High Precision for Hard Processes (HP2 2024)

Europe/Rome
Description

Photo courtesy of Valerio Minato (Instagram/Facebook)

The Ninth International Workshop on High Precision for Hard Processes at the LHC (HP² 2024) will be held from 10th-13th September 2024 hosted by the University of Turin and INFN, at the Campus Luigi Einaudi, Turin, Italy. 

This series of workshops is devoted to high-precision studies of hard scattering processes at hadron colliders. The main themes of these workshops are recent developments and new results in theoretical computations in quantum field theory and their applications to collider phenomenology. These topics are particularly relevant as the LHC experiments at CERN are now entering a new phase of precision measurements.

The conference will be dedicated to the memory of Stefano Catani. 

Topics:

  • Precise predictions for Standard Model and Beyond the Standard Model phenomenology
  • New mathematical techniques for amplitude calculations
  • Automated tools for multi-leg amplitudes
  • Status reports and implications of current LHC results

 

International Advisory Committee: 

 

Charalampos Anastasiou (Zürich, ETH)

Stefan Dittmaier (Freiburg, UNIFREIBURG)

Daniel de Florian (Buenos Aires, ICAS-UNSAM)

Thomas Gehrmann (Zürich, UZH)

Massimiliano Grazzini (Zürich, UZH)

Gudrun Heinrich (Karlsruhe, KIT)

Stephen P. Jones (Durham, IPPP)

Zoltan Kunszt (Zürich, ETH)

 

Local Organising Committee:

 

Simon Badger (UniTo)

Raquel Gomez Ambrosio (UniTo)

Lorenzo Magnea (UniTo)

Paolo Torrielli (UniTo)

Sandro Uccirati (UniTo)

Leonardo Vernazza (INFN Torino)

 

 

Next HP2 workshops:

 

See you in Karlsruhe 2026!

 

 

Previous HP2 workshops:

 

2006: Zürich

2008: Buenos Aires

2010: Florence

2012: Munich

2014: Florence

2016: Buenos Aires

2018: Freiburg

2022: Durham

Participants
  • Achilleas Lazopoulos
  • Adam Kardos
  • Ajjath Abdul Hameed
  • Alessandra Cappati
  • Alessandro Vicini
  • Ana Rosario Cueto Gómez
  • Andrea Ghira
  • Andrey Pikelner
  • Anton Olsson
  • Aris Spourdalakis
  • Augustin Vestner
  • Bakar Chargeishvili
  • Bakul Agarwal
  • Benjamin Campillo
  • Carlo Oleari
  • Chen-Yu Wang
  • Chiara Savoini
  • Chiara Signorile-Signorile
  • Christian Biello
  • Clara Lavinia Del Pio
  • Colomba Brancaccio
  • Daniele Artico
  • Daniele Lombardi
  • Dario Kermanschah
  • Davide Napoletano
  • Dhimiter Canko
  • Eleni Vryonidou
  • Elliot Fox
  • Emanuele Re
  • Fabian Lange
  • Federico Buccioni
  • Federico Coro
  • Federico Gasparotto
  • Federico Ripani
  • Flavio Guadagni
  • Francesco Tramontano
  • Gaia Fontana
  • German Rodrigo
  • Giacomo Brunello
  • Giacomo Magni
  • Giancarlo Ferrera
  • Giovanni Limatola
  • Giovanni Stagnitto
  • Giulio Falcioni
  • Giuseppe Bevilacqua
  • Gloria Bertolotti
  • Gudrun Heinrich
  • Guoxing Wang
  • Hantian Zhang
  • Heribertus Bayu Hartanto
  • Hjalte Axel Frellesvig
  • Ilaria Brivio
  • Ivan Pedron
  • Jonas Lindert
  • Julia Karlen
  • Jungwon Lim
  • Jürg Haag
  • Kay Schönwald
  • Leonardo Bonino
  • Leonardo de la Cruz
  • Leonardo Vernazza
  • Lois Flower
  • Lorenzo Magnea
  • Lorenzo Mai
  • Luca Buonocore
  • Luca Rottoli
  • Lukas Simon
  • Marco Niggetiedt
  • Marco Rocco
  • Maria Vittoria Garzelli
  • Mark Costantini
  • Markus Löchner
  • Massimiliano Grazzini
  • Matteo Becchetti
  • Matteo Cacciari
  • Matteo Marcoli
  • Mattia Pozzoli
  • Ming-Ming Long
  • Nicolo Giraudo
  • Paolo Garbarino
  • Paolo Torrielli
  • Pavel Novichkov
  • Peter Meinzinger
  • Petr Jakubčík
  • Philipp Böer
  • Pierpaolo Mastrolia
  • Piotr Bargiela
  • Pooja Mukherjee
  • Prasanna Kumar Dhani
  • Ramona Groeber
  • Raquel Gomez Ambrosio
  • Renato Maria Prisco
  • Richard Keith Ellis
  • Roberto Bonciani
  • Robin van Bijleveld
  • Rudi Rahn
  • Sam Teale
  • Sandro Uccirati
  • Santiago Castro
  • Silvia Ferrario Ravasio
  • Silvia Zanoli
  • Simon Badger
  • Simone Alioli
  • Simone Zoia
  • Stefano Pozzorini
  • Stephen Jones
  • Sven-Olaf Moch
  • Terry Generet
  • Thomas Becher
  • Timea Vitos
  • Tiziano Peraro
  • Tommaso Armadillo
  • Vasily Sotnikov
  • Vsevolod Chestnov
  • Xing Wang
  • Yang Zhang
  • Yuyu Mo
  • Zihao Wu
  • Zoltan Trocsanyi
    • 08:50 09:00
      Welcome Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Lorenzo Magnea (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
    • 09:00 10:30
      Plenary Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Simon David Badger (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 09:00
        Recent experimental precision measurements at CMS 30m

        Thanks to the increasing amount of data provided by the LHC and the new techniques adopted, experiments are entering the era of precision measurements. The increasing precision of the results allows the standard model of particle physics to be tested more and more thoroughly.
        This talk will present recent precision measurements of standard model parameters performed by the CMS collaboration.

        Speaker: Alessandra Cappati (LLR)
      • 09:30
        QCD splitting functions at four loops 30m

        We present computations of the even-N moments of the flavour-singlet four-loop splitting functions to N=20. These results, obtained using off-shell operator matrix elements (OMEs). We construct approximations based on our moments for the OMEs and endpoint constraints. These approximations facilitate an approximate N3LO evolution of parton distributions which are sufficiently accurate for parton momentum fractions accessible at current colliders.

        Speaker: Giulio Falcioni (University of Torino and University of Zürich)
      • 10:00
        Heavy Quark Fragmentation in e+e- Collisions to NNLO+NNLL Accuracy in Perturbative QCD 30m

        Fragmentation of heavy quarks into heavy-flavoured hadrons receives both perturbative and non-perturbative contributions. We consider perturbative QCD corrections to heavy quark production in $e^+e^-$ collisions to next-to-next-to-leading order accuracy in QCD with next-to-next-to-leading-logarithmic resummation of quasi-collinear and soft emissions.

        We study multiple matching schemes, and multiple regularisations of the soft resummation, and observe a significant dependence of the perturbative results on these ingredients, suggesting that NNLO+NNLL perturbative accuracy may not lead to real gains unless the interface with non-perturbative physics is properly analysed.

        We confirm previous evidence that $D^{*+}$ experimental data from CLEO/BELLE and from LEP are not reconcilable with perturbative predictions employing standard DGLAP evolution.

        We extract non-perturbative contributions from $e^+e^-$ experimental data for both $D$ and $B$ meson fragmentation. Such contributions can be used to predict heavy-quark fragmentation in other processes, e.g. DIS and proton-proton collisions.

        Speaker: Matteo Cacciari (LPTHE Paris)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break 30m
    • 11:00 12:40
      Electroweak and Higgs Physics, EFT and BSM Room C2

      Room C2

      Convener: Paolo Torrielli (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 11:00
        Two-loop mixed QCD-EW corrections to charged-current Drell-Yan 25m

        The charged current Drell-Yan process plays a crucial role at hadron colliders since it provides the environment for a precise study of the gauge sector of the Standard Model and, in particular, for the determination of the W-boson mass. In this talk, we will present our recent computation of the mixed QCD-EW two-loop virtual amplitudes for this process, which constitute one of the main bottlenecks for the complete calculation of NNLO mixed QCD-EW corrections. We present the details of our calculation, performed via semi-analytical methods, with an emphasis on the evaluation of all the relevant two-loop Feynman integrals where the presence of one additional mass, compared to the neutral current case, makes the computation extremely challenging.

