COSMO 2018

Asia/Seoul
Main Hall

Main Hall

IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
Kiwoon Choi (CTPU, IBS)
Description

 

COSMO-18

27th - 31st August  2018

 

IBS Science and Culture Center, Daejeon, Korea

 

The 22nd annual international Conference on Particle Physics and Cosmology (COSMO-18) will be held at the IBS Science and Culture Center in Daejeon. The meeting is hosted by the Center for Theoretical Physics of the Universe(CTPU) in Institute of Basic Science(IBS). The COSMO series is one of the major venues of interaction between cosmologists and particle physicists. Topics to be discussed include:

 

  • Large Scale Structure and Cosmological Microwave Background

  • Inflation and Early Universe

  • Particle astrophysics

  • Dark matter and dark energy

  • Particle Physics


Registration at the official homepage

 

  

 


 

Poster
    • 1
      Openning Remark Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Speaker: Dr Doochul Kim (IBS President)
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Kiwoon Choi
      • 2
        Dark Matter from Strong CP: An Alternative View
        Spacetime parity provides an important alternative to the Peccei-Quinn solution of the strong CP problem. Furthermore, it provides an understanding of why the Higgs quartic coupling is so small at very high energies. Two theories with parity restoration are discussed, one with precision gauge coupling unification and another with a new dark matter candidate. I discuss signals for a component of dark matter with colored constituents and for trace amounts of fractionally charged stable particles.
        Speaker: Dr Lawrence Hall (U. C. Berkeley)
        Slides
      • 3
        Conversion of dark radiation to photon in early universe and 21cm signal
        I discuss a possibility to convert dark radiation to photon in the early universe. In particular, I show that dark radiation consisting of axion-like particles can resonantly convert into photons under the intergalactic magnetic field. Such a conversion process can effectively heat up the Rayleigh-Jeans tail of the CMB, which may explain the anomaly in the 21cm spectrum recently reported by EDGES experiment. I also discuss possibilities of the dark radiation other than axion-like particle.
        Speaker: Dr Takeo Moroi (U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 4
        Cosmology and the String Swampland
        Speaker: Dr Matthew Reece (Harvard U.)
        Slides
        Video
    • 10:30
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Eung Jin Chun
      • 5
        Unification and "invisible" axion
        I discuss the invisible axion arising from GUTs and string compactification. It will also include our recent calculation of the current misalignment angle, which leads to about $10^{-18}\bar{\theta}_1$ where $\bar{\theta}_1$ is the initial misalignment angle at the time $m_a=3H$.
        Speaker: Dr Jihn E. Kim (Kyung Hee U.)
        Slides
        Video
      • 6
        Astrophysical and Cosmological Searches for Axions
        Axions span a vast parameter space, from axion inflation at the GUT scale, to axion dark energy at the Hubble scale. In between lie the benchmark models of the QCD axion, and “fuzzy dark matter”. Remarkably, vast swathes of this parameter space can be probed. I will review a mixed bag of such constraints and searches, with a focus on cosmology. I will also briefly discuss exciting new ideas in axion direct detection.
        Speaker: Dr David Marsh (U. of Goettingen)
        Slides
        Video
    • 12:00
      Lunch Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Jun’ich Yokoyama
      • 7
        Title: Search for Dark Matter at 250 GeV Lepton Colliders
        The search for the (thermal)dark matter is one of important goals at future lepton colliders such as ILC and CEPC. I will discuss what kind of role these lepton colliders play on this search and figure out quantitatively what kind of the dark matter can be efficiently detected there, compared to other dark matter experiments at other collider experiments (e.g. LHC), underground experiments (direct dark matter detections) and astrophysical observations (indirect dark matter detections).
        Speaker: Dr Shigeki Matsumoto (U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
        Video
      • 8
        The status and prospect for neutrino physics
        The study of neutrino properties, especially those pertaining to neutrino masses and mixing, is among the most rapidly developing subjects in fundamental physics. Non-zero neutrino masses are the most palpable evidence of physics beyond the standard model and there are several current and future experiments poised to make new discoveries. I will present the current status of neutrino physics, emphasizing the open phenomenological and theoretical questions.
        Speaker: Dr Andre Luiz De Gouvea (Northwestern U.)
        Slides
        Video
      • 9
        Dark Matter and Structure Formation in the Universe
        The cosmological model dominated by dark matter and dark energy has proven to be very successful in explaining the structure formation on large scales (>~1Mpc). There are so-called `small-scale problems’ of the Lambda-CDM model, however, many of them can be solved by astrophysical effects of baryons and feedback. I will review some of these issues, and discuss the current efforts in taking the next step in galaxy formation research using cosmological hydrodynamic simulations.
        Speaker: Dr Kentaro Nagamine (Osaka U.)
        Slides
        Video
    • 15:30
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Shigeki Matsumoto
      • 10
        The Current Status and Prospects for Direct Dark Matter Searches
        Direct detection experiments seek to detect dark matter though its scattering off nuclei in terrestrial detectors. Over the last decade direct detection dark matter experiments have made remarkable progress in searching for the constituents of the dark matter that makes up ~80% of the matter density of the Universe. Experiments using liquid noble elements are quickly approaching a regime where they will encounter an irreducible neutrino background while solid state device is pushing bounds searching for dark matter candidates of lower masses. In this talk, I will review the motivation for the direct detection of dark matter, discuss a variety of challenges faced by experimenters trying to directly detect dark matter and review recent results from leading direct detection experiments.
        Speaker: Dr Jodi Cooley (Southern Methodist U.)
        Slides
        Video
      • 11
        Recent PandaX-II results on dark matter search and PandaX-4T upgrade status
        PandaX experiment, located at China JinPing underground Laboratory (CJPL), is a 500kg scale liquid xenon dark matter direct detection experiment. With recent data, PandaX-II experiment obtained stringent upper limits on the spin-independent (SI) and spin-dependent (SD) WIMP-nucleon elastic scattering cross sections. Alternative models of dark matter are also explored using this data. Meanwhile, PandaX collaboration has launched an upgrade plan to build PandaX-4T detector with 4-ton liquid xenon in the active volume. The PandaX-4T experiment will be relocated to CJPL-II and is expected to run after 2020. Detailed simulation indicates that the sensitivity on SI WIMP-nucleon scattering cross section could reach 10^{-47} cm^2 after two-year's running.
