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Monday, 21 November 2022
Time Speaker Title Resources
09:30 to 10:45 Gautam Bhattacharyya Session chair
09:30 to 09:40 Rajesh Gopakumar (ICTS-TIFR, India) Welcome address
09:40 to 09:45 Amol Dighe (TIFR Mumbai, India) Introduction to the programme
09:45 to 10:45 Gian Giudice (CERN, Switzeerland) Looking into the future of high-energy particle physics (Lecture 1)

Particle physics is going through a period of change, in which theorists are exploring new ideas and experimentalists are planning new projects after the LHC. The status of particle physics and its future ambitions will be reviewed, with special emphasis on the high-energy collider programme.

11:30 to 12:00 Satyaki Bhattacharya (SINP, India) Results from ATLAS and CMS
11:30 to 13:00 Manas Maiti Session chair
12:00 to 12:30 Diego Tonnelli (INFN, Italy) Results from BELLE II & LHCb
12:30 to 13:00 Gaia Lanfranchi (INFN, Italy) The Search for Feebly-Interacting Particles (Zoom talk)
14:30 to 15:00 Sudhir Vempati (IISc, India) Some Forays in BSM Physics
14:30 to 16:00 Rukmani Mohanta Session chair
15:00 to 15:30 Soumitra Nandi (IIT Guwahati, India) SM anomalies and measurements
15:30 to 16:00 Alex Pomarol (Barcelona and CERN) New Physics, EFTs & the on-shell Approach (Zoom talk)
16:30 to 18:30 Dilip Kumar Ghosh Session chair
16:31 to 17:00 Sabyasachi Chakrabarty (IIT Kanpur, India) Displaced Searches New Physics at Belle
17:00 to 17:30 Nishita Desai (TIFR Mumbai, India) Collider searches for dark matter through long-lived particles (Zoom talk)
17:30 to 18:00 Ranjan Laha (IISc, India) High-energy Neutrinos from the Sun as a Discovery tool for Dark matter-electron scattering
18:00 to 18:30 Ipsita Saha (University of Allahabad, India) ENew Physics, EFTs & the on-shell Approach
Tuesday, 22 November 2022
Time Speaker Title Resources
09:45 to 10:45 Debajyoti Choudhury Session chair
09:46 to 10:45 Gian Giudice (CERN, Switzerland) Looking into the future of high-energy particle physics (Lecture 2)

Particle physics is going through a period of change, in which theorists are exploring new ideas and experimentalists are planning new projects after the LHC. The status of particle physics and its future ambitions will be reviewed, with special emphasis on the high-energy collider programme.

11:29 to 13:00 Suchandra Dutta Session chair
11:30 to 12:00 Sanjay Swain (NISER Bhubaneswar, India) India-CMS Collaboration
12:00 to 12:30 Gagan B. Mohanty (TIFR Mumbai, India) BELLE Collaboration
12:30 to 13:00 Guy Wilkinson (University of Oxford, UK) Future e+e- colliders
14:30 to 16:00 Subir Sarkar Session chair
14:30 to 15:00 Vikram Rentala (IIT Bombay, India) W polarization measurements in hadronic decays
15:00 to 15:30 Rusa Mandal (IIT Gandhinagar, India) Flavor anomalies and new physics interpretations
15:30 to 16:00 Tirtha Shankar Ray (IIT Kharagpur, India) Bottom-up Composite Higgs @ LHC
Wednesday, 23 November 2022
Time Speaker Title Resources
09:30 to 11:00 Subhendra Mohanty Session chair
09:30 to 10:00 Poonam Mehta (JNU, India) New physics searches in neutrino oscillations (Zoom talk)
10:00 to 10:30 Subhendu Rakshit (IIT Indore, India) Astrophysical neutrinos
10:30 to 11:00 Sovan Chakravarty (IIT Guwahati, India) Supernova neutrinos
11:30 to 12:00 Satyanarayan Mukhopadhyay (IACS, India) Dark matter in astroparticle physics
11:30 to 13:00 Sourov Roy Session chair
12:00 to 12:30 Aseem Paranjape (IUCAA, India) Dark matter in astrophysics
12:30 to 13:00 Subhaditya Bhattacharya (IIT Guwahati, India) Dark matter at colliders
14:30 to 15:00 Anirban Kundu (University of Calcutta, India) India HEP outlook
14:30 to 16:05 Sreerup Raychaudhuri Session chair
15:00 to 15:30 Pratik Majumdar (SINP, India) India Astro-particle Physics outlook
15:30 to 16:00 Rudrajyoti Palit (TIFR Mumbai, India) India Nuclear Physics outlook
16:00 to 16:05 -- Vote of Thanks
17:00 to 17:15 Spenta Wadia (ICTS-TIFR, India) Welcome and introduction of speaker
17:15 to 18:00 Gian Giudice (CERN, Switzerland) Looking into the future of high-energy particle physics (Lecture 3)

Particle physics is going through a period of change, in which theorists are exploring new ideas and experimentalists are planning new projects after the LHC. The status of particle physics and its future ambitions will be reviewed, with special emphasis on the high-energy collider programme.