        Speaker: Tommaso Armadillo (UCLouvain, UNIMI)
      • 11:25
        Light by Light Scattering at NLO in QCD+QED 25m

        In this talk I plan to discuss the QCD+QED corrections to Light by Light scattering (LbL) process at next-to-leading order (NLO). The recent experimental observation of this fundamental process at the Large Hadron Collider has revived the interest to precisely predict its cross-section. We discuss two radically different computational approaches, both exact in the fermion mass dependence, thus offering a strong cross-check of our results. The first approach is a fully analytic method to calculate compact and well-organized two-loop helicity amplitudes. The second one is entirely numerical and leverages the Local Unitarity construction. Our two calculations agree with each other and conclude that including the exact fermion mass contribution typically increases the size of the NLO corrections. Moreover, we find that the exact result converges slowly to the massless limit of the high-energy regime, thus emphasizing the importance of including the full mass dependence at NLO. We also compare our results with the ATLAS measurement of LbL in ultra-peripheral lead-lead collisions, and find that the inclusion of exact NLO corrections reduces, but does not eliminate, the existing tension with theoretical predictions.

        Speaker: Dr Ajjath Abdul Hameed (LPTHE (CNRS), Paris)
      • 11:50
        On the Electron Self-Energy to Three Loops in Quantum Electrodynamics 25m

        We report on the analytic calculation of the Electron Self Energy in Quantum Electrodynamics at three loops. Feynman integrals appearing in the problem are evaluated via the method of differential equations. In particoular, we will discuss how to cast the system of differential equations -- including elliptic secrors -- in an eps-factorized form via suitable transformation(s), thus (almost) trivializing the solution.

        This is work in progress in collaboration with Claude Duhr, Christoph Nega, Lorenzo Tancredi and Stefan Weinzierl.

        Speaker: Federico Gasparotto (JGU Mainz)
      • 12:15
        AsyInt for massive two-loop four-point integrals at high energies 25m

        In this talk, I will present analytic techniques for massive two-loop four-point Feynman integrals at high energies and the toolbox AsyInt. In the high-energy region, the Feynman integrals involving massive particles, such as the top quark, Higgs and vector bosons, can be asymptotically expanded and directly calculated in the small-mass limit. With AsyInt, analytic results for higher-order terms in the expansion parameter and the dimensional regulator can be obtained.

        Speaker: Hantian Zhang (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
    • 11:00 12:40
      Precision QCD corrections Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Raquel Gomez Ambrosio (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 11:00
        NNLO+PS predictions for Z boson production in association with b-jets at the LHC 25m

        We present the first NNLO-accurate event generation for $Z$ boson production in association with a bottom-quark pair. This is achieved by matching the NNLO calculation in the 4FS to a parton shower within the MiNNLO method, which we extend to accommodate the class of processes with a color singlet and a heavy-quark pair in the final state. We find that NNLO corrections to $Zb\bar{b}$ production are large and remarkably reduce the tension between 4FS predictions and $Z$+$b$-jet ATLAS and CMS measurements. The long-standing discrepancy between 4FS and 5FS predictions is therefore largely alleviated.

        Speaker: Vasily Sotnikov (University of Zurich)
      • 11:25
        Complete NLO QCD corrections to ZZ production in gluon fusion 25m

        We present our results for complete next-to-leading order QCD corrections to ZZ production through gluon fusion. We combine the two-loop amplitudes with top quark mass dependence calculated numerically in a previous work with the analytic forms of massless, Higgs-mediated, and one-loop factorisable diagrams to obtain complete virtual corrections. We show that the choice of IR subtraction scheme used for virtuals has a significant impact on their size as well as required precision.

        Speaker: Bakul Agarwal (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
      • 11:50
        Higher-order computations for top-quark production at hadron colliders: implications for top-quark mass and PDF fits 25m

        One of the motivations underlying the efforts towards higher-order computations of heavy-flavour production is the possibility to better constrain parton distribution functions as well as heavy-quark mass values. In this contribution we focus on the top-quark case and we discuss the impact of including higher-order corrections to top-antitop and single-top production at hadron colliders on the extraction of tne aforementioned quantities. We discuss in particular our recent extractions of top-quark mass values at fixed (PDFs + alpha_s(M_Z)), considering a number of modern PDF fits, as well as our simultaneous fit of top-quark mass, PDFs and alpha_s(M_Z), using as a basis state-of-the-art collider data on top-quark production compared to NNLO theory predictions. The computation of the latter has been automated through the MATRIX+PineAPPL framework in the case of multi-differential predictions, leading to tables of predictions that can be shared with the collider community and used for any new fit. We also sketch further possible improvements in the theory computations, which would lead to even more precise and accurate PDF and top-quark mass fits.

        Speaker: Maria Vittoria Garzelli (Universita' degli Studi di Cagliari, Dipartimento di Fisca & Universitaet Hamburg, II Institut fuer Theoretische Physik)
      • 12:15
        Quark Mass Effects in Higgs Production 25m

        We examine the effect of finite top- and bottom-quark masses on the Higgs production cross section in the gluon-gluon fusion channel. We employ both $\overline{\text{MS}}$ and on-shell renormalisation for the quark masses and provide a thorough comparison. Furthermore, we explore alternative treatments of quark masses, in particular in the four-flavour scheme, and investigate their impact on the cross section. Our work also presents novel predictions for differential cross sections in the Higgs rapidity. The results lead to a significant reduction of scale uncertainties, and our analysis enables us to offer well-grounded recommendations for future research in this area.

        Speaker: Marco Niggetiedt (Max-Planck-Institut für Physik)
    • 11:00 12:40
      Resummation, Parton Showers and Monte-Carlo Room C1

      Room C1

      Convener: Carlo Oleari (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 11:00
        Matching NLO calculations with NLL Panscales showers with initial-state partons 25m

        The matching between fixed-order calculations and parton shower simulations represents one of the key building blocks for the construction of accurate and fully-differential predictions at colliders. While NLO matching with leading logarithmic accurate parton showers has been a solved problem for many years, there is currently no standard matching procedure with next-to-logarithmic (NLL) accurate showers. In this talk, I will present how to obtain NLO accurate predictions matched to NLL PanScales parton showers with efficient and positive-definite techniques for deep inelastic scattering and colour-singlet production in hadron collisions. Such a matching is a fundamental ingredient for the formulation of next-to-NLL showers.

        Speaker: Silvia Zanoli (University of Oxford)
      • 11:25
        The QED-MC@NLO method 25m

        As experimental precision continues to improve, it becomes increasingly important for the theory community to incorporate electroweak corrections alongside higher-order QCD effects in our predictions. In this talk, I will introduce the QED-MC@NLO method, which matches a QED parton shower with an NLO electroweak calculation. I will discuss some implementation details and present results from important use cases. Additionally, I will demonstrate how this method extends to combined QCD+EW NLO calculations, matched to an interleaved parton shower.

        Speaker: Lois Flower (IPPP, Durham University)
      • 11:50
        Resonance-aware NLOPS matching for off-shell top-pair plus tW production with semileptonic decays 25m

        The increasingly high accuracy of top-quark studies at the LHC calls for a theoretical description of $t\bar t$ production and decay in terms of exact matrix elements for the full $2 \to 6$ process that includes the off-shell production and the chain decays of $t\bar t$ and $tW$ intermediate states, together with their quantum interference. Corresponding NLO QCD calculations matched to parton showers are available for the case of dileptonic channels and are implemented in the bb4l Monte Carlo generator, which is based on the resonance-aware POWHEG method. In this talk, I present the first NLOPS predictions of this kind for the case of semileptonic channels. In this context, the interplay of off-shell $t\bar t$ + $t W$ production with various other QCD and electroweak subprocesses that yield the same semileptonic final state is discussed in detail. On the technical side, we improve the resonance-aware POWHEG procedure by means of new resonance histories based on matrix elements, which enable a realistic separation of $t\bar t$ and $t W$ contributions. Moreover, I introduce a general approach which makes it possible to avoid certain spurious terms that arise from the perturbative expansion of decay widths in any off-shell higher-order calculation, and which are large enough to jeopardise physical finite-width effects. Presented results and simulation tools will be of paramount importance for future precision top-quark studies and for the modelling of irreducible backgrounds in BSM searches.