        Speaker: Dr Ning Zhou (Shanghai Jiao Tong U.)
        Slides
        Video
    • 17:00
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • IBS Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Sanghyeon Chang
      • 12
        Axion dark matter search at IBS/CAPP
        Since its prediction, the axion has been considered as the most compelling solution to the strong-CP problem and a leading candidate for cold dark matter. The Center for Axion and Precision Physics Research (CAPP) of the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) in South Korea has completed the construction of the infrastructure for axion dark matter search experiments. Multiple experiments are currently under preparation, with one in data acquisition mode, for parallel operation targeting at different mass ranges. The ultimate goal of our center is to be sensitive to the DFSZ model over a wide range of axion mass. The current approaches to achieve this goal are three folds – commissioning of high field magnets, designing high frequency cavities, and developing low noise (nearly quantum noise limited) amplifiers. We present the status of the experiments and discuss the future prospects.
        Speaker: Dr Sung Woo Youn (IBS CAPP)
        Slides
        Video
      • 13
        AMoRE: A neutrinoless double beta decay experiment
        The AMoRE (Advanced Molybdenum based Rare process Experiment) is looking for neutrinoless double beta decay of Mo-100 in molybdate based crystal scintillators by using a cryogenic technique. The crystals equipped with MMC (Metallic Magnetic Calorimeter) phonon and photon sensors are cooled down to 10~20 mK temperatures to detect both thermal and scintillation signals produced by a particle interaction in the crystal to achieve high energy resolution and efficient particle discrimination. The AMoRE-pilot, an R&D phase, has six 48depl Ca 100 MoO 4 crystals with a total mass of ~1.9 kg in the latest configuration and is running at the 700-m-deep YangYang underground laboratory. After the completion of the AMoRE-pilot run by autumn this year, the AMoRE-I will start with ~5 kg of crystals, mostly 48depl Ca 100 MoO 4 and several R&D crystals such as Li 2 100 MoO 4 and Na 2 100 MoO 7 . The AMoRE-II with 200 kg of molybdate crystals at the new 1,000 m deep underground laboratory (Yemi Lab) to be excavated by 2020 at Handeok iron mine can improve effective Majorana neutrino mass sensitivity down to the level of inverted hierarchy of neutrino mass, 20-50 meV. We have already secured 70 kg of Mo-100 isotope out of 120 kg contracted for the AMoRE-II experiment. Results of the AMoRE-pilot and status of the AMoRE-I and AMoRE-II preparation will be presented.
        Speaker: Dr Moo Hyun Lee (IBS CUP)
        Slides
        Video
      • 14
        Axionic Electroweak Baryogenesis
        An axion can make the electroweak phase transition strongly first-order as required for electroweak baryogenesis even if it is weakly coupled to the Higgs sector. This is essentially because the axion periodicity helps to avoid an instability of the potential regardless of the value of the axion decay constant. Furthermore, the axion can serve as a CP phase relevant to electroweak baryogenesis if one introduces an effective axion coupling to the top quark Yukawa operator. Then, for an axion decay constant between about TeV and order 10 TeV, the observed baryon asymmetry can be explained while avoiding current experimental constraints. It will be possible to probe the axion window for baryogenesis in future lepton colliders and beam-dump experiments.
        Speaker: Dr Chang Sub Shin (IBS CTPU)
        Slides
        Video
    • 18:30
      Reception Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      • 15
        Inflationary Correlators from the Boundary
        Speaker: Dr Daniel Baumann (U. of Amsterdam)
        Video
      • 16
        Inflation as a Particle Collider
        The conventional way to study high energy particle physics is to build particle colliders. In fact, the nature has already built a “collider” running at unprecedentedly high energy (up to 10^13 GeV): During cosmic inflation, high energy particles (up to the Hubble scale of inflation) are produced and interacts with each other. The relics of the interaction are imprinted in the density fluctuations of our current universe in a unique and model-independent way. By measuring the correlations of these density fluctuations, the particle spectrum and interactions at the energy scale of inflation can be reconstructed. This is known as the cosmological collider physics. In this talk, the cosmological collider physics, and the corresponding signature for the Standard Model are reviewed. We also discuss how the expansion history of the primordial universe can be measured by the same process.
        Speaker: Dr Yi Wang (Hong Kong U. of Science and Technology)
        Slides
        Video
      • 17
        Signatures of particle production during inflation
        We will discuss several phenomenological signatures that can result from particle production during inflation, with a particular attentions to models of axion inflation. The signatures include large non-gaussianity and sourced gravitational waves at CMB scales, primordial black holes, and gravitational waves at interferometer scales.
        Speaker: Dr Marco Peloso (U. of Minnesota)
        Slides
        Video
    • 10:30
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Hang Bae Kim
      • 18
        Non-Gaussian gravitational waves from inflation
        It has been widely assumed that detection of primordial gravitational waves from inflation in, for example, B-mode polarisation of the cosmic microwave background, immediately implies discovery of the quantum nature of spacetime. While this statement is true for the vacuum solution, it does not apply if the gravitational waves originate from the matter fields. How can we distinguish between these two origins? The answer is non-Gaussinaity. We show that the gravitational waves from SU(2) gauge fields coupled to a spectator axion field during inflation are highly non-Gaussian with a characteristic shape, whereas those from the vacuum are only weakly non-Gaussian.
        Speaker: Dr Eiichiro Komatsu (Max Planck Institute)
        Slides
        Video
      • 19
        Light inflaton completing Higgs inflation
        We consider the extension of the Standard Model (SM) with a light inflaton where both unitarity problem in Higgs inflation and vacuum instability problem are resolved. The linear non-minimal coupling of the inflaton to gravity leads to a significant kinetic mixing between the inflaton and the graviton such that perturbative unitarity is restored up to Planck scale. We show the correlation between unitarity scale and inflationary observables in this model and discuss how the effective Higgs inflation appears.
        Speaker: Dr Hyun Min Lee (Chung-Ang U.)
        Slides
        Video
    • 12:00
      Lunch Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • CUP Open Lab Center for Underground Physics (IBS Main Building)

