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The first announcement of the twenty-sixth workshop
“What Comes Beyond the Standard Models?"

 

 

 

 

 

 

Organizing Committee:
Norma Susana Mankoč Borštnik, Holger Bech Nielsen, Maxim Yu. Khlopov, Astri Kleppe

Scientific Committee:
John Ellis (CERN and King's College London),
Roman Jackiw (MIT),
Masao Ninomiya (二宮 正夫) (Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto University)


Dear colleague

This letter is the first announcement of the twenty-sixth workshop entitled

"What Comes Beyond the Standard Models?"

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which will after two ''virtual'' years and one partly virtual and partly real year take place at Bled, Slovenia, from 10th of July 2023 (Monday, arrival day, afternoon) to 19th of July 2023 (Wednesday, departure day, morning), real and "virtual"  (ZOOM)  workshop. We hope that we shall meet at Bled with most of participants in vivo.

The ''virtual'' part will be hosted by Cosmovia, courtesy of Prof. Maxim Yu. Khlopov.

Please let us know if you are interested and can participate during that period. We will then send you further information.

For the ''virtual'' part of the workshop we will need besides the title also the abstracts of your talks and you will have to send your talk (as a pdf or PowerPoint file) to Maxim and Norma probably at least a day in advance.

To make a schedule we will therefore need a title of your talk (and preferably also an abstract). We will try to make a preliminary schedule a few days before the workshop starts and update and modify it daily as necessary for talk continuations and discussions.

We will also put your presentations on this homepage. As every year, we plan to publish printed Proceedings with the write-ups of your talks in December 2023. You will receive detailed instructions on this at the end of the virtual workshop and also later. We also expect informational support from MDPI journals Symmetry, Universe, Particles ad Physics and selected invited contributions will be published for free, if accepted, in the corresponding special issues.

After appearing on arxiv, we shall need for that the arxiv number of your talk, the whole proceedings will appear in Scopus.

We are in the procedure to arrange the DOI for our proceedings 2023.

This page contains links to maps of Bled etc. and will be updated with later call (in the beginning ofJune).

The following links might be of interest:

  • the links to workshop pages for previous years can be found at  http://bsm.fmf.uni-lj.si/
  • home page of the previous 2022 workshop can be found at  http://bsm.fmf.uni-lj.si/bled2022bsm containing workshop announcements and presentations of most talks, as well as the pdf of the printed workshop Proceedings for 2022. For previous years workshops can be found on analogous URLs by just substituting 2022 with the desired year in the above address for the workshop home page.
  • home page of Cosmovia, http://viavca.in2p3.fr/site.html, which hosts video conferences at our (and many other) conferences for the last several years, courtesy of Prof. Maxim Yu. Khlopov (on the Cosmovia home page go to the link for Previous - Conferences).

 

Program

Our workshop is organized for the purpose of answering the open questions in the elementary particle physics and cosmology, like (every participant can suggest a new topic):

o Can Dirac's second quantization postulates for fermion and boson fields be explained

* with a finite number of Clifford odd and even "basis vectors" describing the internal space of fermions and bosons and with the continuous infinite basis in ordinary momentum or coordinate space?


o Can the need for the Fadeev-Popov ghosts in Feynman's diagrams be explained by the Clifford odd and even "basis vectors" in odd-dimensional spaces?


o Are the Kaluza-Klein-like theories, with gravity as the only interaction among fermions in higher dimensional spaces, the right next step to understand

* all the observed properties of quarks and leptons and antiquarks and antileptons, and
* of their vector and scalar gauge vector fields?


o What is the most promising step beyond the standard model, explaining the assumptions of the standard model like:

* the origin of massless family members with their related spins and charges,
* the origin of families of fermions,
* the origin of massless vector gauge fields,
* the origin of the Higgs' scalar and Yukawa couplings for massive quarks and leptons,
* the origin of differences in masses of family members?


o What is the most promising step beyond the standard model explaining:

* the origin of dark matter and its properties (when comparing cosmological observation, direct detections and all the proposed models),
* the masses and charges of the dark matter,
* the origin of the dark energy,
* the origin of ordinary matter-antimatter asymmetry?


o How to interpret the so far made searches for new physics?