        Speaker: Jonas Lindert (University of Sussex)
      • 12:15
        Towards the Automation of Quarkonium Production Cross Sections with MadGraph 25m

        We introduce a forthcoming extension to MadGraph5_aMC@NLO, enabling the automated computation of cross sections for processes involving quarkonium particles within the non-relativistic QCD (NRQCD) factorization framework. To achieve next-to-leading order (NLO) accuracy in the strong coupling constant $\alpha_s$, we have refined the FKS subtraction formalism. Our approach is applicable to the production of S- or P-wave quarkonium bound states in association with any number of elementary particles, thereby offering a comprehensive solution for a wide range of scenarios. Key contributions of our work include the derivation of local and integrated soft counterterms specifically designed for colour-singlet and colour-octet P-wave bound states. These advancements are crucial for accurately modeling heavy quarkonium inclusive and associated production processes, thereby enhancing our understanding of quarkonium dynamics in high-energy phenomena.

        Speaker: Lukas Simon (Sorbonne Université & CNRS)
    • 12:40 14:30
      Lunch 1h 50m
    • 14:30 16:35
      Electroweak and Higgs Physics, EFT and BSM Room C2

      Room C2

      Convener: Colomba Brancaccio (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 14:30
        Yukawa- and Higgs self-coupling corrections to di-Higgs production 25m

        The upcoming HL-LHC phase gives hope to tighten the experimental
        constraints on one of the core parameters of the SM: the Higgs
        self-coupling. The most prolific process to consider in this context is
        double Higgs boson production. Theoretical higher order calculations,
        both QCD and electro-weak, are required to match the experimental precision.

        In this talk we present our calculation of electro-weak NLO
        contributions comprising Yukawa-type and Higgs self-coupling corrections
        at two-loop level.

        Speaker: Augustin Vestner (KIT ITP)
      • 14:55
        Analytic results for double Higgs production at the LHC 25m

        In this talk I will present recent efforts to calculate analytic results for double Higgs production at the LHC, concentrating on the virtual corrections to the gluon fusion channel.
        On the one hand, I will report on recent results on electro-weak corrections to this process.
        On the other hand, the extension of the calculation to NNLO QCD corrections is discussed.
        Our methods are based on analytic expansions in forward kinematics and the high-energy limit, which can be effectively matched to cover the whole kinematic region of the process.
        The results are important for the precise determination of the Higgs self coupling in the future, but are also applicable to a wide range of other collider signatures.

        Speaker: Kay Schönwald (UZH)
      • 15:20
        Anomalous Couplings in Higgs plus Jet Production 25m

        We present NLO QCD results for Higgs boson production in association with one jet, including anomalous Higgs-top and Higgs-gluon couplings, and with full top quark mass dependence. We will compare the full theory with varied anomalous couplings to the Standard Model. Of special interest will be the $p_{T,H}$ distribution, since the high $p_{T,H}$ tail is sensitive to heavy new physics.

        Speaker: Benjamin Campillo (Karlsruhe Institut für Technologie)
      • 15:45
        High precision in Drell-Yan and electroweak input schemes 25m

        At hadronic colliders, the Drell-Yan processes are crucial for testing the Standard Model via the template-fit determination of electroweak parameters, such as the W-boson mass and the weak mixing angle. Monte Carlo event generators play an important role to provide reliable templates for such measurements.
        The Z_ew-BMNNPV code is dedicated to the simulation of neutral-current Drell-Yan in the POWHEG-BOX framework, delivering NLO QCD plus NLO EW accuracy with exact matching to QCD and QED parton showers. The most recent updates to the code are here presented: in particular, we discuss the implementation of several options for the electroweak input-parameter and renormalization schemes, e.g. the ones with the weak mixing angle in its effective or MSbar definition as input, which allow the high-precision determination of this parameter at hadron colliders. We provide a critical comparison among the predictions obtained within different schemes and quantify the related theoretical uncertainties.

        Speaker: Clara Lavinia Del Pio (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 16:10
        Two-loop amplitudes for W-boson production in association with two photons at the LHC 25m

        I will present a computation of two-loop amplitudes contributing to W+2 photon production at the Large Hadron Collider. We adopt a hybrid approach where analytic results are derived for the leading colour contribution while the subleading colour amplitudes are evaluated numerically, both within the finite-field framework. The size of subleading colour contribution is studied, by evaluating the amplitudes on a small set of physical phase-space points.

        Speaker: Heribertus Bayu Hartanto (Asia Pacific Center for Theoretical Physics)
    • 14:30 16:35
      Methods for amplitudes and integrals Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Stefano Pozzorini (Zurich university)
      • 14:30
        Analytic Waveforms in General Relativity from Scattering Amplitudes 25m

        The remarkable detection of gravitational waves (GWs) by Ligo-Virgo-Kagra interferometers has opened the new era of multimessenger astrophysics. An analytic understanding of GWs waveform allows us to construct precise GWs templates, which are needed to detect signals via matched filtering analyses.
        In this talk, I will combine the observable-based formalism (KMOC), the analytic properties of scattering amplitudes, generalised unitarity and the heavy mass expansion with a newly introduced IBP reduction for Fourier integrals, to provide an efficient framework for computing scattering waveforms. Such properties are based on a recent understanding of frequency space waveforms as twisted period integrals, which can be studied using Twisted Cohomology. Using these techniques, we were able to derive for the first time the analytic expression for the next-to-leading-order (NLO) waveform in General Relativity.

        Speaker: Giacomo Brunello (UNIPD & IPhT-CEA/Saclay & INFN-PD)
      • 14:55
        Locally finite two-loop amplitudes for multi Higgs production in gluon fusion 25m

        A universal numerical method for computing loop amplitudes would enable precise theoretical predictions for a broad range of phenomenological relevant processes. A major obstacle in developing such methods is the treatment of infrared and ultraviolet singularities, which must be eliminated at the integrand level before numerical integration becomes feasible.
        In this talk, I will introduce a framework under development aimed at constructing locally finite two-loop amplitudes for arbitrary process. The framework is based on the universality of infrared singularities, realizing infrared factorization manifestly at the local level. As a specific example, I will explain the construction of locally finite two-loop amplitudes for gluon-fusion processes with an arbitrary number of Higgs final states. We find that infrared singularities reside in simple amplitudes of well-known 2 -> 1 processes. Anticipating the generalization of our method, I will also discuss our progress on more complex QCD processes, which require novel techniques to achieve local Ward identity cancellations of collinear singularities.

        Speaker: Julia Karlen (ETH Zurich)
      • 15:20
        Integrated Unitarity for Scattering Amplitudes 25m

        We present a new method for computing multi-loop scattering amplitudes in Quantum Field Theory (arXiv:2403.18047). It extends the Generalized Unitarity method by constraining not only the integrand of the amplitude but also its full integrated form. Our approach exploits the relation between cuts and discontinuities of the amplitude. Explicitly, by the virtue of analyticity and unitarity of the S-matrix, the amplitude can be expressed in terms of lower-loop on-shell amplitudes dispersively integrated along cuts. As both cuts and discontinuities can be computed systematically in dimensional regularization, we validated our method by reproducing the four-gluon amplitude in two-loop massless Quantum Chromodynamics. Moreover, since our approach improves the performance of the calculation, we provide a new result for the four-loop four-point massless planar ladder Feynman integral. It is expressed in terms of Harmonic Polylogarithms with letters 0 and 1.

        Speaker: Piotr Bargiela (University of Zurich)
      • 15:45
        Recent development of NeatIBP 25m

        The Feynman integral is a critical object in quantum field theory. It is very important in high energy physics. The integration-by-parts (IBP) reduction is one of the bottle-neck steps in the evaluation of multi-loop Feynman integrals. NeatIBP is a program based on the syzygy method of IBP reduction. It generates much smaller sized IBP system compared to traditional Laporta's algorithm. This helps us to reduce the computation cost of IBP reduction. In this talk, we will present the recent development and progress of NeatIBP since its last publication. We will introduce new useful features in the new versions of NeatIBP. These new features include the automated interface with the popular Feynman integral reduction software Kira.

