ALPHA Collaboration Meeting
The ALPHA Collaboration will have a 2-day meeting in WL 216 from Sept 25-26.
The ALPHA Collaboration will have a 2-day meeting in WL 216 from Sept 25-26.
This workshop is designed to introduce new users to the HPC resources available at Yale and to provide a comprehensive overview of the basic concepts needed to perform computing on the clusters.
The workshop will consist of a presentation and practical exercises spanning approximately two hours, followed by open OFFICE HOURS with the YCRC Research Support Team who will be available for questions, demonstrations, and troubleshooting. Practice scripts in python, R, and MATLAB will be available for learners to practice applying their new skills.
This workshop is designed to introduce new users to the HPC resources available at Yale and to provide a comprehensive overview of the basic concepts needed to perform computing on the clusters.
The workshop will consist of a presentation and practical exercises spanning approximately two hours, followed by open OFFICE HOURS with the YCRC Research Support Team who will be available for questions, demonstrations, and troubleshooting. Practice scripts in python, R, and MATLAB will be available for learners to practice applying their new skills.
At short distances, the proton consists of weakly interacting point-like quarks and gluons, aka partons. At high energy this picture of the proton is expected to break down before confining forces take over when soft enough gluons, that are abundantly present inside the proton, interact in a non-linear fashion. This regime of Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) is known as the saturation regime and is best described by strong classical gauge fields.
Molly Watts will lead a discussion on “Applying Superfluid Helium to Light Dark Matter Searches: Demonstration of the HeRALD Detector Concept” found at https://arxiv.org/pdf/2307.11877v1.pdf
Members in the departments of physics and astronomy who work on dark matter and neutrino-related fields are invited to get together to discuss papers related to their field. Topics include: neutrinos, dark matter, BSM physics, fundamental symmetries, precision physics and more.
Emily Pottebaum will lead a discussion on the paper “Ocean Science with the Pacific Ocean Neutrino Experiment” found at https://arxiv.org/pdf/2209.14710.pdf, with the goal of discussing both P-ONE and more generally the opportunities detector experiments have for interdisciplinary research and collaboration.
Thomas Penny will lead a discussion on the paper “HUNTER: precision massive-neutrino search based on a laser cooled atomic source” found at https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/2058-9565/abdb9b/pdf
Members in the departments of physics and astronomy who work on dark matter and neutrino-related fields are invited to get together to discuss papers related to their field. Topics include: neutrinos, dark matter, BSM physics, fundamental symmetries, precision physics and more.
Jorge Torres will be lead a discussion on the paper “Detecting High-Energy Neutrinos from Galactic Supernovae with ATLAS,” found at https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.09771v1
Members in the departments of physics and astronomy who work on dark matter and neutrino-related fields are invited to get together to discuss papers related to their field. Topics include: neutrinos, dark matter, BSM physics, fundamental symmetries, precision physics and more.
Contact Xiran Bai and Eleanor Graham for more information.
Yu-Han Tseng will lead a discussion on the paper “Direct detection of classically undetectable dark matter through quantum decoherence,” found at https://arxiv.org/pdf/1212.3061.pdf
Members in the departments of physics and astronomy who work on dark matter and neutrino-related fields are invited to get together to discuss papers related to their field. Topics include: neutrinos, dark matter, BSM physics, fundamental symmetries, precision physics and more.
Contact Xiran Bai and Eleanor Graham for more information.
Xiran Bai will lead a discussion on the paper “Stimulated emission of signal photons from dark matter waves,” found at: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2305.03700.pdf
Members in the departments of physics and astronomy who work on dark matter and neutrino-related fields are invited to get together to discuss papers related to their field. Topics include: neutrinos, dark matter, BSM physics, fundamental symmetries, precision physics and more.
Contact Xiran Bai and Eleanor Graham for more information.