Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS April Meeting
Wednesday–Saturday, April 3–6, 2024; Sacramento & Virtual
Session K01: Kavli Foundation Keynote Plenary Session: New Challenges and Big Questions for the Next DecadeLive Streamed Plenary Undergrad Friendly
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Sponsoring Units: APS Chair: Andre de Gouvea, Northwestern University Room: SAFE Credit Union Convention Center Ballroom A1, Floor 2 |
Friday, April 5, 2024 8:30AM - 9:06AM |
K01.00001: New Challenges and Big Questions for Nuclear Physics Invited Speaker: Gail E Dodge The nuclear science community recently adopted a new Long Range Plan, titled A New Era of Discovery. An overview of the plan will be presented, with an emphasis on the scientific opportunities and challenges for the next decade. Current and future efforts to ensure a welcoming and respectful climate, as well as to lower barriers to participation in our science, will be discussed. |
Friday, April 5, 2024 9:06AM - 9:42AM |
K01.00002: New Challenges and Big Questions for High Energy Physics: Particle Physics Project Prioritization Panel (P5) Invited Speaker: Hitoshi Muryama I describe the long-range planning process in particle physics called P5. It made recommendations on the US particle physics program for the next ten years within the twenty-year context for budget scenarios given by the funding agencies. I summarize the main recommendations and the rationales behind them. |
Friday, April 5, 2024 9:42AM - 10:18AM |
K01.00003: New Challenges and Big Questions for Accelerator Physics Invited Speaker: Andrei A Seryi Studies of the fundamental properties of nature – quantum laws governing the subatomic world of nuclei, protons and neutrons, and tiny elementary particles – require advanced scientific tools with ever increasing reach and precision. Particle accelerators and colliders are instruments that enabled many fundamental discoveries in the past. The recent long-range planning reports produced in 2023 by the nuclear physics community, and by the particle physics community, outlined ambitious plans for accelerator-based exploration programs involving the Electron-Ion Collider and LBNF/PIP-II projects; a possible Higgs factory such as a linear collider ILC or circular collider FCC-ee, eventually leading to an energy frontier collider FCC-hh; or an advanced concept presently undergoing R&D – a muon collider or plasma wakefield acceleration collider. In this presentation, we will review the main questions that need to be answered on the path to the realization of these discovery machines, highlighting the unique challenges of each concept as well as discussing the themes that are common to any such collider. |
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