Sezione
HEP Colloquia 2025
by
→
Europe/Rome
Sala Consiliare (Department of Physics)
Sala Consiliare
Department of Physics
Description
Quantum Gravity Phenomenology: from high energy astrophysics to cold-atom interferometry
In the first part of this talk I will present how astrophysical neutrinos can be used to test in-vacuo dispersion, one of the most studied candidate effects of quantum gravity which predicts an energy dependence of the speed of ultrarelativistic particles. In particular I will discuss how the failure to observe neutrinos from GRBs could, in principle, be attributed to in-vacuo dispersion that makes neutrinos arrive with an energy dependent delay with respect to their electromagnetic counterparts. Finally, I will also contemplate the possibility that, assuming in-vacuo dispersion, the recently announced ultra-high-energy neutrino 230213A with energy of ∼220 PeV, might be a GRB neutrino.
In the second part of the talk I will discuss phenomenological opportunities arising from the deep-infrared regime. In fact, several approaches to quantum gravity predict infrared counterparts to ultraviolet effects due to the so-called IR/UV mixing mechanism. I will discuss how some implications for IR/UV mixing of some recent cold-atom-interferometry measurements allow us to estabilish Planckian bounds on the characteristic quantum-gravity scale, and show that IR/UV mixing can provide a solution to the puzzling discrepancy between cesium- and rubidium-based atom-interferometric determinations of the fine-structure constant.
Organised by
Prof. Umberto D'Alesio - umberto.dalesio@ca.infn.it
Dr. Nanako Kato - nanako.kato@dsf.unica.it
Contact