        Speaker: Zihao Wu (Hangzhou Institute for Advanced Study, UCAS)
      • 16:10
        - 25m
    • 14:30 16:35
      Resummation, Parton Showers and Monte-Carlo Room C1

      Room C1

      Convener: Leonardo Vernazza (INFN, Torino)
      • 14:30
        Towards subleading power factorisation 25m

        Calculations in perturbative QCD suffer from large logarithms that appear at all orders in the perturbation theory, endangering the perturbative description. In pursuit of precise predictions for (differential) cross sections, factorisation theorems have been established with the benefit to sum these large logarithms to all orders in perturbation theory, improving the predictive power of the theory. This procedure is well-understood at leading power in these large logarithms, but much work is still to be done at next-to-leading power (NLP). By extending known methods to resum the leading logarithm at NLP for single differential cross sections, I will show that one can compute leading logarithmic resummed cross sections differential in both a threshold variable (i.e. the limit where the radiation has little energy) and the rapidity of a final state particle. To improve these resummation formulas beyond the leading logarithm, further study needs to be done. For this purpose, I will introduce new jet functions that contribute to this subleading power behaviour. We check these definitions up to two loop against the region expansion of the QED form factor.

        Speaker: Robin van Bijleveld (Nikhef)
      • 14:55
        Renormalizing Soft-quark Functions and Anomalous Dimensions at Next-to-leading Power 25m

        Power corrections are crucial for the frontier precision study at colliders, and soft quarks play an important role starting from next-to-leading power. However, renormalizing soft-quark functions and, hence, deriving their anomalous dimensions are hard and have only received progress recently. In this talk, I will show how to renormalize soft-quark functions entering the light-quark-induced Higgs form factor and the Drell-Yan process in position space in a concise way. In particular, I will also illustrate how to extract UV poles consistently in the context of introducing offshellness-related IR regulators inherited from factorization formulae.

        Speaker: Xing Wang
      • 15:20
        RG-improved resummation of super-leading logarithms 25m

        The higher-order behavior of logarithmically enhanced contributions in non-global LHC observables is very intricate, in particular as double-logarithmic corrections -- so-called super-leading logarithms (SLLs) -- arise first at high orders in perturbation theory.
        Their all-order resummation has been understood recently by means of a factorization formula in soft-collinear EFT.
        In this talk, I will discuss improvements in the resummation of SLLs, including a renormalization-group treatment with a running coupling constant, as well as corrections from higher-order Glauber exchanges.

        Speaker: Philipp Böer (JGU Mainz)
      • 15:45
        Heavy quarks’ mass corrections to threshold resummation 25m

        Perturbative calculations for processes that involve heavy flavours can be performed in two approaches: the massive scheme and the massless one. The former enables one to fully account for the heavy-quark kinematics, while the latter allows one to resum potentially-large mass logarithms. Furthermore, the two schemes can be combined to take advantage of the virtues of each of them. Both massive and massless calculations can be supplemented by soft-gluon resummation. However matching between massive and massless resummed calculations is difficult, essentially because of the non-commutativity of the soft and massless limits. In this talk, I will present a formalism to combine massive and massless resummed calculations. Our result consists of an all-order expression that consistently resums both mass and soft logarithms to next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy. Finally, I will comment on the phenomenological impact of these findings, presenting a comparison between our calculations and experimental data for heavy flavour fragmentation.

        Speaker: Andrea Ghira (Università di Genova and Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN) sezione di Genova)
      • 16:10
        Sherpa 3.0: status and updates 25m

        Accurate and fully differential predictions are crucial inputs for the precise experimental analyses at collider experiments and are typically provided by parton shower Monte Carlo programs. The event generator Sherpa with its focus on the inclusion of higher-order EW and QCD effects is available in a new version 3.0 this year and we will summarise its new features and current developments for upcoming releases in the near future.

        Speaker: Peter Meinzinger (IPPP, Durham University)
    • 16:35 17:10
      Coffee Break 35m
    • 17:10 18:40
      Plenary Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Gudrun Heinrich (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
      • 17:10
        Feynman Integrals in Parameter Space: Hidden Regions and Contour Deformation 30m

        Understanding the singularity structure of Feynman integrals in parameter space is useful both for formulating numerical procedures for their evaluation (e.g. sector decomposition) and for understanding their asymptotic behaviour, as captured by the method of regions. A promising direction of exploration in this regard is the geometric description of Feynman integrals in parameter space.

        In this talk, using Landau singularity analysis, we study the appearance of "hidden" regions not associated with endpoint singularities in parameter space, and so not straightforwardly captured by the geometric approach. We demonstrate that in the strict on-shell limit such Landau singularities can prevent the direct numerical evaluation of integrals in parameter space and describe how they can be re-parameterised and dissected to circumvent this problem. Using similar techniques, we demonstrate how knowledge of the variety of the second Symanzik polynomial can be used to obtain strictly positive integrands even in the Minkowski Regime, circumventing the need for contour deformation and significantly improving the numerical performance.

        Speaker: Stephen Jones (IPPP Durham)
      • 17:40
        Parton Showers with higher logarithmic accuracy 30m

        Parton shower event generators are essential tools for establishing the quantitative connection between theory and experiment. However, their flexibility comes with a trade-off: they generally offer lower formal accuracy compared to state-of-the-art analytic calculations, which in turn have more limited applicability. The poor accuracy of the inevitably employed parton shower generators introduces systematic uncertainties that affect all measurements at colliders. In this talk, I will dis- cuss the efforts made by the PanScales collaboration to improve the logarithmic accuracy of parton showers. Until recently, this accuracy was limited to the leading logarithms. Specifically, I will demonstrate how we can achieve Next-to-Leading Logarithm (NLL) accuracy. Furthermore, I will explore advancements beyond NLL. These developments are crucial for refining our understanding of fundamental particle interactions and reducing uncertainties in present and future collider measurements.

        Speaker: Dr Silvia Ferrario Ravasio (CERN)
      • 18:10
        Factorization restoration through Glauber gluons 30m

        We analyze the low-energy dynamics of gap-between-jet cross sections at hadron colliders, for
        which phase factors in the hard amplitudes spoil collinear cancellations and lead to double logarith-
        mic behavior. Based on a method-of-regions analysis, we identify contributions from perturbative
        active-active Glauber-gluon exchanges which have precisely the right structure to make the cross sec-
        tion consistent with PDF factorization below the veto scale associated with the gap. The Glauber
        contributions we identify are unambiguously defined without any regulators beyond dimensional
        regularization.

        Speaker: Thomas Becher
    • 18:40 20:40
      Aperitivo 2h
    • 09:00 10:30
      Plenary Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Richard Keith Ellis
      • 09:00
        Overview of ATLAS precision measurements and Monte Carlo generators usage 30m

        Overview of ATLAS precision measurements and Monte Carlo generators usage

        Speaker: Ana Rosario Cueto Gómez (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid)
      • 09:30
        Expansions for multi-scale two-loop processes 30m

        I will show how expansion methods can be used to analytically evaluate multi-scale gluon fusion processes at two-loop order. In particular, an expansion for small transverse momentum covers most of the phase space for the gg-> ZZ, gg-> HZ and gg-> HH processes. When combined with a high-energy expansion the whole phase space is covered. Since this approach allows to express the amplitudes analytically, the results can be easily implemented into flexible Monte Carlo codes.

        Speaker: Ramona Groeber (Università di Padova e INFN, Sezione di Padova)
      • 10:00
        Towards an automated generator based on OpenLoops+LTD 30m

        We present ongoing work towards the development of an automated NLO generator in the OpenLoops framework. This new algorithm combines key features of the Loop Tree Duality (LTD) and OpenLoops methods. In particular, virtual and real corrections are combined in a way that enables the local cancellation of IR singularities. To this end we introduce a new technique that supports the calculation of IR safe observables in a similarly flexible and automated manner as within state-of-the-art parton-level generators. This new framework will serve as a basis for the development of an automated NNLO generator.

        Speaker: Stefano Pozzorini (Zurich university)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break 30m
    • 11:00 12:40
      Methods for amplitudes and integrals Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Simone Zoia (CERN)
      • 11:00
        Three-loop ladder diagrams with two off-shell legs 25m

        In this talk I will present a calculation of the three-loop four-point master integrals. They come from two three-loop ladder diagrams with two off-shell legs that have identical masses. The talk will mainly consist of two sections. First I will demonstrate the construction of a canonical basis and solve the differential equation it fulfills. Then it goes to the discussion of using the symbol technique to simplify the complicated analytic expressions of master integrals.

