IPAC is the main international event for the worldwide particle accelerator field and industry. The IPAC’23 edition is jointly organized by the accelerator communities in Europe, Americas and Asia and is hosted by Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare and Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste. Attendees will learn about world-wide highlights in cutting-edge accelerator research and development, hear about new projects, gain the latest insights into accelerator facilities across the globe and, last not least, 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’23 will offer the most complete review on new ideas, important results and ground-breaking technologies in the field of particle accelerator science and technology. All this is in one week! An exceptional opportunity!
Post-conference tours will be organized to the physics laboratories of INFN-LNL and Elettra, equipped with modern hadron and electron accelerators.
For information on the venue and accommodations, use the “UCLA Conference Website” link to the left or go to https://conferences.pa.ucla.edu/dark-matter-2023
For registration, please click on the “Registration” option on the left of this Indico page. After you register on this website, to pay for the registration and/or additional banquet tickets, please use the “Registration-Payment” link to the left or https://commerce.cashnet.com/DARKMATTER
Please note that the early registration fee ($600) will change on Jan. 31st, 2023, at 16:00 (4pm) Pacific Time into our regular registration fee ($650) until March 8th at the same time. After which, the late registration fee ($700) will be charged. We encourage participants to register as early as possible to facilitate our planning.
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 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.
The main topics of the conference are:
- Gravitational waves detection from the coalescence of black holes and neutron star mergers
- Detection and analysis of gravitational waves in the era of multimessenger astronomy
- Strong field tests of General Relativity (Pulsars, Black holes,…)
- Quantum sensors
- Pulsar timing
- Fundamental physics with gravitational waves
- Tests of the equivalence principle
- Astrometry, solar system ephemerides and observational gravity tests
- Space geodesy, Earth and Planetary Gravity, Navigation
- Clocks, lasers and fundamental constants
- Tests of GR and alternative theories (CPT and Lorentz violation,…)
- Modified gravity theories
- Short range gravity and Casimir effect: classical, atom and neutron tests
- Long range gravity, dark matter, dark energy
- Cosmology, primordial black holes and gravitational waves
The 2022 International Conference on the Structure of Baryons, Baryons-2022, will take place in Seville, the capital of Andalusia, Spain, in the period of 7-11 November 2022. This conference series began in 1970 at Duke University. The Seville meeting follows the successful events in Glasgow (2013), Tallahassee (2016), and related-school in Seville (2021); and will canvass similar themes. It will highlight the physics of baryons and related subjects in astro-, nuclear- and particle-physics, developing our understanding of the spectrum, structure and reactions of baryons using all available tools. Particular emphasis will be placed on elucidating the role of confinement and emergent mass, key non-perturbative phenomena within the Standard Model. Recent developments at existing facilities and those anticipated from the next-generation will also be showcased.
Main Topics Include:
- Spectroscopy of hadrons.
- Hadron-hadron Interactions.
- Electromagnetic and weak interactions.
- Hadrons at finite density and temperature.
- Structure of hadrons.
- Theory for strong QCD.
- New facilities and instrumentation.
We are pleased to announce the Higgs 2022 Conference that will take place in the on-site format.
The conference will focus on new experimental and theoretical results on the Higgs boson.
Latest measurement of the Higgs boson properties and recent theoretical developments in the Higgs boson sector, in the Standard Model and in physics Beyond the Standard Model will be presented and discussed at the Conference.
Contributions will be organised in several parallel and plenary sessions.
During the the Conference, the ten years anniversary of Higgs boson discovery will be celebrated with social events opened to the general public.
The conference is planned to be kept in hybrid format with a substantial in-person participation, in compliance with the relevant COVID-19 regulations at the time of the meeting.
Registration is now open for the International Conference on Quantum Technology for High-Energy Physics, which will be hosted at CERN on 1–4 November 2022.
Following CERN’s successful workshop on quantum computing in 2018, this is the first edition of the #QT4HEP conference taking place to further investigate the nascent quantum technology and its great promise to support scientific research.
Bringing the whole community together, we aim to foster common activities and knowledge sharing, discuss the recent developments in the quantum science field and keep looking for activities within HEP — and beyond — that can most benefit from the application of quantum technologies.
The event will cover a number of topics ranging from four quantum technology areas (theory, sensing, computing, communication), to collaborations with academia and industry, entrepreneurship, training and education activities.
There will also be a series of tutorials and hands-on sessions co-developed with companies and providers, to explore the fascinating field of quantum science to its possible fullest.
We look forward to welcoming you to the event!
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