      Center for Underground Physics

      IBS Main Building

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Parallel Session: Cosmic Microwave Background 314

      314

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Kohei Kamada
      • 20
        BICEP/Keck Array Program: Performance Overview and Future Plans
        Speaker: Jae Hwan Kang (Stanford U)
        Slides
      • 21
        Searching for inflationary gravitational waves with the South Pole Telescope
        Speaker: Christian Reichardt (U. of Melbourne)
        Slides
      • 22
        Cosmic microwave background constraints for global defects
        Speaker: Asier Lopez-Eiguren (U. of Helsinki)
        Slides
      • 23
        Axion Landscape and CMB Statistics
        Speaker: Spyros Sypsas (U. of Chile)
        Slides
      • 24
        Exploring compensated isocurvature perturbations with CMB spectral distortion anisotropies
        Speaker: Keisuke Inomata (U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 25
        Magnetogenesis from isocurvatures with second order Boltzmann solver
        Speaker: Pedro Carrilho (Queen Mary U. of London)
        Slides
      • 26
        Reconstructing the inflationary landscape with cosmological data
        Speaker: Gonzalo Palma (U. of Chile)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Dark Matter 1 204

      204

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Jong-Chul Park
      • 27
        Composite dark axions and light dark baryons
        Speaker: Deog Ki Hong (Pusan National U.)
        Slides
      • 28
        Anatomy of RHN-portal Dark Matter
        Speaker: Eung Jin Chun (KIAS)
        Slides
      • 29
        Decaying ALPino dark matter as a solution to small scale issues
        Speaker: Ayuki Kamada (IBS-CTPU)
        Slides
      • 30
        The Dawn of FIMP Dark Matter
        Speaker: Tommi Tenkanen (Queen Mary U. of London)
        Slides
      • 31
        Early Kinetic Decoupling of DM: when the standard way of calculating the thermal relic density fails
        Speaker: Andrzej Hryczuk (U. of Oslo)
        Slides
      • 32
        Dark matter with low-reheating temperature
        Speaker: Ki-Young Choi (Sungkyunkwan U.)
        Slides
      • 33
        Production of Purely Gravitational Dark Matter
        Speaker: Kazunori Nakayama (U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 34
        Unitarizing SIMP scenario with dark vector resonances
        Speaker: Soo-Min Choi (Chung-Ang U.)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Gravitaional Wave 306

