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Where is Particle Physics Going?

The answer to the question in the title is: in search of new physics beyond the Standard Model, for which there are many motivations, including the likely instability of the electroweak vacuum, dark matter, the origin of matter, the masses of neutrinos, the naturalness of the hierarchy of mass scale...

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Autor principal: Ellis, John
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S0217751X17460010
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2259332
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author Ellis, John
author_facet Ellis, John
author_sort Ellis, John
collection CERN
description The answer to the question in the title is: in search of new physics beyond the Standard Model, for which there are many motivations, including the likely instability of the electroweak vacuum, dark matter, the origin of matter, the masses of neutrinos, the naturalness of the hierarchy of mass scales, cosmological inflation and the search for quantum gravity. So far, however, there are no clear indications about the theoretical solutions to these problems, nor the experimental strategies to resolve them. It makes sense now to prepare various projects for possible future accelerators, so as to be ready for decisions when the physics outlook becomes clearer. Paraphrasing George Harrison, “If you don’t yet know where you’re going, any road may take you there.”
id cern-2259332
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2017
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spelling cern-22593322023-10-04T08:52:51Zdoi:10.1142/S0217751X17460010http://cds.cern.ch/record/2259332engEllis, JohnWhere is Particle Physics Going?hep-exParticle Physics - Experimenthep-phParticle Physics - PhenomenologyThe answer to the question in the title is: in search of new physics beyond the Standard Model, for which there are many motivations, including the likely instability of the electroweak vacuum, dark matter, the origin of matter, the masses of neutrinos, the naturalness of the hierarchy of mass scales, cosmological inflation and the search for quantum gravity. So far, however, there are no clear indications about the theoretical solutions to these problems, nor the experimental strategies to resolve them. It makes sense now to prepare various projects for possible future accelerators, so as to be ready for decisions when the physics outlook becomes clearer. Paraphrasing George Harrison, “If you don’t yet know where you’re going, any road may take you there.”The answer to the question in the title is: in search of new physics beyond the Standard Model, for which there are many motivations, including the likely instability of the electroweak vacuum, dark matter, the origin of matter, the masses of neutrinos, the naturalness of the hierarchy of mass scales, cosmological inflation and the search for quantum gravity. So far, however, there are no clear indications about the theoretical solutions to these problems, nor the experimental strategies to resolve them. It makes sense now to prepare various projects for possible future accelerators, so as to be ready for decisions when the physics outlook becomes clearer. Paraphrasing George Harrison, "If you don't yet know where you're going, any road may take you there."arXiv:1704.02821KCL-PH-TH-2017-18CERN-TH-2017-080oai:cds.cern.ch:22593322017-04-10
spellingShingle hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
Ellis, John
Where is Particle Physics Going?
title Where is Particle Physics Going?
title_full Where is Particle Physics Going?
title_fullStr Where is Particle Physics Going?
title_full_unstemmed Where is Particle Physics Going?
title_short Where is Particle Physics Going?
title_sort where is particle physics going?
topic hep-ex
Particle Physics - Experiment
hep-ph
Particle Physics - Phenomenology
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1142/S0217751X17460010
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2259332
work_keys_str_mv AT ellisjohn whereisparticlephysicsgoing