Prof.
Stephanie Majewski
(University of Oregon)
10/12/17, 1:00 PM
By 2026 the High Luminosity LHC will be able to deliver 14 TeV proton-proton collisions with an order of magnitude higher instantaneous luminosity than the original design, at the expected value of 7.5 × 10^34 cm−2s−1. The ATLAS experiment is planning a series of upgrades to prepare for this new and challenging environment, which will produce much higher data rates and larger and more complex...
Richard Cavanaugh
(University of Illinois at Chicago and Fermilab)
10/12/17, 1:25 PM
The High-Luminosity LHC will open an unprecedented window on the weak-scale nature of the universe, providing high-precision measurements of the standard model as well as searches for new physics beyond the standard model. Such precision measurements and searches require information-rich datasets with a statistical power that matches the high-luminosity provided by the Phase-2 upgrade of the...