      306

      Convener: Chang Sub Shin
      • 35
        SOGRO: Superconducting Tensor Gravitational Wave Detector for Mid-Frequencies
        Speaker: Gungwon Kang (KISTI)
        Slides
      • 36
        Gravitational waves from vacuum first-order phase transitions: from the envelope to the lattice
        Speaker: Daniel Cutting (U. of Sussex)
        Slides
      • 37
        Primordial Gravitational Waves induced by Gauss-Bonnet inflation
        Speaker: Gansukh Tumurtushaa (IBS-CTPU)
        Slides
      • 38
        Gravitational wave forest from string axiverse
        Speaker: Naoya Kitajima (Nagoya U.)
        Slides
      • 39
        Analytic Calculation of Gravitational Wave Spectrum Induced from Primordial Curvature Perturbations
        Speaker: Takahiro Terada (KEK)
        Slides
      • 40
        Back-Reaction of Gravitational Waves Revisited
        Speaker: Tomo Takahashi (Saga U.)
        Slides
      • 41
        Cosmological phase transitions in the Standard Model with hidden scale invariance
        Speaker: Cyril Lagger (U. of Sydney)
        Slides
    • 16:00
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Parallel Session: Dark Matter 2 204

      204

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Hyun Min Lee
      • 42
        Characterizing DM properties with (non)minimal Higgs portal at future colliders
        Speaker: Pyungwon Ko (KIAS)
        Slides
      • 43
        Quantum corrections in a DM model with pseudo-scalar mediator
        Speaker: Tomohiro Abe (Nagoya U.)
        Slides
      • 44
        Hunting for Boosted Dark Matter
        Speaker: Jong-Chul Park (Chungnam National U.)
        Slides
      • 45
        Sterile neutrino DM and the status of 3.5 keV line
        Speaker: Alexey Boyarsky (Leiden U.)
      • 46
        PeV scale supersymmetry and the IceCube neutrino events
        Speaker: Mansi Dhuria (Indian Institute of Technology Bombay)
        Slides
      • 47
        Modeling evolution of dark matter substructure and annihilation boost
        Speaker: Nagisa Hiroshima (U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 48
        Dark Matter Direct Detection with a Spin-2 mediator
        Speaker: Yoo-Jin Kang (Chung-Ang U.)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Large Scale Structure 1 314

      314

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Cristiano Sabiu
      • 49
        WFIRST High Latitude Survey and Synergies with Ground-based Surveys
        Speaker: Chen Heinrich (Caltech/JPL)
        Slides
      • 50
        Cosmology from cosmic shear power spectra with Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam data
        Speaker: Chiaki Hikage (Kavli IPMU)
      • 51
        Cosmological constraints using BAO - From spectroscopic to photometric catalogues
        Speaker: Srivatsan Sridhar (KASI)
        Slides
      • 52
        Scale-dependent trispectrum and cosmological parameter constraints
        Speaker: Saroj Adhikari (U. of Michigan, Ann Arbor)
        Slides
      • 53
        Cosmology with type Ia supernova gravitational lensing
        Speaker: Jacobo Asorey (KASI)
        Slides
      • 54
        Probing features in the Early Universe with the Large-Scale Structures
        Speaker: Benjamin L'Huillier (KASI)
        Slides
      • 55
        Constraints on cosmology and baryonic feedback with the Deep Lens Survey using galaxy-galaxy and galaxy-mass power spectra
        Speaker: Mijin Yoon (Yonsei U.)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Multi Messenger Astrophysics/Early Universe 306

