Desperately Seeking Susy: A farewell to a bold proposal?

Presented at 30C3 (2013), Dec. 28, 2013, 8:30 p.m. (60 minutes).

Supersymmetry has been particle theorists' favorite toy for several decades. It predicts a yet unobserved symmetry of nature and implies that to each known type of elementary particle there exists a partner particle none of which has been detected up to today.

I will explain why it is an attractive idea nevertheless and what is the current situation after the large hadron collider (LHC) at CERN has looked at many places where supersymmetric partners were expected and did not find them. Is it time to give up hope that susy is a property of nature?

The speaker is a theoretical physics research at Munich university. His research focusses mainly on superstring theory (an extension of supersymmetry) and quantum gravity.


Presenters:

  • atdotde
    I am a researcher in theoretical physics at LMU Muenchen. My scientific interests are in particular in string theory and quantum gravity. I enjoy presenting science according to Einstein's advice "Simplify as much as possible, but no further". I am a theoretical physicist working at Ludwig Maximilians Universität München. I mainly work on high energy physics and especially the quantisation of gravity in connection with particle physics. My focus is on superstring theory but I also work on black hole entropy, loop quantum gravity and have in interest in quantum information and quantum computers.

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