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A rendering of a black hole

Primordial Black Holes (PBHs) could play a relevant role in several physical phenomena: PBHs are particularly attractive as a macroscopic DM candidate, they might provide the seeds for the formation of the supermassive black holes that we observe in our universe today, and they might also be responsible for a fraction of the merger events detected by LIGO/Virgo, among other motivations. In addition, they also constitute unique probes of the inflationary phase, early universe physics associated to the smallest scales, and hidden BSM degrees of freedom which are almost inaccessible otherwise. 

The interest in PBHs has grown exponentially since the first detection of gravitational waves in 2015, where the existence of black holes was definitively established.  PBHs have since become one of the most prominent research topics in the field of high-energy physics.  The workshop aims to address questions related to PBH formation, Hawking radiation, experimental detection, and the role of PBHs in the Universe.

This three day workshop will host around 20 participants, giving most or all participants the opportunity to present their recent work as well as allowing time for informal discussion.  There will be no registration fee and we expect to be able to provide coffee breaks, lunches and a workshop dinner on Thursday night.  If you are interested in attending, please contact the organisers.

Confirmed Speakers

  • Alexander Kusenko (UCLA)
  • David Kaiser (MIT)
  • Stefano Profumo (UCSC)
  • Jane MacGibbon (University of North Florida) 
  • Yang Bai (University of Wisconsin–Madison)

Accommodation Suggestions

Organising Committee

  • Michael Baker (UMass - mjbaker [at] umass [dot] edu)

  • Andrea Thamm (UMass - athamm [at] umass [dot] edu - Diversity Coordinator)

  • Joaquim Iguaz Juan (UMass - jiguazjuan [at] umass [dot] edu)

  • Mehr U Nisa (MSU - nisamehr [at] msu [dot] edu)

  • Kristi Engel (UMD - klengel [at] umd [dot] edu)

Code of Conduct

All participants are required to agree with the following code of conduct. Organisers will enforce this code throughout the event. We expect cooperation from all participants to help ensure a safe environment for everybody.

Our workshop is dedicated to providing a harassment-free workshop experience for everyone, regardless of gender, age, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, or religion (or lack thereof). We do not tolerate harassment of workshop participants in any form.  Workshop participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled from the workshop at the discretion of the workshop organizers.

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In person and On campus event posted in Research for Current students