At the present time experiments at Hadron Colliders provide our best vision into physics at the TeV scale. The LHC discovered the Higgs boson in its first run, and is now preparing to operate at the energy frontier opening a new era in the exploration of the smallest scales accessible to scientists. The Fermilab Tevatron experiments are currently exploring the electroweak scale using their full collected data sets. Plans for the next big Hadron Collider are begining to emerge. To realize the full potential of these developments, Fermilab and CERN are offering a series of "Hadron Collider Physics Summer Schools", to prepare young researchers for these exciting times. The first school took place at Fermilab in 2006, followed by the second school at CERN in 2007. The eleventh school will take place August 11-20, 2016 at Fermilab, and will build on the successes of the previous schools.
Confirmed Lecturers:
Yuval Grossman (Cornell) - Standard Model
Glen Cowan (London) - Statistic
Stefan Hoeche (SLAC) - QCD and Monte Carlo Tools
Robin Erbacher (Davis) - Top Physics
Mariangela Lisanti (Princeton) - Dark Matter
Matt Reece (Harvard) - Beyond the SM Theory
Andre De Gouvea (Northwestern) - Neutrinos and Muons
Ian Shipsey (Oxford) - Flavor Physics
Daniella Bortolleto (Oxford) - Tracking
Jim Olsen (Princeton) - Higgs Measurements
Wesley Smith (Wisconsin) - Trigger/DAQ
Albert de Roeck (CERN) - Beyond the SM Measurments
Chris Tully (Princeton) - Calorimetry
Helen Caines (Yale) - Heavy Ion Physics
Phil Harris (CERN) - Reconstruction
Vladimir Shiltsev (Fermilab) - Particle Accelerators
Special Lectures:
Stefania Gori (Cincinatti) - Exotic Higgs Decays
Dmitri Denisov (Fermilab) - Future Colliders
Michael Kagan (SLAC) - Deep Learning
and more ...