiple rare-events searches that investigate unanswered questions in physics. First, through studying neutrinoless double beta decay (OuBB) and […]

High energy physics theory seminar: Bob Holdom

Bloomberg 462

TITLE: Ghosts on the way to a QFT for gravity ABSTRACT: Ghosts have been a stumbling block in the development of a UV complete quantum field theory for gravity. We discuss how difficulties associated with ghosts are overcome in the context of 0+1d QFT. Obtaining a probability interpretation is the key issue, and for this […]

Condensed Matter & Biological Physics Seminar: Alan Tennant (University of Tennessee, Knoxville)

Bloomberg 462

TITLE: Is an information viewpoint useful in condensed matter experiment? ABSTRACT: Some of the most significant developments in science concern information, from artificial intelligence to quantum computation and communications. In this regard there has long been a close connection between statistical mechanics and information theory. An interesting question then is whether we can use new […]

Experimental particle physics seminar: (i) Jeff Davis (JHU), (ii) Nick Pinto (JHU)

Bloomberg 475

Title: (i) Search for Higgs+photon production at LHC and constraints on light quark Yukawa couplings; (ii) Sensitivity to CP violation in the Higgs-strahlung process at a Future Circular Collider. Abstract: (i) A search for Higgs+photon production is performed with the LHC data for the first time. The analysis focuses on the topology of a boosted Higgs […]

Department-wide Colloquium: Ray Jayawardhana (JHU)

Bloomberg 272 - Schafler Auditorium

TITLE: Exploring Planetary-Mass Brown Dwarfs in Young Star Clusters with JWST ABSTRACT: The discovery and characterization of free-floating planetary-mass objects (FFPMOs) is fundamental to our understanding of star and planet formation. The James Webb Space Telescope affords the opportunity to search for objects down to the opacity limit for fragmentation in nearby star-forming regions. We […]

Condensed Matter & Biological Physics Seminar: Jakub Kołacz (Naval Research Laboratory)

Bloomberg 462

TITLE: Liquid Crystals as Cores and Claddings ABSTRACT: Liquid crystals (LCs) refer to structured mesophases that retain the ability to flow while exhibiting broken symmetries. One simple LC is the nematic phase (NLC), which is comprised of rod-shaped molecules that co-orient with a D∞h symmetry. Their anisotropic properties can be modeled locally using a prolate […]

Experimental particle physics seminar: Philip Harris (MIT)

Bloomberg 475

Title: Around the forces in 80 microseconds Abstract: With large amounts of data, a Higgs boson discovery, and world-leading constraints on an enormous amount of parameters and interactions, the Large Hadron Collider has been a phenomenal tool. However, it is going through a mid-life crisis. More data, more Higgs bosons, and more constraints are not bringing the same […]

Department-wide colloquium: Alessandra Corsi (JHU)

Bloomberg 272 - Schafler Auditorium

TITLE: Multi-messenger observations of gravitational waves sources: from LIGO to Cosmic Explorer, ABSTRACT: The direct detection of gravitational waves is revolutionizing our view of the universe and has opened a new era in the field of time-domain multi-messenger astronomy. In this talk, I will summarize key open questions on the astrophysics of stellar-mass compact objects […]