Autumn Institute - Challenges in collider physics

Europe/Rome
Aula Seminari (Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati (Rome), Italy)

Aula Seminari

Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati (Rome), Italy

Via E.Fermi 40 I-00044 Frascati (RM)
Gennaro Corcella (LNF)
Description
Aim of the workshop:
This meeting aims at gathering theorists and experimentalists working in the Rome area in the field of collider physics. In an informal environment, we shall discuss several issues, which are relevant at present (LHC) and future accelerators. In particolar, we shall debate the phenomenology of dark photons, parton distribution functions, the state of the art of higher order QCD corrections as well as top-quark phenomenology, paying special attention to CP violation in top decays.
Speakers:

Roberto Bonciani  (Universita' di Roma `La Sapienza')
"Planar two-loop corrections to Higgs+jet production in QCD"

Marco Bonvini  (Universita' di Roma `La Sapienza')
"Theory uncertainty from missing higher orders"  

Lucio Cerrito  (Universita' di Roma `Tor Vergata')  
"Top B physics with the ATLAS experiment"   

Marco Guzzi  (Manchester University) 
"The structure of the proton global analysis in QCD and LHC precision physics"

Barbara Mele  (INFN Roma)  
"Massless dark-photon phenomenology at colliders"   

    • 10:00 AM 11:00 AM
      Planar two-loop corrections to Higgs+jet production in QCD 1h
      We will review the calculation of the two-loop QCD amplitudes that contribute to the NLO cross section for the production of a Higgs boson with a jet (or to Higgs decay to three partons). In particular we concentrate on planar corrections, we discuss the structure of the amplitude in terms of helicity amplitudes, their expression in terms of dimensionally regularized Feynman integrals and, finally, the reduction to the master integrals and their calculation with the differential equations method. We show a class of four-point functions that show an elliptic behaviour, i.e. whose differential equation can be solved in terms of complete elliptic integrals.
      Speaker: Roberto Bonciani (ROMA1)
    • 11:00 AM 12:00 PM
      Massless dark-photon phenomenology at colliders 1h
      A prediction of recent models possibly explaining the fermion-mass hierarchy is the existence of a massless dark photon. Its interaction is restricted to a hidden sector made up of massive dark fermions (which are promising dark-matter candidates), and heavier scalar messengers connecting the SM with the dark fields. Thanks to the nondecoupling properties of the Higgs boson, exotic Higgs interactions with the invisible dark photon can show up at present and future colliders with measurable rates. Predictions for new Higgs signatures and corresponding rates are presented. A new class of FCNC’s mediating SM fermion decays into massless dark photons  are also discussed.
      Speaker: Barbara Mele (ROMA1)
      Slides
    • 12:00 PM 1:00 PM
      Top B physics with the ATLAS experiment 1h
      The violation of the combined charge conjugation (C) and parity transformation (P) of particles and antiparticles implies that the laws of physics are not the same for matter and antimatter. Observations of CP violation are not sufficient to explain the matter–antimatter asymmetry in the universe, and it is believed that a source of new physics is required. The abundance of top quarks at the Large Hadron Collider are usually exploited to explore top properties or search for heavy resonances, however top decay products also provide a unique window for measurements of CP violation in b- and c-quarks. Utilising semileptonic b-decays, CP sensitive asymmetries may be built from lepton-pairs in the l+jets channel. The first analysis to use this technique is presented using data collected by the ATLAS detector.
      Speaker: Lucio Cerrito (ROMA2)
    • 1:00 PM 2:30 PM
      Lunch at LNF Canteen 1h 30m
    • 2:30 PM 3:30 PM
      The Structure of the proton: global analyses in QCD and LHC precision physics 1h
      Parton distribution functions (PDFs) provide detailed information about the nonperturbative structure of the proton and are the core input for QCD theory predictions and simulations for the Large Hadron Collider. Modern PDFs are determined from large-scale analyses of high-energy hadronic data and account for a rich variety of experimental and theoretical factors. I will review the current status of new generation of PDFs, in particular the CT14 PDFs, by the Coordinated Theoretical-Experimental project on QCD (CTEQ). PDF implications for predictions of importance for LHC processes, (Higgs boson, top-quark pair production, etc.) will also be discussed.
      Speaker: Dr Marco Guzzi (University of Manchester)
    • 3:30 PM 4:30 PM
      Theory uncertainty from missing higher orders 1h
      In the precision era of the LHC, it is of utmost importance having a good control on the theoretical uncertainties. With particular attention to the inclusive Higgs cross section in gluon fusion, where scale variation notoriously underestimates the theory error, I will discuss alternative options, trying to provide a statistical interpretation.
      Speaker: Marco Bonvini