De Roeck, A and Ellis, J and Grojean, C and Heinemeyer, S and Jakobs, K and Weiglein, G and Wells, J and Azuelos, G and Dawson, S and Gripaios, B and Han, T and Hewett, J and Lancaster, M and Mariotti, C and Moortgat, F and Moortgat-Pick, G and Polesello, G and Riemann, S and Schumacher, M and Assamagan, K and Bechtle, P and Carena, M and Chachamis, G and Chen, KF and De Curtis, S and Desch, K and Dittmar, M and Dreiner, H and Duehrssen, M and Foster, B and Frandsen, MT and Giammanco, A and Godbole, R and Gopalakrishna, S and Govoni, P and Gunion, J and Hollik, W and Hou, WS and Isidori, G and Juste, A and Kalinowski, J and Korytov, A and Kou, E and Kraml, S and Krawczyk, M and Martin, A and Milstead, D and Morton-Thurtle, V and Moenig, K and Mele, B and Ozcan, E and Pieri, M and Plehn, T and Reina, L and Richter-Was, E and Rizzo, T and Rolbiecki, K and Sannino, F and Schram, M and Smillie, J and Sultansoy, S and Tattersall, J and Uwer, P and Webber, B and Wienemann, P (2010) From the LHC to future colliders. In: European Physical Journal C (EPJ C), The - Particles and Fields, 66 (3-4). pp. 525-583.
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Abstract
Discoveries at the LHC will soon set the physics agenda for future colliders. This report of a CERN Theory Institute includes the summaries of Working Groups that reviewed the physics goals and prospects of LHC running with 10 to 300 fb(-1) of integrated luminosity, of the proposed sLHC luminosity upgrade, of the ILC, of CLIC, of the LHeC and of a muon collider. The four Working Groups considered possible scenarios for the first 10 fb(-1) of data at the LHC in which (i) a state with properties that are compatible with a Higgs boson is discovered, (ii) no such state is discovered either because the Higgs properties are such that it is difficult to detect or because no Higgs boson exists, (iii) a missing-energy signal beyond the Standard Model is discovered as in some supersymmetric models, and (iv) some other exotic signature of new physics is discovered. In the contexts of these scenarios, the Working Groups reviewed the capabilities of the future colliders to study in more detail whatever new physics may be discovered by the LHC. Their reports provide the particle physics community with some tools for reviewing the scientific priorities for future colliders after the LHC produces its first harvest of new physics from multi-TeV collisions.
Item Type: | Journal Article |
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Publication: | European Physical Journal C (EPJ C), The - Particles and Fields |
Publisher: | Springer |
Additional Information: | Copyright of this article belongs to Springer. |
Department/Centre: | Division of Physical & Mathematical Sciences > Centre for High Energy Physics |
Date Deposited: | 09 Jun 2010 05:24 |
Last Modified: | 19 Sep 2010 06:00 |
URI: | http://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/27260 |
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