      306

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Kenji Kadota
      • 56
        Precision Measurement of Electron and Positron Fluxes In Primary Cosmic Rays with the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station.
        Speaker: Cheng Zhang (Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
        Slides
      • 57
        EDGES, the complexity of star formation, and no constraining power on Dark Matter Models.
        Speaker: Wessel Valkenburg (EPFL, Lausanne)
        Slides
      • 58
        A Limit on Axion from the Cooling Neutron Star in Cassiopeia A
        Speaker: Jiaming Zheng (U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 59
        The spectrum of the axion dark sector and black hole spin constraints on the number of axion-like fields.
        Speaker: Matthew Stott (King's College London)
        Slides
      • 60
        Axion Window and Low-Scale Inflation
        Speaker: Wen Yin (Institute of High Energy Physics)
        Slides
      • 61
        Machine learning for bounce calculation
        Speaker: Ryusuke Jinno (IBS-CTPU)
        Slides
      • 62
        Topics on primordial black holes from inflation
        Speaker: Gabriele Franciolini (U. of Geneva)
        Slides
      • 63
        Primordial Black Holes in Matter Dominated Universe
        Speaker: Kazunori Kohri (KEK/Oxford U.)
        Slides
    • 64
      Public Talk : 뉴턴과 아인슈타인 - 두 우주 이야기 Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Speaker: Dr Hang Bae Kim (Hanyang U.)
      Poster
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Marco Peloso
      • 65
        Pixels to physics: the promise and challenges of survey cosmology
        We are entering a transformative period in observational cosmology. Surveys starting in 2019 promise to solve key problems in cosmology — but only if we develop new approaches for handling the volume and complexity of the data. Extracting robust cosmological information from these surveys is a major challenge that will require development and validation of analysis methods at each step of the chain from raw pixels to cosmology. I will comment on some of the experimental and methodological innovations that are needed to realise the promise of upcoming surveys. I will place particular emphasis on the need for accurate diagnosis of inconsistent results from different combinations of cosmological probes, to ascertain whether such “tensions" indicate the need for new physics.
        Speaker: Dr Hiranya Peiris (U. College London)
        Slides
        Video
      • 66
        21cm cosmology
        I'll review the science potential, challenge and recent progresses of observing the redshifted 21cm line in cosmology, and also discuss the Tianlai experiment in China.
        Speaker: Dr Xuelei Chen (National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences)
        Slides
        Video
      • 67
        Cosmological implications of string theory moduli
        Speaker: Dr Fernando Quevedo (International Centre for Theoretical Physics)
        Slides
        Video
    • 10:30
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Arman Shafieloo
      • 68
        Mapping the Dark Universe with Galaxy Surveys
        Speaker: Dr Risa Wechsler (Stanford U.)
        Video
      • 69
        Measuring the Properties of Dark Energy with Galaxy Surveys
        I will summarize the ways in which galaxy surveys test the properties of Dark Energy and the current constraints based on these tests. I will include a particular focus on the use of distance measurements provided by measuring the baryon acoustic oscillation feature in the distribution of galaxies. I will discuss some of the current tensions within the LCDM model and the future measurements that will probe them further.
        Speaker: Dr Ashley Ross (Ohio State U.)
        Slides
        Video
    • 12:00
      Lunch Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Parallel Session: Dark Matter Experiment 204

      204

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Moo Hyun Lee
      • 70
        Results from the 1 tonne x year Dark Matter Search with XENON1T
        Speaker: Julien Masbou (Subatech - U. of Nantes)
        Slides
      • 71
        WIMP-search Results from a Blinded Maximum Likelihood Analysis of CDMSlite Run 3
        Speaker: William Page (U. of British Columbia)
        Slides
      • 72
        Status of the COSINE-100 experiment
        Speaker: Pushparaj Adhikari (Sejong U./IBS-CUP)
        Slides
      • 73
        Dark Sector Serches with Belle II
        Speaker: Zachary Liptak (U. of Hawaii)
        Slides
      • 74
        FASER: ForwArd Search ExpeRiment
        Speaker: Sebastian Trojanowski (National Centre for Nuclear Research)
        Slides
      • 75
        Search for heavy dark matter with IceCube
        Speaker: Hrvoje Dujmovic (SKKU)
        Slides
      • 76
        Phenomenology of dark gauge group at the LHC
        Speaker: Myeonghun Park (Seoultech)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Inflation 1 306

      306

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Ryusuke Jinno
      • 77
        Geometrical destabilization and reheating
        Speaker: Krzysztof Turzynski (U. of Warsaw)
        Slides
      • 78
        Assisted Hilltop Inflation
        Speaker: Wanil Park (Chonbuk National U)
        Slides
      • 79
        Floquet analysis of self-resonance in single-field inflationary models
        Speaker: Michal Wieczorek (U. of Warsaw)
        Slides
      • 80
        Higgs inflation at the hilltop
        Speaker: Eemeli Tomberg (U. of Helsinki)
        Slides
      • 81
        Extranatural inflation and CMB observations
        Speaker: Gaurav Goswami (Ahmedabad U.)
        Slides
      • 82
        Inflationary Correlators from Symmetries and Singularities
        Speaker: Hayden Lee (Harvard U.)
        Slides
      • 83
        Unsuppressed Primordial Standard Clocks in Warm Quasi-Single Field Inflation
        Speaker: Siyi Zhou (HKUST)
        Slides
      • 84
        Angular inflation in α-attractors
        Speaker: Evangelos Sfakianakis (U. of Leiden)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Large Scale Structure 2 314

      314

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Benjamin L’Huillier
      • 85
        Soft Theorems in Cosmological Correlation Functions
        Speaker: Sam Wong (Columbia U.)
        Slides
      • 86
        Fast Generation of Covariance Matrices for Weak Lensing
        Speaker: Raphael Sgier (ETH Zurich)
        Slides
      • 87
        Modelling nonlinearities beyond vanilla LCDM
        Speaker: Matteo Cataneo (U. of Edinburgh)
        Slides
      • 88
        Shell-crossing structure of cold dark matter with Lagrangian perturbation theory
        Speaker: Shohei Saga (Kyoto U.)
        Slides
      • 89
        Machine learning dark matter halo formation
        Speaker: Luisa Lucie-Smith (U. College London)
        Slides
      • 90
        Cosmological constraints on the velocity-dependent Baryon-Dark matter coupling
        Speaker: Junpei Ooba (Nagoya U.)
        Slides
    • 16:00
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Poster Session 308-312

