DescriptionThe `Cosmological Constant Problem’ is one of most outstanding problems in theoretical physics. It is a significant theme of many current areas of research, both at theoretical level, and at the experimental level, via the increasing observational evidence for dark energy. However, the way researchers address this problem varies tremendously between different scientific communities. The principal aim of this workshop is to bring together leading researchers in neighboring fields, to reach a common understanding of the nature of the problem, and to share the tools used in addressing it. In parallel, this workshop aims at understanding how the different directions in solving the Cosmological Constant Problem are related as well as searching for genuinely new approaches to tackle the question.
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The Cosmological Constant Problem and Extra Dimensions
Cliff Burgess McMaster University
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6D Brane Models and their Perturbations
Susha Parameswaran University of Liverpool
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Inflation on a codimension-two brane
Hyun Min Lee Carnegie Mellon University
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Infrared Modification of Gravity with Dynamical Torsion
Seifallah Randjbar-Daemi The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP)
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Phenomenological Connections between Particle Physics and Dark Energy
Daniel Chung University of Wisconsin–Madison
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Positive and Negative Energy Symmetry and the Cosmological Constant Problem
John Moffat Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
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LHC, ILC, and Quintessence
Lisa Everett University of Wisconsin–Madison
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Cyclic Universe
Neil Turok University of Edinburgh
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Where in the String Landscape is Quintessence.
Nemanja Kaloper University of California System
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Dilution of the Cosmological Constant: Higher Codimension Branes and Higher Curvature Terms
Alberto Iglesias University of California, Davis
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Cascading Gravity and the Cosmological Constant
Justin Khoury University of Pennsylvania
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