        Speaker: Ming-Ming Long (KIT, TTP)
      • 11:25
        Minimal set of variables and high-energy building blocks at high multiplicity 25m

        Extending the BFKL program beyond next-to-leading logarithms requires high-multiplicity central-emission vertices (CEV) and peripheral emission vertices (PEV). In this talk, I discuss how to conveniently extract these building blocks at tree level from amplitudes in general kinematics using a suitable (minimal) set of kinematic variables. Specifically, we determine all quark and gluon emission vertices with up to four partons in the final state and show how analytic expressions free of spurious poles can be obtained. We then analyse the properties of these emission vertices, demonstrate their factorization into lower-point vertices in soft and collinear limits and in further high-energy limits. Finally, we study additional identities satisfied by the set of PEVs and CEVs, including the photon decoupling identity, Kleiss-Kuijf relations, and SUSY Ward identities.

        Speaker: Yuyu Mo (University of Edinburgh)
      • 11:50
        Five-parton scattering in the high-energy limit 25m

        The availability of high-multiplicity multi-loop scattering amplitudes in QCD provides invaluable data for studying the theory under special kinematic configurations. Recent calculations of two-loop full-colour QCD amplitudes for the scattering of five partons have enabled us to explore their high-energy limit, known as Multi-Regge Kinematics (MRK). In this limit, a universal factorisation pattern is expected for the amplitude. However, starting at the next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic order (NNLL), the exchange of multiple reggeons (MR) disrupts this factorisation.

        In this talk, I will first review the effective theory that accurately describes the high-energy limit and how it predicts the MR contributions. Once the latter are properly accounted for, the universal factorisation pattern is restored. This restoration allowed us to extract a fundamental ingredient for the factorisation at NNLL: the Lipatov vertex at two-loop order. I will also delve into various technical details of how this calculation was carried out.

        Speaker: Federico Buccioni (TUM)
      • 12:15
        Master integrals for three-loop Higgs plus jet production 25m

        I will present novel results for non-planar three-loop four-point Feynman integrals with one off-shell leg. The talk will cover various integration techniques, as well as observations on the function space. As a first application, I present an analytic result for a form factor of a local composite operator in maximally supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory.

        Speaker: Jungwon Lim
    • 11:00 12:40
      Precision QCD corrections Room C2

      Room C2

      Convener: Thomas Becher (University of Bern)
      • 11:00
        NNNLO zero-jettiness soft function 25m

        We report on computing the NNNLO zero-jettiness QCD soft function, the last missing ingredient required for the first application of the subtraction scheme with jettiness as a slicing variable at the NNNLO level.

        Speaker: Andrey Pikelner (TTP KIT)
      • 11:25
        Triple real contributions to zero-jettiness soft function at N3LO 25m

        In this talk, we present some technical details in the calculation of triple real contributions to the zero-jettiness soft function at N3LO. We use extended reverse unitarity to handle Heaviside functions in the integral reduction and compute master integrals by solving differential equations with respect to an auxiliary parameter. Additional complications introduced by the analytic regulator are discussed.

        Speaker: Chen-Yu Wang (Max-Planck-Institut für Physik)
      • 11:50
        NNLO Predictions for Tribosons Processes at the LHC 25m

        Diboson processes being the key to study the electroweak triple gauge-boson couplings, triboson processes pave the way to investigate the quartic. Moreover, with leptonic decay products from multiple gauge bosons, they provide dominant backgrounds to many New Physics searches. With the increasing statistics collected by the LHC, and in particular in view of the HL-LHC running phase, precise predictions beyond the present NLO results are required to make the best out of the measurements. Exact two-loop amplitudes being yet unknown for triboson processes beyond triphoton production, a suitable estimation of these contributions is required. Studies on diboson production, where exact amplitudes are available, give us confidence on the applicability of this procedure and the robustness of our related error estimates. This approach allows us to present first differential predictions for triboson processes, together with their leptonic decay modes, that may be claimed to be NNLO-accurate.

        Speaker: Paolo Garbarino (University of Zurich)
      • 12:15
        Nf-part of the NNLO virtual correction to the production of three massive vector bosons 25m

        I will present our recent calculation of previously unavailable NNLO contributions to electroweak vector boson production. For the first time at two loops, we enable their direct numerical integration by tackling infrared, ultraviolet and threshold singularities simultaneously using local subtractions. I will discuss our numerical method and describe the next steps towards calculating the full NNLO contribution.

        Speaker: Dario Kermanschah
    • 11:00 12:40
      Subtraction, slicing and loop/tree duality Room C1

      Room C1

      Convener: Sandro Uccirati (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 11:00
        Antenna Subtraction beyond NNLO 25m

        In this talk I discuss the extension of the well-established antenna subtraction method beyond next-to-next-to-leading order in perturbative QCD. The definition of N3LO antenna functions for final-state radiation and their analytical integration are briefly reviewed. Subsequently, I analyse the structure of the subtraction terms needed to remove infrared singularities at N3LO in the context of low-multiplicity processes. Finally, I discuss future phenomenological applications.

        Speaker: Matteo Marcoli (University of Durham)
      • 11:25
        A Numerical Implementation of the LASS Subtraction Scheme 25m

        NNLO QCD corrections are indispensable for Today's and tomorrow's colliders. Several subtraction schemes are available in the literature. The LASS (Local Analytic Subtraction Scheme) as it is developed in Turin offers a possible way to obtain NNLO QCD predictions with this version of subtraction. Its simple analytical integrals make it tempting to generalize even to hadron collisions. Before this crucial step a proof-of-concept numerical implementation is needed for electron-positron collisions. In my talk I would like to give highlights of our effort to create the first numerical implementation of the scheme focusing on the contribution with double-parton emission.

        Speaker: Adam Kardos (University of Debrecen)
      • 11:50
        Generalised Antenna Functions for Higher-Order Calculations 25m

        In the past few years, work has been done to construct antenna functions used in the antenna subtraction scheme directly from the limits we want them to have, rather than taking them directly from matrix elements. These "designer" antenna functions introduce fewer spurious singularities, and hence improve the simplicity of subtraction terms, especially at high multiplicity. Here, we report on further work to both construct and integrate generalised antenna functions at NNLO, which further simplifies the subtraction terms, as well as making manifest their algorithmic construction. We also present validation of this "generalised designer antenna" method by comparing to the known calculation of e+e- to 3 jet at NNLO.

        Speaker: Elliot Fox (Durham University)
      • 12:15
        - 25m
    • 12:40 14:00
      Lunch 1h 20m
    • 14:00 19:00
      Excursion 5h
    • 09:00 10:30
      Plenary Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Paolo Torrielli (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 09:00
        Semi-Inclusive DIS at NNLO in QCD 30m

        We present the first results for the next-to-next-to leading order (NNLO) corrections to the semi-inclusive deep-inelastic scattering process in perturbative quantum chromodynamics. We consider scattering with polarized and unpolarized protons and obtain the complete contributions analytically for all parton channels. All relevant virtual and real emission Feynman diagrams have been computed using integration-by-parts reduction to master integrals and two approaches for their subsequent evaluation (parametric phase-space integration and method of differential equations). The numerical analysis demonstrates the significance of the NNLO corrections and their great impact on the reduction of the residual scale dependence.

        Speaker: Sven-Olaf Moch (Universität Hamburg)
      • 09:30
        Euler-Mellin-Feynman Integrals and Intersection Theory 30m

        I elaborate on the vector space structures of Euler-Mellin-Feynman Integrals, emerging from the application of Intersection Theory of (twisted) De Rahm Co-homology, and discuss the crucial role of the intersection numbers as fundamental mathematical quantities, ruling linear relations (integration-by-parts identities or contiguity relations, differential and difference equations), as well as quadratic relations (Riemann bilinear relations), and higher order relations obeyed by those integrals.
        I comment on the correspondence between the vector space of integrals and the D-module structure of the differential operators acting on them.
        I report on the methods we introduced for evaluating intersection numbers of differential n-forms, and their application to the direct decomposition of integrals in terms of master integrals, to be considered as the generators of the vector space.
        I conclude on the applicability of these novel techniques and ideas in various areas of modern Physics and Mathematics.

