Rice University logo
 
Top blue bar image
Home of the Particle and Nuclear Physics groups at Rice University
 

RHIC featured at NPR’s Science Friday: How to Make Quark Soup

October 20th, 2014 by geurts

Watch at this direct link to PRI’s video. Or, go to PRI’s Science Friday website at  How to Make Quark Soup and find audio and video links.

 

 



NPP Seminar by Kuver Sinha (Syracuse Univ.)

October 20th, 2014 by geurts

Date: Wednesday October 29, 2014 at noon
Location: 227 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title: Cosmology as a Probe of Physics Beyond the Standard Model in 2014
Speaker:Kuver Sinha (Syracuse Univ.)
Abstract: Cosmological observations provide clear evidence that the Universe is made up mainly of dark matter and dark energy, neither of which have an explanation within the Standard Model of particle physics. Moreover, inflation, our best theory for primordial structure formation and the vastness of the universe, remains elusive from the point of view of a microscopic theory. Combined with the mysterious hierarchical distance between the Electroweak scale and the Planck scale, and the question of understanding the Higgs mass, it is clear that the cosmic and energy frontiers are both crying out for new physics. Will Nature be kind enough to make new physics accessible to our experiments? I will talk about my latest research, located at the confluence of these areas, and address some of these fundamental questions in the light of new experimental anomalies seen in both frontiers this year.


NPP Seminar by Mark Strikman (PSU)

October 15th, 2014 by geurts

Date: Tuesday  October 21, 2014 at noon
Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title: Transverse Geometry of the Hard and Soft pp and pA Collisions at the LHC
Speaker: Mark Strikman (PSU)

Abstract: Decades of studies of hard QCD phenomena provided a precision picture of the distribution of proton constituents (quarks and gluons) over the fraction of energy, x, which they carry in fast nucleons. More recently, studies of the hard exclusive processes provided first information about three dimensional structure of fast nucleons – the x-dependent impact parameter single parton distributions in the nucleon and led to the two scale geometric picture of the proton – proton interactions at the LHC. I will review how this picture explains a number of regularities of hadron production observed at the LHC, and reveals presence of the parton – parton correlations in nucleons. I will also present evidence for existence of significant fluctuations of gluon strength in nucleons as well as fluctuations of the overall strength of the interactions and discuss implications for pp and pA collisions.


RHIC featured on the Science Channel

August 15th, 2014 by geurts

The Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider (RHIC) featured in “How The Universe Works” on the Science Channel. With STAR’s Mike Lisa (OSU) explaining RHIC’s role in exploring the building blocks of matter.

see BNL Newsroom feature



Wei Li selected for the 2014 DOE Early Career Award

May 7th, 2014 by geurts

Congratulations to Wei Li who has been selected as one of the recipients of the 2014 DOE Early Career Awards!

This award supports the development of individual research programs of outstanding scientists early in their careers and stimulates research careers in the disciplines supported by the DOE Office of Science. Out of almost 750 proposals, 35 have been selected. For more information, go to http://science.energy.gov/early-career

 



NPP Seminar by Carlos Ordonez (UH)

April 25th, 2014 by geurts

Date: Thursday Wednesday May 1, 2014 at 1h30pm
Location: 200 Brockman Hall for Physics, Rice University

Title:  A pedagogical introduction to anomalies in conformal quantum mechanics and some potential applications in cold-atom and graphene systems
Speaker: Carlos Ordonez (UH)
Abstract: The breaking of a classical symmetry at the quantum level as a consequence of the quantization procedure is known as an anomaly (quantum). Anomalies in quantum field theory (chiral, gauge) have a long history and their impact in particle and gravitational physics (including strings) is well known.  Anomalies in quantum mechanics (non-relativistic systems) also exist, although they are not as well-known.  I will describe how these anomalies arise in systems described by conformal quantum mechanics (CQM), following the work of my group at UH. I will also mention some recent applications to cold atoms and possible applications to graphene physics.  The latter is very recent.  The first half of the talk will be dedicated to showing in detail how the anomalies arise in the concrete case of a two-dimensional delta function potential. There rest of the talk will emphasize the (possible) applications.  The emphasis of the talk will be on the conceptual aspects and it will be pedagogical in nature. My hope is that people in the audience (from high-energy, condensed-matter and AMO-physics backgrounds) will find this topic interesting and of potential use in their research.


NPP Seminar by Regina Demina (Rochester)

April 10th, 2014 by geurts

Date: Wednesday April 16, 2014 at noon
Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title:  Asymmetry in production of top quarks
Speaker: Regina Demina (Rochester)
Abstract: Results from the Tevatron experiments suggest that there is a forward-backward asymmetry in the production of the top and antitop quarks, namely the top quark is emitted preferentially in the direction of the initial proton. I will review the latest results on the asymmetry measurement from the Tevatron. Kinematic dependencies of these asymmetries are discussed. I will also comment on the consistency of the Tevatron and LHC data.


NPP Seminar by Peter Onyisi (UT Austin)

April 2nd, 2014 by geurts

Date: Tuesday  April 8, 2014 at noon
Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title: Latest Top-Higgs Coupling Results from ATLAS
Speaker: Peter Onyisi (UT Austin)
Abstract: The Yukawa coupling of the Higgs boson to the top quark is one of the fundamental parameters of the Standard Model, and its size probes whether the electroweak symmetry breaking mechanism and the fermion mass generation mechanism are the same.  Indirect measurements of this quantity – determined from Higgs production via top quark loops – are available, but suffer from ambiguity with possible new physics in the loop diagrams.  In contrast we can constrain the Yukawa coupling with tree diagrams using the cross-section of associated production of the Higgs boson with a top quark pair (ttH).  I will discuss the latest ATLAS seaches for ttH production in the H -> gamma gamma and H -> bb decays and some projections for the future.


The Impact of the US on CMS

March 20th, 2014 by geurts

A couple of videos that advertise the role of the US in CMS  h/t Don Lincoln (FNAL)

 



NPP Seminar by Kevin Dusling (PRL)

March 12th, 2014 by geurts

Date: Tuesday  March 18, 2014 at noon
Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title: Imaging the proton with multi-particle correlations at the LHC
Speaker: Kevin Dusling (PRL)
Abstract: The Large Hadron Collider at CERN is able to study the structure of the proton at shorter time scales and higher resolution then ever before. The first year of operation brought an entirely unexpected discovery; in proton-proton collisions a peculiar correlation between particles traveling in opposite directions was uncovered in extremely rare events. More recently, a similar correlation was observed in high multiplicity proton-lead collisions. We discuss the implications of these measurements on our understanding of the proton at high energies.