Summer Institute 2019: Flavour anomalies in B decays, light dark matter from hidden sectors and lepton dipole moments

Europe/Rome
INFN-LNF, Aula Salvini

INFN-LNF, Aula Salvini

Enrico Nardi (LNF)
Description
Aim of the meeting:
This informal meeting is intended for extensive discussions on hot topics in particle physics phenomenology, as the long standing issue of the flavour anomalies in B decays, and of the nature of dark matter which might be possibly related to a hidden sector containing light states. 
 
 
 
Seminars:
 
 
Monday 24/06 11:00am        Divya Sachdeva (Delhi Univ.) 
"Model independent analysis of MeV scale dark matter"
 
 
 
Monday 24/06 2:30pm         Marco Fedele  (Barcellona Univ.) 
"New Physics in 𝑏→𝑠ℓ+ℓ−  confronts new data on Lepton Universality"
 
 
Tuesday 25/06 11:00am:      Luc Darme' (Nat. Centre Nuclear Res., Warsaw)
"Searching for long-lived particles from light dark sectors
 
 

Tuesday 25/06 14:30am:     Giovanni Marco Pruna  (Rome3 U.)
"Effective field theories for lepton dipole moments: updates and applications

 

                              
Registration
Summer Institute 2019: Flavour anomalies in B decays and light dark matter from hidden sectors
Participants
  • Anish Ghoshal
  • Divya Sachdeva
  • Enrico Nardi
  • Fredrik Bjorkeroth
  • Gennaro Corcella
  • Giovanni Marco Pruna
  • Luc DARME
  • Marco Fedele
  • Matthew Kirk
    • 11:00 12:00
      Model independent analysis of MeV scale dark matter 1h

      Recent results from several direct detection experiments have imposed severe constraints on the multi-GeV mass window for various dark mat- ter(DM) models. However, many of these experiments are not sensitive
      to MeV scale DM as the corresponding recoil energies are much below the detector thresholds. In this regard, we reexamined the light scalar DM in a model-independent approach in our recent work. For such a DM, it should not be assumed that it annihilates into a pair of free quarks. Instead, it becomes necessary to determine the effective couplings of DM to hadrons and calculate the annihilation rate with hadrons in final states. In this talk, I will discuss the methodology for determining this effective coupling along with various constraints coming from cosmological and astrophysical observations.

      Speaker: Divya Sachdeva (University Delhi)
    • 14:30 15:30
      Update on b to s anomalies after Moriond 2019 1h

      Flavour Changing Neutral Currents (FCNC) are an excellent probe for the search of New Physics. Therefore, LHCb has put a particular care in the study of B decays mediated by FCNC starting from Run I and with more data being presently acquired during Run II. Tensions between present data and Standard Model predictions have been found in some of these channels, hinting at a possible violation of Lepton Flavour Universality. I will review the status of these tensions after the latest result presented at Moriond 2019, assessing with particular care the theoretical cleanness of the observables displaying such tensions. Then, I'll discuss the possible explanations for such a pattern of anomalies both within and beyond the Standard Model, employing a model independent EFT framework. Finally, I'll review a possible loop model capable to address such anomalies.

      Speaker: Dr Marco Fedele (ICCUB)
    • 11:00 12:00
      Searching for long-lived particles from light dark sectors 1h

      Dark matter-motivated light dark sectors often feature long-lived hidden sector states. Their presence offers bright detection prospects at fixed target experiments and colliders and may lead to strong astrophysical bounds. We will illustrate this point by exploring explicitly a typical simple fermion light dark matter setup, then expanding to limits on an effective theory of light dark sectors. In particular, we will investigate in detail the semi-visible three-body decays of dark sector states and show that it is a key element of the accelerator phenomenology of such models.

      Speaker: Luc Darme' (Nat. Centre Nuclear Research, Warsaw)
    • 14:30 15:30
      Effective field theories for lepton dipole moments: updates and applications 1h

      The status of the research on effective field theories for lepton dipole moments will be reviewed. Standard Model Effective Field Theories (SMEFTs) at high and low energies will be reviewed in light of current and future bounds from experiments on lepton flavour violation. In addition, some modern techniques for multi-loop computations in SMEFTs will be reviewed and applications to ultra-violet complete theories will be shown

      Speaker: Giovanni Marco Pruna (Roma 3)