Colloquium Event

Video From Ken Van Tilburg, New York University - “Searching for Odd Phenomena with Odd Detectors”

Date
Tue February 8th 2022, 3:30pm
Location
Hewlett 200

Video Link

 

APPLIED PHYSICS/PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM

 

 

The Paul Kirkpatrick Award will be announced at this colloquium

 

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

3:30 p.m. on campus in Hewlett Teaching Center, Rm. 200

Light refreshments served in Varian lobby at 2:45 p.m.

Please register to attend: https://forms.gle/2FUzYP758cdTWMo1A

Please wear face coverings and practice social distancing

In-person attendance limited to Stanford affiliates

Zoom webinar link: https://stanford.zoom.us/j/98096122683

Password: Email dmoreau [at] stanford.edu (dmoreau[at]stanford[dot]edu)

 

Ken Van Tilburg
New York University

 

“Searching for Odd Phenomena with Odd Detectors”

 

Parity (P) and time reversal (T) were once thought to be fundamental symmetries of nature; electromagnetism and gravity are "even" under these spacetime ransformations. In the second half of the 20th century, experiments indicated that P and T are only approximate symmetries at low energies, yet the apparent absence of parity- and time-reversal-violating effects in the strong nuclear interactions poses one of the greatest theoretical problems with the Standard Model of particle physics. One dynamical solution to this puzzle involves a new particle---the QCD axion---which can also make up the dark matter of the universe. In this talk, I will describe two classes of experimental proposals designed to discover the QCD axion in the laboratory. They are based on a previously unknown phenomenon which we call the "piezoaxionic effect", akin to the piezoelectric effect typically present in parity-violating crystals. These phenomena and detectors are "odd" in the colloquial sense---they are unusual---but also in a precise sense: certain observables and material properties flip sign when viewed in a mirror (P-odd) or played backwards in time (T-odd).