      308-312

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      • 91
        ''Invisible'' QCD axion rolling through the QCD phase transition
        Speaker: Sejin Kim (KyungHee U.)
      • 92
        CMB-S4 Forecast on the Primordial non-Gaussianity Parameter of Feature Models
        Speaker: Wuhyun Sohn (U. of Cambridge)
      • 93
        Detection of Intrinsic Spin Alignments in Isolated Spiral Pairs
        Speaker: Hanwool Koo (KASI/UST)
      • 94
        Einstein Double Equations
        Speaker: Jeong-Hyuck Park (Sogang U.)
        Poster
      • 95
        K-evolution (Non-linear evolution of k-essence field)
        Speaker: Farbod Hassani (U. of Geneva)
        Poster
      • 96
        Leptoquark portals for B-meson anomalies and dark matter
        Speaker: Tae Gyu Ro (Chung-Ang U.)
        Poster
      • 97
        Precise peculiar velocities from gravitational waves accompanied by electromagnetic signals and cosmological applications
        Speaker: Yuyang Wang (Nanjing U.)
        Poster
      • 98
        Probing The Isotropy of Cosmic Acceleration Using Different Supernova Samples
        Speaker: Zhiqiang Sun (Nanjing U.)
        Poster
      • 99
        PyCosmo: An Integrated Cosmological Boltzmann Solver
        Speaker: Federica Tarsitano (ETH Zurich)
        Poster
      • 100
        Reconstructing properties of WIMP DM
        Speaker: Sebastian Trojanowski (National Centre for Nuclear Research)
        Poster
      • 101
        Redshift-space streaming velocity effects on the baryon acoustic oscillation scale
        Speaker: Jahmour Givans (Ohio State U.)
      • 102
        Reexamining Constraints on High-Mass High-Cross Section Dark Matter
        Speaker: Matthew Digman (Ohio State U.)
    • 18:30
      Korean Music Concert Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea

      Korean Traditional Music ensemble TaM will play Korean traditional music with modern flavor.

    • 19:00
      Banquet First Floor Hall

      First Floor Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Sunghoon Jung
      • 103
        Optical Follow-up Observation of the Gravitational Wave Source, GW170817
        On August 17th 2017, for the first time in the history, the gravitational wave (GW) detectors recorded signals coming from the merger of two neutron stars.  This event was named as GW170817, and more interestingly, gamma-ray emission was detected 2 seconds after the gravitational wave signal, and 11 hours later, telescopes in Chile identified that the GW signal came from the NGC 4993 galaxy at the distance of about 40 Mpc. This is again the first time that electromagnetic (EM) signals are detected for a GW source. The follow-up observations by astronomers all around the world, including our group in Korea, successfully identified the optical emission as the kilonova, the elusive optical/NIR counterpart that has been proposed to originate from a neutron star merger. Yet again, this marks the first time that a kilonova was discovered convincingly. This whole event started the new era of astronomy, so-called the "multi-messenger astronomy", where the combined information from GW and EM radiation reveals an unprecedented view of the universe. In this talk, I summarize this exciting event, and describe the efforts by Korean astronomers that have led to important discoveries about the kilonova and the host galaxy properties, and finally provide the future prospects.
        Speaker: Dr Myungshin Im (Seoul National U.)
        Slides
        Video
      • 104
        Multi-frequency GW astronomy
        Discoveries of binary black holes (BBHs) and binary neutron stars via gravitational waves (GWs) opened a new window to explore the universe. So far the GW astronomy is accessible between about 25 Hz up to 2000 Hz (by LIGO and Virgo detectors on Earth). Compact objects such as neutron stars and black holes with masses around O(1) - O(100) Solar masses are main sources in this frequency range. There are international efforts for GW observations in multi- frequency bands, in particular toward lower frequencies. For example, Pulsar Timing Array aims to detect gravitational waves in nanohertz, targeting supermassive black hole binaries. The success of the LISA Pathfinder mission of ESA (European Space Agency) proved that the technology required to detect GWs around millihertz or below in space is feasible. One of the most important information we can obtain by the multi-frequency GW observation would be the formation and evolution of compact objects in binaries, in particular BBHs, over the cosmic time. The "middle-frequency" range between 0.1-10 Hz have attention recently for the prospects of discovering intermediate-mass black holes. In addition to resolved targets, cosmic GW background calls for a broad-band or multi-frequency observation. In this review talk, I will present highlights of different proposals targeting different frequency bands and their science goals. The “multi-messenger” astronomy, in coordination with particle and electromagnetic-wave observations, will be most powerful when multi-frequency GW observations will be available. I will discuss prospects of multi-frequency, multi-messenger astronomy that would be in reality in decades, focusing on black hole astronomy and cosmology.
        Speaker: Dr Chunglee kim (Ewha Womans U.)
        Slides
    • 10:00
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Ashley Ross
      • 105
        Gravitational-wave astrophysics
        Ground-based gravitational-wave detectors have opened new avenues to explore the universe. The detections of several binary black holes have allowed, for the first time, to access these objects without needs for photons, and to directly measure their masses and spins. The spectacular join detection of gravitational waves and light from the binary neutron star system GW170817 has shown the potential of multi-messenger astrophysics and yielded an independent measurement of the Hubble constant. In this talk, I will focus on what we can expect next, as the detectors approach their design sensitivity. I will also report on the scientific potential of the next-generation of gravitational-wave detectors, which could detect all the binary black holes in the universe.
        Speaker: Dr Salvatore Vitale (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
        Slides
        Video
      • 106
        Some aspects of Dark Energy models
        We will present some results about the growth index, a phenomenological tool that can be used for the characterization of the growth of matter perturbations. Partly related to this, we will also consider the behaviour of the effective gravitational coupling in modified gravity dark energy models.
        Speaker: Dr David Polarski (Montpellier 2 U.)
        Slides
        Video
    • 12:00
      Lunch Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • CUP Open Lab Center for Underground Physics (IBS Main Building)