* How many families shall we be able to observe at the LHC and at which energies?
* How many scalar fields shall the LHC observe?
* What are masses of new families?
* What are properties of new scalar fields?


o What can different models and experiments say about the lepton number non conservation?


o What is the origin of the energy scales:

* the colour phase transition scale,
* the electroweak phase transition scale,
* the scale at 1019 GeV or higher?


o What can strings and membranes contribute to our understanding of elementary particle physics and cosmology,

* what understanding of the low energy fermions and the vector and scalar gauge fields they offer?


o What can the complex action bring into the understanding of  the properties of our universe?

o Why has Nature made a choice of four (noticeable) dimensions while all the others (if existing) are hidden?

* How does the "compactification" of extra dimensions (if existing) occur?
* What are properties of space-time in the hidden dimensions?


o How can one understand the discrete symmetries in Kaluza-Klein like  theories?

o How can all gauge fields, including gravity and scalar fields, be unified and quantized?

o What is the origin of the field which caused inflation?

o What can new measurements of gravitational waves contribute to understanding cosmology (and elementary fields)?

o How can the second quantization of the black hole be related to classical singularity?

o How do black holes influence the history of the universe?

o Many other open problems.

 

About our workshops

The aim of the workshop is to bring together physicists, who are trying to find the answers to some of these and other open questions from the field of the elementary particles and cosmology and who would enjoy to actively discuss these questions in a small group.

In the last twenty-five years we have organized workshops entitled “What Comes Beyond the Standard Models?" They took place annually in July since 1998, except 2018, which was in June. Each year we spent about ten days, trying to answer these questions in a very pleasant and relaxing atmosphere. We have published twenty-four volumes of Proceedings to these workshops (one in 1999, and then one volume every year since 2001). In the year 2003 we have also organized, in addition and with the help of EURESCO, the conference titled "Euroconference on symmetries beyond the Standard models" from 12. -- 17. of July 2003 in Portorož,Slovenia. Proceedings volume published in 2003 contains write-ups of the talks at this conference.


About the location

Bled is a nice town by the lake of the same name, surrounded by mountains, with many comfortable hotels. Home page of Bled, containing information for http://www.bled.si in several languages.

The Physical Society together with the Mathematical Society owns a house, whose owner was our well known mathematician Josip Plemelj. This house can accept at most 18 people in 9 rooms. The street location of the house is Presernova cesta 39, Bled. It also has a lecture room for around 20 people. We also can make the hotel reservation, or you can do that by yourself (Bled homepage www.Bled.si contains links to hotels). If you want us to do that then, please, let us know very soon.

 

Costs

We are trying to keep the costs low. The Conference Fee will be 530 EUR for the whole duration of the Workshop (or 60 EUR per day) and it will cover breakfast, coffees, lunch-snacks and dinner for 8 days, and 50 EUR for the Proceedings, (already included in 530 EUR).

In addition, the price of weakly accommodation in Villa Plemelj is 220 EUR (sharing a double bedroom) or 440 EUR (for single occupancy) and it is paid separately from the Conference Fee.

These costs concern only the part at Bled from 10. July - 19. July 2023. Eventual Ljubljana and Bled after parts have to be paid separately.

 

Letter of invitation

Please, let us know if you need a letter of invitation from the organizing committee either for your institute/university or for a visa application. We shall be glad to send you the letter of invitation after your response to this announcement.

 

Excursion:

We recommend that you bring appropriate shoes and parkas for trekking and mountaineering.

 

Sponsors

The workshop is organized by the DMFA (Society of Mathematicians, Physicists and Astronomers of Slovenia). The workshop is sponsored by DMFA and Department of Physics, FMF, University of Ljubljana with the computer equipment and supported by Beyond Semiconductor, and the last several years by MDPI. Also Niels Bohr institute is supporting the workshops, and all those who are paying the living expenses by themselves, if the institutions do not pay their travel and living expenses as well.

 

One page contribution


You may send a one page contribution to the workshop.


Suggestions of discussions


We also ask you to write in a few sentences the suggestions for the open problems, which you are prepared to lead the discussions for, or you suggest the discussions about.

Presentations


It is planned that in the first two or three days everybody will present her or his work in a one hour talk (although the talks usually, because of many questions and interruptions, last much longer). In the rest of the workshop we shall discuss the open problems.