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Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2019 – Visbal

227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Speaker: Eli Visbal Title: Revealing the First Billion Years of the Universe Abstract: How the first stars and galaxies formed is an exciting open question in astrophysics and cosmology. Answering this question will shed light on the earliest stages of galaxy evolution and test models of dark matter particle physics. In this talk, I shall

Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2019 – Brinkerhoff

227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Speaker: Andrew Brinkerhoff Title: Higgs couplings: GREAT and small Abstract: Just 5 years after the Higgs boson was discovered, the CMS and ATLAS experiments at CERN have precisely measured most of its properties. The observed Higgs lifetime, spin, and parity, and its interactions with weak bosons, bottom quarks, and tau leptons all agree with the

Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2019 – Mohammadi

227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Speaker: Abdollah Mohammadi (Kansas State) Title: LHC and the quest of understanding the Universe Abstract: Almost a decade has passed since the first proton-proton beam collisions took place at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. The discovery of the Standard Model Higgs boson in 2012 represented a thrilling triumph for the particle physics community

Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2019 – Duric

227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Speaker: Senka Duric Title: Electroweak and Higgs physics at the LHC: The present and the future Abstract: Contrary to all expectations, experiments at the LHC did not discover any fundamentally new particles other than the Higgs boson. However, a lot can be learned from precision measurements of Higgs boson properties and the production of vector

Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2019 – Fleischauer

227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Speaker: Michael Fleischhauer (Univ. of Kaiserslautern) Title: Non-local nonlinear optics using Rydberg atoms Abstract: Photons do not easily interact with each other and nonlinear processes
on the few-photon level can usually be realized only under very special
conditions. Coupling of weak light fields to atoms involving Rydberg states
may change this picture. Under conditions of electromagnetically induced
transparency (EIT)

Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2019 – Rorie

227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United States

Speaker: Jamal Rorie (Rice) Title: Dark Matter, CMS, and the Search for Physics Beyond the Standard Model Abstract: There is compelling observational evidence for the existence of dark matter, but it is not currently included in the Standard Model of elementary particle and their interactions. The recently observed Higgs boson may interact with dark matter