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UK funding (£1,057,868): Gauge Theories and Strings in the LHC Era Ukri1 Oct 2011 UK Research and Innovation, United Kingdom

Overview

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Gauge Theories and Strings in the LHC Era

Abstract The standard model of particle physics encodes our current knowledge of the fundamental constituents of atoms and the nature of matter in the earliest moments following the Big Bang. However, our understanding of the dynamics of the standard model is limited by our ability to solve its strongly-interacting sector, quantum chromodynamics (QCD), which describes the interactions of quarks and gluons. The Swansea group is approaching this problem from two complementary perspectives. By approximating the continuum of spacetime as a discrete lattice of points, it is possible to simulate QCD on high performance computers. The group will study lattice QCD in the extreme conditions of high temperature and density which existed following the Big Bang and which can now be realised in heavy-ion collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. These investigations will be complemented by analytic insights arising from `gauge-gravity duality', a remarkable principle which relates the theories describing particle physics with properties of general relativity. The primary goal of the LHC is, however, to discover the new physics which is responsible for the generation of mass for the elementary particles. This `electroweak symmetry breaking' is the least understood part of the standard model. It may be due to the existence of a background field permeating spacetime, which gives mass to particles as they interact with it. The quantum fluctuations of this field would show up at the LHC as the famous Higgs boson. On the other hand, mass generation may be due to the existence of a new strong interaction at the TeV energy scale probed by the LHC, as described by a class of theories known in analogy with QCD as `technicolor'. Again, we are studying these theories using both gauge-gravity duality and lattice simulations. Particle physicists do not, however, believe that the standard model is the ultimate theory of nature. It is an example of a gauge theory, a theoretical framework which unifies quantum mechanics and special relativity together with the fundamental symmetries which physicists have discovered through decades of experiments with particle accelerators. A deeper unification appears possible with superstrings, which contain both gauge theories and gravity together with a new type of spacetime symmetry known as supersymmetry. The Swansea group is therefore complementing its investigations of LHC physics with research into the deeper structure of gauge fields and strings, using fundamental ideas such as gauge-gravity duality and `quantum integrability' in the search for the underlying principles behind our current theories of particle physics.
Category Research Grant
Reference ST/J00040X/1
Status Closed
Funded period start 01/10/2011
Funded period end 30/09/2014
Funded value £1,057,868.00
Source https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=ST%2FJ00040X%2F1

Participating Organisations

Swansea University
UKQCD

The filing refers to a past date, and does not necessarily reflect the current state. The current state is available on the following page: Swansea University, Swansea.

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