        Speaker: Pierpaolo Mastrolia (Universita` di Padova)
      • 10:00
        Precise predictions for the EFT 30m

        I will review progress in computation of EFT contributions to LHC processes, including higher order QCD and EW contributions (and their potential automation), as well as the inclusion of renormalisation group effects in the predictions. I will discuss the impact of these corrections for LHC phenomenology with some examples in the top, EW and Higgs sectors

        Speaker: Eleni Vryonidou
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break 30m
    • 11:00 12:40
      Electroweak and Higgs Physics, EFT and BSM Room C2

      Room C2

      Convener: Davide Napoletano (Università e INFN Milano-Bicocca)
      • 11:00
        Electroweak logarithms in OpenLoops 25m

        I will present a fully automated implementation of next-to-leading order electroweak (NLO EW) corrections in the logarithmic Sudakov approximation in OpenLoops. For energies above the electroweak scale, NLO EW corrections are logarithmically enhanced and for tails of kinematic distributions of crucial LHC processes yield correction factors of several tens of percent. The considered Sudakov approximation reproduces the full one-loop result at the percent level, while retaining tree-level computing complexity. The presented implementation relies on an efficient representation of the Denner-Pozzorini algorithm in terms of an effective vertex approach. The implementation is model independent, supports the computation of EW corrections to resonant processes, as well as to VBF/VBS-topologies, and is suitable for extensions to the two-loop NNLO EW level.

        Speaker: Lorenzo Mai (University of Genova)
      • 11:25
        NLO corrections to tri-boson production in the WZjj channel 25m

        Tri-boson production, together with vector-boson scattering and Higgs-strahlung, is a privileged channel to study the EW structure of the Standard Model. Upcoming LHC running stages will soon allow to measure them at unprecedented accuracy and for all possible final states, which requires to push theory predictions to still unexplored frontiers.
        In this talk I will present the first calculation for the process pp → μ+μ−e+νe j j at the LHC in a tri-boson phase space. All LO contributions have been accounted for, namely the O(α^6), which contains the genuine tri-boson signature, and the O(αs α^5) and O(αs^2 α^4), together with the two O(α^7) and O(αs α^6) NLO corrections. After having discussed some technical aspects of the computation, I will show some phenomenologically relevant results for the integrated and differential cross-sections.

        Speaker: Daniele Lombardi (Universität Würzburg)
      • 11:50
        Precision predictions in the gauge and scalar sectors of the super weak extension of the standard model 25m

        The superweak (SW) force is a minimal, anomaly-free U(1) extension of the standard model (SM) with a complex scalar and three sterile right-handed neutrions. The SWSM is designed to explain the origin of (i) neutrino masses and mixing matrix elements, (ii) dark matter, (iii) cosmic inflation, (iv) stabilization of the electroweak vacuum and (v) leptogenesis. In this talk we present precision predictions including quantum corrections in the gauge and scalar sectors of such U(1) extensions in general. We apply such predictions in the SWSM to constrain the parameter space in the gauge and scalar sectors of the model. Talk based primarily on papers 2204.07100, 2305.11931 and 2402.14786, all published in Physical Review D.

        Speaker: Zoltan Trocsanyi (ELTE Eotvos Lorand University)
      • 12:15
        SIMUnet: an open-source tool for simultaneous global fits of EFT Wilson coefficients and PDFs 25m

        We present the open-source SIMUnet code, designed to fit Standard Model Effective Field Theory (SMEFT) Wilson coefficient alongside Parton Distribution Functions (PDFs) of the proton. SIMUnet can perform SMEFT global fits, as well as simultaneous fits of the PDFs and of an arbitrarily large number of SMEFT degrees of freedom, by including both PDF-dependent and PDF-independent observables. SIMUnet can also be used to determine whether the effects of any New Physics models can be fitted away in a global fit of PDFs. SIMUnet is built upon the open-source NNPDF code and is released together with documentation, and tutorials. To illustrate the functionalities of the new tool, we present a new global analysis of the SMEFT Wilson coefficients accounting for their interplay with the PDFs. We increment our previous analysis of the LHC Run II top quark data with both (i) the Higgs production and decay rates data from the LHC, and (ii) the precision electroweak and diboson measurements from LEP and the LHC.

        Speaker: Mark Costantini (University of Cambridge)
    • 11:00 12:40
      Methods for amplitudes and integrals Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Simon David Badger (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 11:00
        Polytope symmetries of Feynman integrals 25m

        Feynman integrals can be evaluated in terms of generalized hypergeometric series known as A-hypergeometric functions, which were proposed by Gel'fand-Kapranov-Zelevinsky (GKZ) as a unified approach to hypergeometric functions. Among the properties of A-hypergeometric functions are symmetries associated with the Newton polytope. In ordinary hypergeometric functions these symmetries lead to linear transformations. In this talk, I will show how these lead to symmetries of Feynman integrals in the Lee-Pomeransky representation. Then, I will summarize the symmetries of n-gon integrals up to n=8, massive banana integrals up to 5-loop, and on-shell ladders up to 3-loop. Finally, I will discuss their relevance to finite integrals.

        Speaker: Leonardo de la Cruz (IPhT)
      • 11:25
        On the numerical evaluation of Feynman integrals for higher-order calculations 25m

        We discuss modern techniques for the numerical computation of master integrals as series solutions of differential equations.

        Speaker: Renato Maria Prisco (Università di Napoli "Federico II")
      • 11:50
        Tensor Reduction for high-rank multi-loop Integrals 25m

        A vital step in multi-loop Feynman integral calculations is tensor reduction. We present an efficient graphical approach to this problem and introduce OPITeR a code that implements this method for arbitrary tensor Feynman integrals. OPITeR can handle integrals of arbitrary loop up to tensor rank 20 with any number of spin indices. We present some applications in the context of R* renormalization calculations as well as asymptotic / subgraph expansions in momentum space, where high-rank tensors are frequently encountered.

        Speaker: Sam Teale (University of Edinburgh)
      • 12:15
        Taming IBPs with Transverse Integration 25m

        Reduction of Feynman integrals to a basis of linearly independent master integrals is a crucial step in any perturbative calculation, but also one of its main bottlenecks. In this talk I will present an improvement over the traditional approach to IBP reduction, that exploits transverse integration identities. Given an integral family to be reduced, the key idea is to find sectors whose corner integrals correspond to either diagrams with fewer external legs or diagrams that can be factorized as products of lower-loop integrals. Then, using transverse integration identities, i.e. a tensor decomposition in the subspace that is transverse to the external momenta of the diagrams, we map integrals belonging to these sectors and their subsectors to (products of) integrals belonging to new and simpler integral families, characterized by either fewer generalized denominators, fewer external invariants, lower loops or combinations thereof. Integral reduction is thus drastically simpler for the newer families. I will include some applications to cutting-edge two-loop families which show significant improvements with respect to traditional methods.

        Speaker: Gaia Fontana (University of Zürich)
    • 11:00 12:40
      Subtraction, slicing and loop/tree duality Room C1

      Room C1

      Convener: Marco Rocco (Paul Scherrer Institut)
      • 11:00
        Antenna subtraction for processes with identified particles at hadron colliders 25m

        Precise theoretical predictions for observables with identified hadrons at hadron colliders are essential to understand how partons fragment into hadrons. The hadronization process is parametrized by process-independent fragmentation functions that encode the parton-to-hadron transition. To incorporate hadron fragmentation in higher-order QCD calculations requires a subtraction method to account for final-state collinear radiation associated with the fragmenting parton. To this aim we have extended the antenna subtraction method to hadron fragmentation processes with hadronic initial states at next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in perturbative QCD. In this talk we describe the calculation of the full set of integrated antenna functions in initial-final fragmentation kinematics and their combination with mass-factorization counterterms. These results pave the way towards precise predictions for observables with identified hadrons at the LHC.

        Speaker: Leonardo Bonino (University of Zurich)
      • 11:25
        Unresolved limits of polarised matrix elements 25m

        NNLO calculations in QCD require an analytic understanding of the infrared singular structure involving up to two unresolved partons. Up to now this was achieved only for unpolarized matrix elements. We report on the progress on the calculation of splitting amplitudes arising in longitudinally polarised QCD matrix elements at NNLO in the Larin $\gamma_5$ scheme. They are derived from DIS-like processes and verified in matrix elements of higher multiplicity. Our results will enable the calculation of NNLO corrections to longitudinal spin asymmetries in polarized collider processes.

        Speaker: Markus Löchner (University of Zurich)
      • 11:50
        The NNLO soft function for N-jettiness in hadronic collisions 25m

        In this talk I'll present our recent work calculating the N-jettiness soft function, based on an extension of the SoftSERVE framework to the general case of N+2 jets and beams for a priori general global observables. I will comment on our approach, present an explicit grid scanning the 2-jettiness soft function, and shed some light on the behaviour of the N-jettiness soft function at the edges of phase space, when two jets/beams become collinear.

