Michael J. Ramsey-Musolf
Professor of Physics, University of Massachusetts/Amherst and Director, Amherst Center for Fundamental Interactions

时间:10月15日(周三)上午10:00
地点:唐仲英楼B501

内容简介:
Explaining why the universe contains more matter than antimatter remains a open problem at the interface of particle and nuclear physics with cosmology. While the Standard Model of particle physics cannot provide an explanation, various candidates for physics beyond the Standard Model may do so by breaking fundamental symmetries. Among the most interesting and testable scenarios are those that would have generated the matter-antimatter asymmetry roughly 10 picoseconds after the Big Bang. I discuss recent theoretical ideas for such scenarios, developments in computing their dynamics, and prospects for testing their viability with measurements at the high energy and high intensity frontiers.