YCRC Research Support Office Hours
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
YCRC Research Support staff are available to answer questions related to research computing and provide ad hoc training.
No appointment necessary. Join at https://yale.zoom.us/my/ycrcsupport
The ALICE experiment was built to study many-body Quantum Chromo-Dynamics (QCD) at high temperature and effectively zero baryon density, using relativistic heavy-ion collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). These collisions form the Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP), a state of matter where quarks and gluons are no longer confined inside hadrons. The ALICE physics program centers around the key questions related to QGP phenomena.
Determining the nature of dark matter (DM), a mysterious ‘missing mass’ in the universe, is crucial to completing our models of cosmology and high-energy physics. However, repeated null searches for the most favored DM candidates has motivated a community re-evaluation of the theoretical biases towards this parameter space. Two recent areas of interest, among the many decades of potential DM masses, are particle-like ‘light DM’ with masses less than a GeV and wave-like candidates of O(10) ueV. In this talk, I will discuss R&D work and experiments that seek to probe both avenues.