        Speaker: Rudi Rahn (University of Vienna)
      • 12:15
        New tools for $N$-jettiness computations 25m

        The $N$-jettiness slicing has been a successful approach for the calculation of cross sections at next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in perturbative QCD, and has a strong potential for computations at the following order. Recently we derived a compact representation of the renormalized $N$-jettiness soft function free of infrared and collinear divergences through NNLO. The convergence of the $N$-jettiness scheme can be systematically improved by the addition of power corrections, for which there has been significant interest in understanding the subleading power contributions and their importance.

        Speaker: Ivan Pedron
    • 12:40 14:30
      Lunch 1h 50m
    • 14:30 16:35
      Methods for amplitudes and integrals Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Matteo Becchetti (Università di Bologna)
      • 14:30
        Two-loop amplitude reduction in the HELAC framework 25m

        I will present recent progress in constructing a generic two-loop amplitude reduction algorithm within the computational framework of HELAC. Following the well-known OPP reduction approach at one loop, a two loop amplitude approach is developed. I will also discuss the differences between the 4-2ε and pure 4 dimensional reduction fitting as well as the implications on the so-called rational terms which incorporate the mismatch between 4 and D = 4-2ε dimensions.

        Speaker: Aris Spourdalakis (NSCR Demokritos)
      • 14:55
        The next major release of Kira 25m

        The reduction of Feynman integrals to a basis of master integrals plays a crucial role for many high-precision calculations and Kira is one of the leading tools for this task. Recently, we achieved significant performance improvements. In this talk we discuss those and some of the new features for the next major release.

        Speaker: Fabian Lange (Universität Zürich and Paul Scherrer Institut)
      • 15:20
        Decomposing Feynman integrals with intersection numbers 25m

        We present a novel, simplified formulation of the recursive algorithm for
        evaluating intersection numbers of differential forms. This approach is
        applied to derive the complete decomposition of two-loop planar and non-planar
        Feynman integrals in terms of a master integral basis.

        The new algorithm extensively utilizes various emerging tensor structures
        derived from the polynomial division technique and local solutions to system of
        differential equations, facilitating efficient computer implementation.
        Additionally, we employ delta-forms as generators of relative twisted
        cohomology groups, which allows us to bypass the usage of analytic regulators.

        More generally, this algorithm can be applied to derive relations among twisted
        period integrals relevant for physics and mathematical studies.

        Speaker: Vsevolod Chestnov (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 15:45
        Finite Feynman Integrals in Momentum and Parameter Space 25m

        The infrared structure of scattering amplitudes offers a natural path to organize bases of Feynman integrals according to their divergence properties. In this talk, I will describe two complementary approaches to this organization: an analytic approach that builds upon the theory of Landau singularities in momentum space, and a geometric approach based on the parametric representation of the integral. Focusing on the class of locally finite integrals, I will explore the relationship between these two methods and discuss potential applications of the results.

        Speaker: Pavel Novichkov (IPhT CEA/Saclay)
      • 16:10
        Baikov Package - A package for loop-by-loop Baikov Parametrization 25m

        The Baikov representation of Feynman integrals, and in particular its loop-by-loop variant, has proven itself useful for a number of purposes. Specifically for generalized cuts, twisted cohomology, and the unveiling of geometric structures.
        For that reason I have made a package implementing that parametrization. In my talk I will present the package, and discuss some strategies for how best to use it. I will also show a number of examples including a recent result from perturbative gravity.

        Speaker: Hjalte Axel Frellesvig (Niels Bohr Institute, Uni of Copenhagen)
    • 14:30 16:35
      Precision QCD corrections Room C2

      Room C2

      Convener: Roberto Bonciani (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 14:30
        The Variable Flavor Number Scheme at NNLO and N$^3$LO: 25m

        In this talk, we combine the four-flavor scheme (4FS) and five-flavor scheme (5FS) into a single prediction such that it retains finite mass effects through a certain order in perturbation theory while at the same time resums the collinear logarithms to all orders in the strong coupling constant ($\alpha_s)$. We match the N$^3$LO 5FS result for the neutral-current Drell-Yan process including contributions from both photon and Z-boson exchange, with the NLO 4FS computation where the bottom quark is treated as a massive final-state particle. We also match the NNLO five-flavor scheme result for the charged-current Drell-Yan process in exchange of virtual W$^+$/W$^-$ boson. In this we account for both massive bottom and charm quarks and hence we match five-flavor scheme results against three-flavour schemes.

        Speaker: Pooja Mukherjee (University of Bonn, Germany)
      • 14:55
        Three-loop amplitudes for V+jet and H+jet production 25m

        I will present recent results for three-loop amplitudes with one off-shell and three on-shell legs, relevant for V+jet and H+jet production in hadron colliders at N3LO in QCD.

        Speaker: Petr Jakubčík (University of Zurich)
      • 15:20
        Towards a numerical evaluation of $q\bar{q} \to t\bar{t}H$ at two loops 25m

        We present progress on the calculation of the virtual NNLO corrections to $t\bar{t}H$ production in the $qq$-channel. We focus on the numerical evaluation of the master integrals with pySecDec, and the associated challenge of constructing a grid for a $5$-point amplitude.

        Speaker: Anton Olsson (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
      • 15:45
        Two-loop QCD amplitudes for $t\bar{t}H$ production from boosted limit 25m

        I will talk about a factorization formula for gauge-theory scattering amplitudes up to two loops in the high-energy boosted limit at leading power, which is then used to give the prediction for the production of a Higgs boson in association with a top-antitop quark pair ($t\bar{t}H$) at next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO). This process holds significant importance in directly probing the top-quark Yukawa coupling and relates to various fundamental questions in high energy physics. I will focus on the factorization and calculation of two-loop amplitudes for $t\bar{t}H$ production at hadron colliders in the high-energy boosted limit. By combining the contributions from real emissions, our results can be utilized to compute the NNLO differential cross sections for $t\bar{t}H$ production in the high-energy boosted limit. This talk is mainly based on our two recent published papers JHEP 05 (2024) 082 and JHEP 07 (2024) 121.

        Speaker: Guoxing Wang (LPTHE, CNRS, France)
      • 16:10
        Energy-Energy Correlation in the back-to-back region at N^3LL+NNLO in QCD 25m

        We consider the Energy-Energy Correlation function in electron-positron annihilation to hadrons. We concentrate on the back-to-back region, performing all-order resummation of the logarithmically enhanced contributions in QCD perturbation theory, up to next-to-next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic (N^3LL) accuracy. Away from the back-to-back region, we consistently combine resummed predictions with the known fixed-order results up to next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO). All perturbative terms up to order α_S^3 are included in our calculation, which exactly reproduces, after integration over the angular separation variable, the next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order (N^3LO) result for the total cross section. We regularize the Landau singularity of the QCD coupling within the so-called Minimal Prescription. We exhibit and discuss the reduction of the perturbative scale dependence of distributions at higher orders, as a means to estimate the corresponding residual perturbative uncertainty. We finally present an illustrative comparison with LEP data.

        Speaker: Giancarlo Ferrera (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
    • 14:30 16:10
      Resummation, Parton Showers and Monte-Carlo Room C1

      Room C1

      Convener: Emanuele Re (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 14:30
        Crossing heavy-flavour thresholds in Fragmentation Functions 25m

        Time-like matching threshold conditions are an ingredient of the DGLAP evolution for Fragmentation Functions in the Variable-Flavour-Number-Scheme. We introduce the theoretical framework by revising the next-to-leading order derivation. An extension of the formalism in electron-positron annihilation is derived at next-to-next-to leading order (NNLO) accuracy. We present an analytical form of the matching condition for light-flavour to hadron Fragmentation Function at NNLO. Outlooks regarding the missing NNLO threshold conditions are discussed.
        Based on arXiv:2407.07623 in collaboration with Leonardo Bonino (UZH).

        Speaker: Christian Biello (Max-Planck Institute for Physics)
      • 14:55
        Factorization and resummation for sequential recombination jet cross sections 25m

        We extend the class of factorization theorems for non-global observables from fixed angular constraints to cross sections defined in terms of sequential jet clustering. The associated hard and soft functions depend not only on the directions of the hard partons, but also on their energy fractions. We derive the one-loop anomalous dimension of the hard functions that drives the leading-logarithmic resummation. The anomalous dimension imposes energy ordering, which simplifies the clustering sequence. We perform resummations for gap-between-jet observables defined with different jet algorithms and explain the effects of the clustering on the importance of secondary emissions and on the effective gap size.

