Undergraduate

WIDG Seminar, Fernando Flor, Yale, "Statistical Hadronization Model Calculations of Chemical Freeze-out Parameters from Heavy Ion and Elementary Particle Collisions"

Statistical Hadronization Models (SHMs) have successfully calculated hadronic particle yields to over nine orders of magnitude in high energy collisions of heavy ions and elementary particles at both RHIC and the LHC. Assuming a thermally equilibrated system, experimental final state particle yields from collisions measured by the STAR and ALICE detectors serve as anchors for the determination of common freeze-out parameters – namely, the chemical freeze-out temperature and the baryon chemical potential – in the QCD phase diagram through thermal fits within the SHM framework.

EHS Orientation for Wright Lab Research Shop Users

Wright Lab will host three identical 1-hour Environmental Health and Safety (EHS) Shop Orientations on Wednesday, January 18 at 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, January 31 at 10:00 a.m., and Friday, February 3 at 11:30 a.m. The EHS shop orientation is offered each semester and is required to be taken once by anyone who would like to gain access and make use of the research and teaching shops at Wright Lab.
For more information on the shop facilities at Wright Lab see:
https://wlab.yale.edu/facilities

Elusives Journal Club, Alberto Ressa, Yale, "Sub-GeV dark matter detection with electron recoils in carbon nanotube"

Alberto Ressa will lead a discussion on the paper ” Sub-GeV dark matter detection with electron recoils in carbon nanotube” found at https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0370269317309565?via%…
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.

Elusives Journal Club, Jorge Torres, Yale, "Earth tomography with supernova neutrinos at future neutrino detectors"

Jorge Torres will lead a discussion on the paper “Earth tomography with supernova neutrinos at future neutrino detectors” found at http://arxiv.org/abs/2303.09369v1
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.

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