High-precision $α_s$ measurements from LHC to FCC-ee

ArXiv 1512.05194 (2015)

Authors:

David d'Enterria, Peter Z Skands, S Alekhin, A Banfi, S Bethke, J Blümlein, KG Chetyrkin, D d'Enterria, G Dissertori, X Garcia I Tormo, AH Hoang, M Klasen, T Klijnsma, S Kluth, J-L Kneur, BA Kniehl, DW Kolodrubetz, J Kühn, P Mackenzie, B Malaescu, V Mateu, L Mihaila, S Moch, K Mönig, R Perez-Ramos, A Pich, J Pires, K Rabbertz, GP Salam, F Sannino, J Soto I Riera, M Srebre, IW Stewart

Abstract:

This document provides a writeup of all contributions to the workshop on "High precision measurements of $\alpha_s$: From LHC to FCC-ee" held at CERN, Oct. 12--13, 2015. The workshop explored in depth the latest developments on the determination of the QCD coupling $\alpha_s$ from 15 methods where high precision measurements are (or will be) available. Those include low-energy observables: (i) lattice QCD, (ii) pion decay factor, (iii) quarkonia and (iv) $\tau$ decays, (v) soft parton-to-hadron fragmentation functions, as well as high-energy observables: (vi) global fits of parton distribution functions, (vii) hard parton-to-hadron fragmentation functions, (viii) jets in $e^\pm$p DIS and $\gamma$-p photoproduction, (ix) photon structure function in $\gamma$-$\gamma$, (x) event shapes and (xi) jet cross sections in $e^+e^-$ collisions, (xii) W boson and (xiii) Z boson decays, and (xiv) jets and (xv) top-quark cross sections in proton-(anti)proton collisions. The current status of the theoretical and experimental uncertainties associated to each extraction method, the improvements expected from LHC data in the coming years, and future perspectives achievable in $e^+e^-$ collisions at the Future Circular Collider (FCC-ee) with $\cal{O}$(1--100 ab$^{-1}$) integrated luminosities yielding 10$^{12}$ Z bosons and jets, and 10$^{8}$ W bosons and $\tau$ leptons, are thoroughly reviewed. The current uncertainty of the (preliminary) 2015 strong coupling world-average value, $\alpha_s(m_Z)$ = 0.1177 $\pm$ 0.0013, is about 1\%. Some participants believed this may be reduced by a factor of three in the near future by including novel high-precision observables, although this opinion was not universally shared. At the FCC-ee facility, a factor of ten reduction in the $\alpha_s$ uncertainty should be possible, mostly thanks to the huge Z and W data samples available.

Holomorphic Yukawa Couplings in Heterotic String Theory

(2015)

Authors:

Stefan Blesneag, Evgeny I Buchbinder, Philip Candelas, Andre Lukas

Search for features in the spectrum of primordial perturbations using Planck and other datasets

Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics IOP Publishing 2015:12 (2015) 052-052

Authors:

P Hunt, Subir Sarkar

Abstract:

We reconstruct the power spectrum of primordial curvature perturbations by applying a well-validated non-parametric technique employing Tikhonov regularisation to the first data release from the Planck satellite. To improve the reconstruction on small spatial scales we include data from the ground-based ACT and SPT experiments, the WiggleZ galaxy redshift survey, the CFHTLenS tomographic weak lensing survey, and spectral analysis of the Lyman-α forest. The reconstructed scalar spectrum (assuming the standard ΛCDM cosmology) is not scale-free but has an infrared cutoff at k ≲ 5 × 10-4 Mpc-1 and several (2-3)σ features, of which two at wavenumber k/Mpc-1 0.0018 and 0.057 had been seen already in WMAP data. A higher significance feature at k ∼ 0.12 Mpc-1 is indicated by Planck data, but may be sensitive to the systematic uncertainty around multipole ℓ ∼ 1800 in the 217×217 GHz cross-spectrum. In any case accounting for the 'look elsewhere' effect decreases its global significance to ∼2σ.

Why string theory?

, 2015

Abstract:

Physics World's 'Book of the Year' for 2016. An Entertaining and Enlightening Guide to the Who, What, and Why of String Theory, now also available in an updated reflowable electronic format compatible with mobile devices and e-readers. During the last 50 years, numerous physicists have tried to unravel the secrets of string theory. Yet why do these scientists work on a theory lacking experimental confirmation? Why String Theory? provides the answer, offering a highly readable and accessible panorama of the who, what, and why of this large aspect of modern theoretical physics. The author, a theoretical physics professor at the University of Oxford and a leading string theorist, explains what string theory is and where it originated. He describes how string theory fits into physics and why so many physicists and mathematicians find it appealing when working on topics from M-theory to monsters and from cosmology to superconductors.

Natural Scherk-Schwarz theories of the weak scale

Journal of High Energy Physics Springer Nature 2015:12 (2015) 1-47

Authors:

Isabel García García, Kiel Howe, John March-Russell