      Center for Underground Physics

      IBS Main Building

    • Parallel Session: Dark Energy / Modified Gravity 1 314

      314

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Jacobo Asorey
      • 107
        Relativistic stars in degenerate higher-order scalar-tensor theories after GW170817
        Speaker: Tsutomu Kobayashi (Rikkyo U.)
        Slides
      • 108
        Holographic Dark Matter Fluid in Late Universe
        Speaker: Yun-Long Zhang (APCTP)
        Slides
      • 109
        Beyond Fierz-Pauli theory
        Speaker: Rampei Kimura (Waseda U.)
        Slides
      • 110
        Self-anisotropizing universe in Horndeski theory
        Speaker: Hiroaki Tahara (RESCEU, U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 111
        Galileon and generalized Galileon with projective invariance in metric-affine formalism
        Speaker: Katsuki Aoki (Waseda U.)
        Slides
      • 112
        Positivity bounds on vector boson scattering at the LHC
        Speaker: Shuang-Yong Zhou (U. of Science and Technology of China)
        Slides
      • 113
        Constraining Effective Theories for Cosmology and Gravity
        Speaker: Scott Melville (Imperial College London)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Inflation 2 306

      306

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Ki-Young Choi
      • 114
        Inflation in the Mixed Higgs-R2 Model
        Speaker: Minxi He (RESCEU, U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 115
        Matching and running: predictions in non-renormalizable inflationary models
        Speaker: Jacopo Funagalli (Nikhef)
        Slides
      • 116
        Probing Starobinsky R2 inflation with CMB precision cosmology
        Speaker: Yuki Watanabe (NIT, Gunma College)
        Slides
      • 117
        Sidetracked Inflation
        Speaker: Sebastian Garcia-Saenz (Institut d'astrophysique de Paris)
        Slides
      • 118
        Search for hybrid inflation with the cosmological collider
        Speaker: Yi-Peng Wu (U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 119
        Pole N-Flation
        Speaker: Marco Scalisi (KU Leuven)
        Slides
      • 120
        Quantum diffusion during inflation and primordial black holes
        Speaker: Chris Pattison (ICG, U. of Portsmouth)
        Slides
      • 121
        Better be careful with cosmological frames
        Speaker: Mario Herrero-Valea (EPFL)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Particle Physics/Early Universe Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Ayuki Kamada
      • 122
        Magnetogenesis from chiral plasma instability and baryon asymmetry of the Universe
        Speaker: Kohei Kamada (IBS-CTPU)
        Slides
      • 123
        Gravitational waves from first order electroweak phase transition in models with the U(1)_X gauge symmetry
        Speaker: Toshinori Matsui (KIAS)
        Slides
      • 124
        Exploring dynamical CP violation induced baryogenesis by gravitational waves and colliders
        Speaker: Fa Peng Huang (IBS-CTPU)
        Slides
      • 125
        Gamma-ray spectral modulations induced by photon-ALP-dark photon oscillations
        Speaker: Seokhoon Yun (KAIST/IBS-CTPU)
        Slides
      • 126
        Supersymmetric Flaxion
        Speaker: Daisuke Hagihara (U. of Tokyo)
        Slides
      • 127
        Can deep infrared modes beyond current horizon scale affect observable primordial fluctuations?
        Speaker: Junsei Tokuda (Kyoto U.)
        Slides
    • 16:00
      Coffee Break Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
    • Parallel Session: Baryogenesis 204

