PLANCK2025 is the 27th in the series of conferences “From the Planck scale to the electroweak scale”. The conference is intended to bring together researchers working in high-energy physics, covering a wide variety of formal, phenomenological and cosmological theoretical topics related to the present experimental programmes. We would appreciate a talk on present and future experiments.
The Thirteenth Annual Large Hadron Collider Physics (LHCP2025) conference will take place in Taipei from 5th to 9th May 2025.
The LHCP conference series started in 2013 after a successful fusion of two international conferences, “Physics at Large Hadron Collider Conference” and “Hadron Collider Physics Symposium”. The programme will contain a detailed review of the latest experimental and theoretical results on collider physics, with many final results of the Large Hadron Collider Run-2, potentially a first glimpse of the upgraded accelerator and detector operation in Run-3, and discussions on further research directions within the high energy particle physics community, both in theory and experiment.
The main goal of the conference is to provide intense and lively discussions between experimenters and theorists in such research areas as the Standard Model Physics and Beyond, the Higgs Boson, Heavy Quark Physics and Heavy Ion Physics as well as to share recent progress in the high luminosity upgrades and future collider developments.
IPAC is one of the most international event for the worldwide particle accelerator field and industry. The IPAC’24 edition is sponsored, financially and technically, by the IEEE Nuclear Plasma Science Society(NPSS) and theAmerican Physical Society (APS) Division of Physics of Beams (DPB)and hosted by OakRidge National Lab (ORNL) a Department of Energy.
Pioneering research and development in accelerator technologies will be presented by global experts.Project leaders will present new accelerator projects, progress on active upgrades and operational status of accelerator facilities across the globe. Attendees will have the opportunity to meet their peers and to make new business contacts. Over 1,200 delegates and 80 industry exhibitors are expected to attend this remarkable and noteworthy event. IPAC’24 will offer the most complete review on new ideas, important results and ground-breaking technologies in the field of particle accelerator science and technology.
22nd Conference on Flavour Physics and CP Violation
(more information TBA)
Dark Matter 2023: From the Smallest to the Largest Scales is a conference devoted to discussing the latest developments in the field of dark matter, from experiments to theory and phenomenology. DM2023 will be held at Hotel Chiqui, just a few steps from the beautiful Sardinero Beach in the city of Santander, a well known Summer resort on the northern coast of Spain.
The meeting starts on the afternoon of May 29th and will end after the morning session on Jun 2nd.(approx. at 1:30 PM). On Tuesday 30th May, we will enjoy a welcome cocktail reception (included in the conference fee) at the beautiful Palacio de la Magdalena.
The Flavor Physics and CP Violation (FPCP) conferences are intended for the exchange of new ideas, for presentation of the latest experimental and theoretical results in the areas included in the conference title, and for discussions about future projects in the field. The conference is open to all experimental and theoretical physicists interested in the field.
This conference series results from the merging of the Heavy Flavor Physics Conference and the International Conference on B Physics and CP Violation in 2002.
The 25th Planck conference in the series “From the Planck scale to the electroweak scale” will take place in Warsaw, May 22-26, 2023. It will be focused on “Hot topics in particle physics and cosmology: theory facing experimental prospects”. Thus, its mostly theoretical character will be guided and organized according to the following blocks:
- Axions and axion-like particles
- Dark matter
- Flavour physics
- Gravitational waves and the universe’s evolution
- LHC and HLHC potential
- Neutrino physics
Important dates
- Abstract submission deadline: 10 April 2023
- Decision on abstract acceptance: 10-18 April 2023
- Early registration deadline: 21 April 2023
- Regular registration deadline: 22 May 2023
- Conference: 22-26 May 2023
The concepts of using quantum information methods and tools in high-energy physics are triggering more and more attention in our community in recent years, after the pioneering workshop which took place at the Brookhaven National Laboratory in 2018. We are convinced that now it is the time for the follow-up and the discussion of new achievements.
Registration:
Registration and call for abstracts were closed on April, 14.
Conference fee:
There is a conference fee of 200 EUR (900 PLN) which covers lunches and coffee breaks. Please make a bank transfer to one of the following bank accounts:
payment in PLN: PL07 1240 4722 1111 0000 4855 9692
payment in EUR: PL04 1240 2294 1978 0010 7072 2467
A major goal in strong-interaction physics is to understand the nature of hadrons, which make up visible matter, and much research activity revolves around two fundamental questions: what are hadrons made up of and how does Quantum Chromo-dynamics (QCD), the strong-interaction component of the Standard Model, produce them? Although these questions are simple, the answers may not be. To address these questions, spectroscopy is a valuable and time-honored tool, as it enables us to understand the structure of mesons, baryons and exotics and how they are produced. In this context, the recent discovery of many new hadronic states, in particular the plethora of observed X, Y, Z states, is exciting, as these objects challenge the commonplace view of hadrons as either quark-antiquark or three-quark color-singlet states.
Experimental investigations of the hadron structure and spectrum are performed via hadron-hadron scattering processes, photo- and electro-production by nucleons or, more recently, by means of heavy-meson decays at world-wide accelerator facilities. In the last decade, these investigations have yielded an enormous amount of data, which have vastly improved our knowledge of the baryon and meson spectrum and enabled us to establish the existence of new states, together with an empirical determination of their angular momentum, content, and spin. Recent highlights are observations of multi-quark states outside our well-known hadronic pictures, which have been interpreted as the long sought-after penta- and tetraquark systems.
However, identifying new states and their quantum numbers requires complex analysis (so-called partial wave analysis), which sometimes relies on model assumptions. For many of the new states, we still do not know the quantum numbers. Different theoretical models for the structure of the new states give different predictions of their quantum numbers. Therefore, the composition of many states remains controversial. Indeed, some of these newly discovered hadrons seem to fit the picture of compact multi-quark states, while others may qualify as molecular states or both, i.e. the superposition of a constituent-quark core and a meson cloud, and one of the main goals of this workshop will be to discuss how to distinguish them.
The CHEP conferences address the computing, networking and software issues for the world’s leading data‐intensive science experiments that currently analyze hundreds of petabytes of data using worldwide computing resources. The Conference provides a unique opportunity for computing experts across Particle and Nuclear Physics to come together to learn from each other and typically attracts over 500 participants. The event features plenary sessions, parallel sessions, and poster presentations; it publishes peer-reviewed proceedings.
The focus of the conference evolves with time to highlight changing technologies and major scientific initiatives. Through the plenary sessions, related scientific and computing topics are presented to ensure a broad and thoughtful program that engages the community. This edition of the conference will place special emphasis on high-performance data organization, management, and access (DOMA), a topic of interest and relevance throughout the scientific community.
The nine parallel session tracks focus on specific topics and often have very animated discussions on the technical merits of various approaches. Birds of a feather sessions promote international communities of common interest.
The CHEP 2023 organizers are committed to fostering a supportive and diverse environment with opportunities for everyone. We take a positive attitude towards having full participation from the whole community and everybody in the field is encouraged to attend. Attendance of students at CHEP 2023 is strongly encouraged. A diversity event will be scheduled.
The CHEP conference location rotates between the Americas, Asia and Europe, and is typically held eighteen months apart. The CHEP 2023 conference will be hosted by the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (Jefferson Lab) at the newly renovated Norfolk Marriott Waterside hotel in Norfolk, Virginia.
The conference will be held from Monday, May 8, 2023, through Friday, May 12, 2023. For the most up-to-date travel guidelines, please reference https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/travelers/international-travel-during-covid19.html.
A WLCG/HSF pre-conference workshop will be held on the prior weekend (May 6-7).