SCL seminar by Dejan Stojkovic
Dr Dejan Stojkovic from the Department of Physics, SUNY at Buffalo, USA, visited SCL on 19 July 2011 and gave a seminar on:
"Vanishing Dimensions: Theory and Phenomenology" (presentation available in PPTX and PDF)
Abstract:
Lower-dimensionality at higher energies has manifold theoretical advantages as recently pointed out. Moreover, it appears that experimental evidence may already exists for it - a statistically significant planar alignment of events with energies higher than TeV has been observed in some earlier cosmic ray experiments. If this alignment is not a fluke, then the LHC should be able to see effects associated with the dimensional crossover. Further, (2+1)-dimensional spacetimes have no gravitational degrees of freedom, and gravity waves cannot be produced in that epoch in the early universe. This places a universal maximum frequency at which primordial gravity waves can propagate, which may be accessible to future gravitational wave detectors such as LISA. In this talk, the theoretical motivation for "vanishing dimensions" as well as generic experimental and observational signature will be discussed.