1–8 mars 2008
La Thuile
Fuseau horaire Europe/Paris

Session

Tevatron, LHC and Brout-Englert-Higgs Mechanism

02am
2 mars 2008, 08:30
La Thuile

La Thuile

Rencontres de Moriond Planibel Hotel - La Thuile Aosta Valley 11016 La Thuile (Aosta), Italy Phone : 39 (0)1 65 88 45 41 Fax : 39 (0)1 65 88 45 35

Documents de présentation

Aucun document.

  1. M. Kohei Yorita (University of Chicago)
    02/03/2008 08:40
    I will present the most recent results on SM Higgs boson search from the CDF and Dzero experiments at the Tevatron at Fermilab.
    Go to contribution page
  2. Dr Lidija Zivkovic (Columbia University)
    02/03/2008 09:00
    We present here searches for the Standard Model Higgs boson at high mass. We show results of the searches in two channels, H->WW->lnulnu and WH->WWW(*)->lnulnu+X. The data were collected with the CDF and D0 detectors at the Tevatron collider at Fermilab, and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 1.1-2.4 fb^-1. In the absence of signal we set limits on the cross section in units of...
    Go to contribution page
  3. Dr Michel Tytgat (ULB - Université Libre de Bruxelles)
    02/03/2008 09:20
    We will discuss a simple extension of the SM with a dark matter candidate in the form of one of the neutral components of an extra scalar doublet, the so-called Inert Doublet Model. In particular I show how the EW symmetry may be broken by loops effects from the inert doublet.
    Go to contribution page
  4. Dr Andrew Haas (Columbia University)
    02/03/2008 09:40
    The status of searches for Higgs bosons in the MSSM and more exotic models will be shown from the D0 and CDF experiments at the Fermilab Tevatron.
    Go to contribution page
  5. Lyndon Evans (CERN Switzerland)
    02/03/2008 10:10
  6. M. Gustavo Burdman (Sao Paulo Univ. Brazil)
    02/03/2008 10:35
  7. Prof. Francisco del Aguila (Universidad de Granada)
    02/03/2008 11:00
    We update the constraints from electroweak precision data on new leptons and scalars that can give Majorana masses to light neutrinos. The allowed mixings and couplings are large enough to make these particles observable at LHC, as long as an extra symmetry suppresses their contributions to light neutrino masses.
    Go to contribution page
Ordre du jour en construction...