Art Theory

What is Supersymmetry? | John Ellis, Catherine Heymans, Ben Allanach, Subir Sarkar, Cumrun Vafa



The Institute of Art and Ideas

The standard model of physics remains incomplete. Could supersymmetry fill the gaps? From whether supersymmetric particles could fix the mass of the Higgs Boson to what this would mean for string theory, the world’s leading thinkers explain all.

Subscribe to the Institute of Art and Ideas: https://www.youtube.com/user/IAITV

John Ellis is a British theoretical physicist who is currently Clerk Maxwell Professor of Theoretical Physics at King’s College London. He was Division Leader for the CERN theory division, a founding member of the LEPC and of the LHCC at CERN and currently chair of the committee to investigate physics opportunities for future proton accelerators.

Catherine Heymans is a Professor of Astrophysics and European Research Council Fellow at the University of Edinburgh. She is also the Director of the German Centre for Cosmological Lensing at the Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany.

Ben Allanach is a member of the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics High Energy Physics research group and The Cambridge SUSY Working Group based at the Cavendish Laboratory.

Subir Sarkar is a physicist at the University of Oxford, where he is head of the Particle Theory Group at the Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics. His research interests are at the interface between fundamental physics and astrophysics & cosmology – specifically theoretical aspects of dark matter, inflation and large-scale structure formation.

Cumrun Vafa is a string theorist from Harvard University. He is the recipient of the 2008 Dirac Medal and the 2016 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics.

#supersymmetry #quantum #stringtheory

DELVE DEEPER
For debates and talks: https://iai.tv
For articles: https://iai.tv/articles
For courses: https://iai.tv/iai-academy/courses

Source

Similar Posts

2 thoughts on “What is Supersymmetry? | John Ellis, Catherine Heymans, Ben Allanach, Subir Sarkar, Cumrun Vafa
  1. IAI is carpetbomming us with

    "How the heck does Santa Clause distribute his 1 billion parcels across
    the planet in just one night in one carriage and a (possibly
    rednosed) reindeer, how he creates his parcels while living on the
    North Pole"

    and of course the big question

    What Is Santa Clause Going To Do When The Ice Cap Melts.

    It is a fascinating study and we all
    eagerly await the first results. But we may have to wait for a
    second, Larger Hineous C*********r (aka LHC) which will be ready by
    2040 and costs around 100 billion Euro/Dollar of taxpayer money.

    But hey, then we m a y finally know how
    Santa Clause does it."

    THIS

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTaXfbvGf8E

    blows all of that BS out of the water,
    presented mid 2019, pulling the magic carpet from under these
    mindtrapped "scientists" that have COMPLETELY lost their
    way.

    Here are some comments by a former
    "crackpot" (according to settled science) who predicted
    some of the astonishing results: elements form from scratch in a
    plasma reactor, using low wattages, basically recreating their model
    of a star in the lab.

    Yes, it has been done.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYpVdkyVEYw

    and a lot more.

    And , if you, like me, were suspicious
    of that presentation in the first link, watch this interview with the
    leading scientist in this experiment.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h49AbVfI7KU

    I recently saw a famous YT astrophysicist state the galaxy has 1 billion stars in it, and really
    seemed to believe it. That is how lost these tunnelvisioned "experts"
    are, getting fancy salaries by telling the unsuspecting public Santa
    stories.

    And, if you do not know how many stars are in the Milky Way, WIKI it.

Comments are closed.

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com