      204

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Eibun Senaha
      • 128
        Can we probe the Universe at the Fermi epoch in the lab?
        Speaker: Inar Timiryasov (EPFL)
        Slides
      • 129
        New conservation law in low scale leptogenesis
        Speaker: Shintaro Eijima (Leiden U.)
        Slides
      • 130
        Pendulum Leptogenesis
        Speaker: Neil Barrie (Kavli IPMU)
        Slides
      • 131
        Non-thermal WIMP baryogenesis
        Speaker: Jongkuk Kim (Sungkyunkwan U.)
        Slides
      • 132
        Spontaneous Leptogenesis in Continuum-Clockwork Axion Models
        Speaker: Jeff Kost (IBS-CTPU)
        Slides
      • 133
        Leptogenesis from Dark Matter Annihilations in Scotogenic Model
        Speaker: Arnab Dasgupta (Seoul Tech)
        Slides
      • 134
        Leptogenesis in Cosmological Relaxation with Particle Production
        Speaker: Fang Ye (KAIST)
        Slides
      • 135
        Effective electroweak baryogenesis
        Speaker: Marieke Postma (Nikhef)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Dark Energy / Modified Gravity 2 314

      314

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Tsutomu Kobayashi
      • 136
        Stringy Gravity and the Einstein Double Field Equations
        Speaker: Stephen Angus (Ewha Womans U.)
        Slides
      • 137
        Model selection and constraints from Holographic dark energy scenarios
        Speaker: Mohammad Malekjani (Bu Ali Sina U.)
        Slides
      • 138
        Tension of H0 and its possible solution
        Speaker: Seokcheon Lee (Sungkyunkwan U.)
        Slides
      • 139
        Thermodynamics of Dark Energy Models in Loop Quantum Cosmology
        Speaker: Abdul Jawad (COMSATS Institute of Information Technology)
        Slides
    • Parallel Session: Early Universe 306

      306

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Yun-Long Zhang
      • 140
        The evolution and decay of hadronic inhomogeneities in the early universe
        Speaker: Soma Sanyal (U. of Hyderabad)
        Slides
      • 141
        Inflationary universes born out of the highly inhomogeneous initial condition
        Speaker: Naritaka Oshita (RESCEU)
        Slides
      • 142
        The no-boundary proposal in loop quantum cosmology
        Speaker: Suddhasattwa Brahma (APCTP)
        Slides
      • 143
        Quantum Entanglement in Multi-field inflation
        Speaker: Shuntaro Mizuno (Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics)
        Slides
      • 144
        Numerically probing many field inflation with PyTransport
        Speaker: David Mulryne (Queen Mary U. of London)
        Slides
      • 145
        A New Semiclassical Picture of Vacuum Decay
        Speaker: Jonathan Braden (U. College London)
        Slides
      • 146
        The cosmic QCD epoch at non-vanishing lepton asymmetry
        Speaker: Isabel M. Oldengott (U. of Valencia)
        Slides
      • 147
        Aspects of Dark Matter Axion Clumps
        Speaker: Mark Hertzberg (Tufts U.)
        Slides
    • Plenary Session Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Convener: Jihn E. Kim
      • 148
        Multimessenger Astronomy with Neutrinos at the South Pole: IceCube and Future Observatories in the Ice
        Speaker: Dr Kael Hanson (U. of Wisconsin-Madison)
        Slides
        Video
      • 149
        Status and prospect of theories on the origin of matter-antimatter asymmetry in the universe
        The origin of the matter antimatter asymmetry of the universe remains unexplained in the Standard Model of particle physics. The origin of the flavour structure is another major puzzle of the theory. In this talk, we report on recent work attempting to link the two themes through the appealing framework of electroweak baryogenesis. We show that Yukawa couplings of Standard Model fermions can be the source of CP-violation for electroweak baryogenesis if they vary at the same time as the Higgs is acquiring its vacuum expectation value, offering new avenues for electroweak baryogenesis. The advantage of this approach is that it circumvents the usual severe bounds from Electric Dipole moments. These ideas apply if the mechanism explaining the flavour structure of the Standard Model is connected to electroweak symmetry breaking, as motivated for instance in Composite Higgs models.
        Speaker: Dr Geraldine Servant (U. of Hamburg)
        Slides
        Video
      • 150
        Utilities of Gravitational Waves for Probing Dark Matter
        We propose that LIGO can see the dark matter possibly in the form of a compact object of 10 solar mass or heavier. It is through the fringe signal imprinted on the gravitational wave(GW). The fringe is a frequency-dependent interference pattern induced gravitationally when the GW passes by compact dark matter. Surprisingly, LIGO is the one that can measure this most efficiently. We discuss underlying physics and prospects of the GW fringe measurement. Refs: [1712.01396], [1710.03269]
        Speaker: Dr Sunghoon Jung (Seoul National U.)
        Slides
        Video
    • 151
      Concluding remarks and outlook Main Hall

      Main Hall

      IBS Science and Culture Center, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, korea
      Speaker: Dr Leszek Roszkowski (Astrocent, Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center Polish Academy of Sciences and National Centre for Nuclear Research)
      Slides
      Video
    • IBS/CAPP Facility Tour Main Hall (CAPP, KAIST Munji Campus)

      Main Hall

      CAPP, KAIST Munji Campus

      Before the excursion, there will be a short facility tour at IBS axion dark matter search lab CAPP with a light lunch

    • Excursion Gonju City

      Gonju City

      Tour to the historic sites of Baekje Dynasty in Gongju City.