Title
Dark matter and Super Symmetry: Exploring and explaining the universe with simulations at the LHC.
Abstract
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, is one of the largest machines on this planet. It is built to smash protons into each other at unprecedented energies to reveal the fundamental constituents of our universe. The 4 detectors at the LHC record multi-petabyte datasets every year. The scientific analysis of this data requires equally large simulation datasets of the collisions based on the theory of particle physics, the Standard Model. The goal is to verify the validity of the Standard Model or of theories that extend the Model like the concepts of Super Symmetry and an explanation of Dark Matter. I will give an overview of the nature of simulations needed to discover new particles like the Higgs boson in 2012, and review the different areas where simulations are indispensable: from the actual recording of the collisions to the extraction of scientific results to the conceptual design of improvements to the LHC.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1109/WSC.2016.7822075
Winter Simulation Conference
Keywords
Field
DocType
dark matter,super symmetry,universe,LHC,Large Hadron Collider,CERN,protons,multipetabyte datasets,scientific analysis,particle physics,standard model,Higgs boson
Dark matter,Standard Model,Large Hadron Collider,Conceptual design,Meson,Higgs boson,Simulation,Computer science,Supersymmetry,Universe
Conference
Volume
ISSN
ISBN
2016
0891-7736
978-1-5090-4484-9
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
1
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
o gutsche111.45