Continuing investment in fundamental weakly-coupled science, primarily through neutrino experiments and dark matter searches, prompts the question: is the maximum possible scientific information going to be extracted from these experiments? Are there new creative uses of the existing and planned facilities that would advance our knowledge of fundamental physics? Are there physics targets that have been overlooked by the current approach? This workshop will attempt to advance discussion of these topics, and concentrate on non-traditional ideas and alternative methods of probing new physics, both at underground laboratories and at high-intensity accelerators. The workshop aims to complement the large international conference, Topics in Astroparticle and Underground Physics 2017, to be held in Sudbury ON July 24-28, by directly preceding that meeting.
Format results
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Dark photon production in positron beam dump experiments via resonant annihilation
National Institute for Nuclear Physics -
Light dark matter at long baseline (and coherent scattering) neutrino experiments
University of Victoria -
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New Dark Matter Search Strategies at DUNE
University of Hawaii at Manoa -
Distorted Neutrino Oscillations (DiNOs) from ultra light, bosonic dark matter
University of Chicago -
Testing Light Dark Matter Co-Annihilation Signatures with Fixed Target Experiments
LinkedIn (United States) -
Probing Light Dark Matter
University of Southern Denmark -
Observing supernova neutrinos to late times
Ohio State University -
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Solar neutrinos as a probe of Neutrino-Dark Matter interactions
Ohio State University -