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U of O High Energy Physics Seminars

Seminars - Fall 2005

October 5, 2005 (Wednesday) Nilendra Deshpande, University of Oregon

October 17, 2005 - Postponed till January 23, 2006 - Hans Krimm, Goddard Space Center

October 17, 2005 (Monday) TBA

October 31- November 4, 2005 (Monday-Friday) Ultra-Mini Workshop on Physics Beyond the Standard Model

November 28, 2005 (Monday) Gordon Watts, University of Washington

UO Center for High Energy Physics

Fall 2004 Winter 2005 Spring 2005 Summer 2005
Fall 2003 Winter 2004 Spring 2004 Summer 2004
Fall 2002 Winter 2003 Spring 2003 Summer 2003
Fall 2001 Winter 2002 Spring 2002 Summer 2002
Fall 2000 Winter 2001 Spring 2001 Summer 2001
Fall 1999 Winter 2000 Spring 2000 Summer 2000

October 5, 2005 - Wednesday

Nilendra Deshpande, University of Oregon

Is There a New Weakly Interacting Boson with Mass 214 MeV?

I will explore the possibility that the newly observed di muon events in Sigma Hyperon decays are from a New Boson of mass 214 MeV.

4:00 pm, 472 Willamette Hall

Refreshments served at 3:45

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October 17, 2005 - Monday

TBA

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October 17, 2005 - Monday

POSTPONED till January 23, 2006

Hans Krimm, Goddard Space Center

Swift: Results From (nearly) the First Year of the Mission

The Swift gamma-ray burst explorer was launched on Nov. 20, 2004 from Cape Canaveral, Florida. The first instrument onboard became fully operational less than a month later. Since that time the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) on Swift has detected more than eighty gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), most of which have also been observed within two minutes by the Swift narrow-field instruments: the X-Ray Telescope (XRT) and the Ultra-Violet and Optical Telescope (UVOT). Swift trigger notices are distributed worldwide within seconds of the trigger through the Gamma-ray burst Coordinates Network (GCN) and a substantial fraction of GRBs have been followed up by ground and space-based telescopes, ranging in wavelength from radio to TeV. Results have included the first rapid localization of a short GRB and further validation of the theory that short and long bursts have different origins; detailed observations of the short-term power-law decay of burst afterglows leading to an improved understanding of the fireball model; and detection of the most distant GRB ever found. Swift is also a sensitive X-ray observatory with capabilities to monitor galactic and extragalactic transients on a daily basis, carry out the first all-sky hard X-ray survey since HEAO-1, and study in detail the spectra of X-ray transients. In this talk I will provide a broad overview of the Swift mission and its most significant results, both in GRB science and in the search for and study of hard X-ray sources.

4:00 pm, 472 Willamette Hall

Refreshments served at 3:45

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Ultra-Mini Workshop on Physics Beyond the Standard Model

Times and locations vary

October 31, 2005 - Monday
Hooman Davoudiasl,
University of Wisconsin

Detecting Solar Axions Using Earth's Magnetic Field

4:00 pm, 472 Willamette Hall

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November 1, 2005 - Tuesday
Paddy Fox,
LBNL

Naturalness and Higgs Decays in the MSSM with a Singlet

4:00 pm, 472 Willamette Hall

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November 2, 2005 - Wednesday
Tilman Plehn,
CERN

More on Supersymmetry at the LHC

2:00 pm, 472 Willamette Hall

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November 3, 2005 - Thursday
Roni Harnik,
SLAC

The Twin Higgs

12:30 pm, 472 Willamette Hall

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November 3, 2005 - Thursday
Department Colloquium
Boris Kayser,
Fermilab

The Neutrino World:Present and Future

4:00 pm, 100 Willamette Hall

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November 28, 2005 - Monday

Gordon Watts, University of Washington

The Search for Single Top at the Tevatron

2:30 pm, 472 Willamette Hall

Refreshments served at 2:15

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