        Speaker: Jürg Haag (UZH)
      • 15:20
        Open bottom production at hadron colliders at NNLO+NNLL 25m

        In this talk, I will present the first calculation of open bottom production at hadron colliders at NNLO+NNLL, i.e. a next-to-next-to-leading-order calculation that resums collinear mass logarithms at next-to-next-to-leading-logarithmic accuracy. This new computation achieves significantly reduced scale uncertainties compared to previous calculations, with errors of just a few percent at high transverse momenta. I will explain how two separate calculations, one with $n_f=4$ and one with $n_f=5$, are combined and matched to obtain the final NNLO+NNLL result. To perform comparisons to data, the hadronisation and decay of the b-quark is included in the theory calculation where needed, yielding predictions for a wide range of final states.

        Speaker: Terry Generet (University of Cambridge)
      • 15:45
        Towards an accurate and efficient event generation for multi-jet processes 25m

        We propose an event generation for LHC multi-jet processes (up to 10 external particles) in a two-step procedure based on the colour expansion of the tree-level matrix-element. In this way, in the first step the phase-space integration is performed on the leading-colour accurate expansion of the amplitudes. At this step, we compare several choices of the integration variables. In a second step, the leading-colour accurate events are reweighted to achieve next-to-leading colour accurate and full-colour accurate events. We investigate the efficiency of the various integration variable choices and assess the efficiency of the full picture of generating tree-level events of high multiplicities.

        Speaker: Timea Vitos (Uppsala University, ELTE Budapest)
    • 16:10 16:35
      Subtraction, slicing and loop/tree duality Room C1

      Room C1

      • 16:10
        Local cancellation of IR singularities: an automated algorithm based on OpenLoops+LTD 25m

        We elaborate on the construction of a new automated NLO generator developed within the OpenLoops framework. This new algorithm employs the Loop Tree Duality (LTD) method to achieve the local cancellation of IR singularities by directly combining virtual and real corrections at the integrand level. In this talk we focus on a novel technique that enables local IR cancellations in a general and automated way, and present first numerical results.

        Speakers: Gloria Bertolotti (University of Sussex), Jonas Lindert (University of Sussex)
    • 16:35 17:10
      Coffee Break 35m
    • 17:10 17:20
      HP2 2026 annoucement 10m
      Speaker: Gudrun Heinrich (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
    • 17:20 18:20
      Plenary Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Alessandro Vicini (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 17:20
        The NNPDF4.0 aN$^3$LO Parton Distributions 30m

        We extend the existing next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) NNPDF4.0 sets of parton distribution functions (PDFs) to approximate next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order (aN$^3$LO).
        We construct an approximation to the N3LO splitting functions that includes all available partial information from both fixed-order computations and from small and large x resummation, and estimate the uncertainty on this approximation by varying the set of basis functions used to construct the approximation. We include known N3LO corrections to deep-inelastic scattering structure functions and extend the FONLL general-mass scheme to $\mathcal{O}(\alpha_s^3)$ accuracy.
        We determine a set of aN$^3$LO PDFs by accounting both for the uncertainty on splitting functions due to the incomplete knowledge of N3LO terms, and to the uncertainty related to missing higher corrections (MHOU), estimated by scale variation, through a theory covariance matrix formalism. We assess the perturbative stability of the resulting PDFs, we study the impact of MHOUs on them, and we compare our results to the aN$^3$LO PDFs from the MSHT group. We examine the phenomenological impact of aN$^3$LO corrections on parton luminosities at the LHC, and give a first assessment of the impact of aN$^3$LO PDFs on the Higgs and Drell-Yan total production cross-sections.
        We find that the aN$^3$LO NNPDF4.0 PDFs are consistent within uncertainties with their NNLO counterparts, that they improve the description of the global dataset and the perturbative convergence of Higgs and Drell-Yan cross-sections, and that MHOUs on PDFs decrease substantially with the increase of perturbative order.

        Speaker: Giacomo Magni (Nikhef, VU Amsterdam)
      • 17:50
        Towards Z+jet NNLO event generation matched to parton showers in the GENEVA Monte Carlo 30m

        I will briefly review the GENEVA framework, which combines the resummation of a jet resolution variable
        up to N3LL with the NNLO fixed-order corrections into a single event generator, eventually matched to the parton shower.
        This provides the highest accuracy in the strong coupling constant at both small and large jet resolution scales.
        I will focus on the recent progress and challenges in the implementation of the Z+ jet production and the LHC
        and discuss possible developments.

        Speaker: Simone Alioli (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
    • 19:30 23:00
      Dinner 3h 30m
    • 09:30 10:30
      Plenary Room B3

      Room B3

      Convener: Massimiliano Grazzini (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 09:30
        NNLO corrections with local subtractions 30m

        We discuss a methodology for calculating second-order cross sections based on the use of local subtractions for soft and collinear singularities and built implementing suitable momentum mappings and well known universal limiting formulae. With appropriate adjustments, it is possible to carry out the analytical calculation of the integrated version of the subtractions, which brings reliable numerical control of predictions.

        Speaker: Francesco Tramontano (Universita` di Napoli e INFN)
      • 10:00
        Towards a fully general subtraction scheme: nested soft-collinear 2.0 30m

        In this talk I will present recent progress in the generalisation of the nested soft-collinear subtraction scheme to multi-parton final state processes. The scheme has already been successfully applied to scatterings involving a limited number of coloured partons, and it has shown remarkable flexibility and good numerical performances. I will discuss how to overcome the difficulties that arise from going beyond the previous implementations, and the crucial ingredients to tackle hadron-hadron scattering into arbitrary final states at next-to-next-to-leading order in QCD.

        Speaker: Chiara Signorile-Signorile (Max-Planck-Institut für Physik)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee Break 30m
    • 11:00 12:50
      Plenary Stefano Catani
      Convener: Massimiliano Grazzini (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 11:00
        About Stefano Catani 10m
        Speaker: Massimiliano Grazzini (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)
      • 11:10
        Precise predictions for ttH production at the LHC 30m

        The top quark plays a pivotal role in particle physics, providing a powerful tool to test the SM and physics beyond it. Indeed, its large mass, near the electroweak scale, enables a detailed scrutiny of its interactions with the Higgs and electroweak bosons. Although its total rate is only few percent of the dominant Higgs production mode via gluon fusion, the hadroproduction of a top--antitop pair in association with a Higgs boson ($t \bar t H$) is crucial since it provides a direct access to the top Yukawa coupling. Given the precise experimental measurements expected at the HL-LHC, improving the accuracy of the corresponding theoretical predictions is of high priority.

        In this talk we will present NNLO results in QCD, obtained by relying on the $q_T$-subtraction formalism for the treatment of infrared singularities arising at the intermediate stages of the calculation. A crucial ingredient are the relevant two-loop scattering amplitudes. The exact two-loop amplitudes being currently out of reach, we rely on physically motivated and reasonable approximations for this part of the calculation. Beyond our previously published results for the total cross section at NNLO, we will present a more sophisticated procedure, based on the combination of a soft-boson approximation and massification approach. We will also include the full tower of NLO EW corrections, thus providing the best theoretical prediction for $t \bar t H$ production up to date. Results for the total cross section as well as for several phenomenologically relevant distributions will be discussed.

        Speaker: Chiara Savoini (University of Zurich (UZH))
      • 11:40
        Catani's collinear factorisation to all perturbative orders in QCD 30m

        We consider the most general factorisation properties of scattering amplitudes in perturbative QCD in both collinear and collinear-soft limits. While scattering amplitudes obey strict collinear factorisation (SCF) in the time-like collinear region to all perturbative orders, SCF is known to break in the so-called space-like region. We generalise previously known results of SCF breaking to more than one collinear direction. We also extend our analysis to the simultaneous collinear-soft factorisation.

        Speaker: Prasanna Kumar Dhani (IFIC, CSIC-UV)
      • 12:10
        The solution is in the vacuum 30m

        The artificial separation between loop and tree-level contributions is at the origin of many technical difficulties in quantum field theory at high perturbative orders. The original motivation for the loop-tree duality (LTD), as explained in the seminal paper by Stefano Catani, was to circumvent this separation by opening the loops to tree-level objects in such a way that both contributions would be treated on the same footing. One of the unexpected properties of LTD is that the integrand of scattering amplitudes becomes manifestly causal. By exploiting this physically motivated property, we propose vacuum amplitudes in LTD as the optimal building blocks to assemble theoretical predictions at colliders.

        Speaker: German Rodrigo (IFIC Valencia)