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Expecting the Unexpected with AI at Particle Colliders

In particle physics, we search for new elementary particles that signal extensions of the fundamental interactions of nature. Experiments at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) produce massive datasets, which physicists scour for evidence of hypothetical particles that have been suggested by theorists.  But it is impossible to predict exactly what nature has in store. Can we discover something new without knowing in advance what we are looking for?

Progress in data science gives us new ways to mine the datasets from the LHC.  Using artificial intelligence, we  can search in a general way for events that are anomalous, signaling behavior outside of our current laws of physics.  Coupled with advanced silicon microelectronics, we can apply AI to scan and sort data in real time, at the enormous rates at which the LHC collides protons.  These game-changing technologies will work even more powerfully at future particle colliders, where era-defining discoveries might be around every corner.

Speaker: Julia Gonski, SLAC

Register to attend in person, or watch the lecture live on our YouTube page

Thursday, 12/05/24

Contact:

Website: Click to Visit

Cost:

Free

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Stanford Linear Accelerator (SLAC) Public Lecture Series

2575 Sand Hill Road, Building 51
Kavli Auditorium
Menlo Park, CA 94025

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