1: Lyndon Evans: The Large Hadron Collider
2: M. Giovanozzi: The LHC machine: from beam commissioning to
operation and future upgrades
3: Dan Green: The LHC detectors and the first CMS data
4: Bruno Mansoulie: About the identification of signals at LHC:
analysis and statistics
5: Michelangelo L. Mangano: Introduction to the theory of LHC
collisions
6: Juan M. Maldacena: An introduction to the gauge gravity
duality
7: Jan de Boer: Introduction to the AdS/CFT correspondence
8: Yaron Oz: Hydrodynamics and black holes
9: Gian Francesco Giudice: Supersymmetry
10: Gerard t' Hooft: Spontaneous breakdown of local conformal
invariance in quantum gravity
11: Zohar Komargodski: Renormalization group flows and
anomalies
12: Alex Pomarol: Models of electroweak symmetry breaking
13: Luis Ibañez: String phenomenology
14: Michael R. Douglas: The string landscape and low energy
supersymmetry
15: Laurent Baulieu: The description of N = 1, d = 4 supergravity
using twisted supersymmetric fields
16: Eliezer Rabinovici: AdS Crunches, CFT Falls and cosmological
complexity
17: Gabriele Veneziano: High-energy collisions of particles,
strings and branes
Laurent Baulieu studied in Ecole Normale Superieure and taught
physics in Ecole Polyechnique. He has been working on the theory of
elementary particles, quantum field theory, and symmetries. He is
Directeur de Rechercheurs at CNRS currently working at Laboratoire
de physique theorique et des hautes energies in the University
Pierre et Marie Curie, which is part of Paris Sorbonne University.
He organized numerous schools and conferences around the World
and
co-edited proceedings from several of these including 'String
theory: formal developments and applications' (with J. de Boer et
al.), 'Theory and Particle Physics: the LHC perspective and beyond'
(with J. de
Boer et al.), and 'Strings and branes: the present paradigm for
gauge interactions and cosmology'. Karim Benakli prepared his
thesis at Ecole Polytechnique and was a post-doc at Texas A&M
and ICTP Trieste, and fellow at CERN. He is Directeur de Recherches
at CNRS working at Laboratoire de physique theorique et des hautes
energies in the University Pierre et Marie Curie, which is part of
Paris Sorbonne University. His main interests in research are on
beyond the Standard Model high
energy physics.
Michael R. Douglas is a Professor at Stony Brook. He received his
bachelor's degree in physics from Harvard University, and a Ph.D.
in physics from Caltech in 1988. Douglas was a postdoc at the
University of Chicago for one year, and then moved to Rutgers
University in 1989 with Dan Friedan and Steve Shenker to help start
the New High Energy Theory Center. He became an associate professor
at Rutgers in 1995, and left for a year in 1997-1998 to take up a
permanent position at the Institut des
Hautes Études Scientifiques. He then returned to Rutgers and in
2000 became the director of the NHETC. In 2008, Douglas moved from
Rutgers to become the first permanent member of the Simons Center
for
Geometry and Physics. Douglas received the 2000 Sackler Prize in
theoretical physics, holds a Louis Michel Visiting Professorship at
the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, and has been a Gordon
Moore Visiting Scholar at Caltech, and a Clay Mathematics Institute
Mathematical Emissary. Bruno Mansoulie obtained an engineering
degree from Ecole Polytechnique, then a masters and Ph.D. in
theoretical physics. He started his career working at CERN where
participated in the discovery of
the W, Z, and top particles. He Is now a member of the Atlas
experiment in LHC. From 2002 to 2007 he was the director of the
Service de Physique des Particules in CEA. He gives numerous talks
on the LHC
project and the problem of the origin of the elementary particle
masses. Eliezer Rabinovici is Professor of Physics, holding the
Leon H. and Ada G. Miller Chair of Science at the Racah Institute
of Physics, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He received there his
BSc (1969) and MSc degrees (1971). He completed his PhD at the
Weizmann Institute of Science in 1974. He was a postdoctoral fellow
at Fermilab (1975-1976) and at Lawrence Berkeley Lab (1977). He has
been at the Hebrew University since
1978 as Senior Lecturer, Associate Professor (1981) and Professor
(1985). He was awarded the Miller Visiting Professorship at UC
Berkeley (2003) and a Simons Distinguished Visiting Scholar at KITP
UCSB
(2014). He has been a fellow at the IAS Princeton and a visiting
professor at the Michigan-Ann Arbor, Rutgers and Stanford
Universities. He was awarded a Blaise Pascal International chair at
Paris VI and ENS (2013). He was awarded the Louis Michel visiting
chair at IHES, France (2015). Leticia F. Cugliandolo received her
Ph.D. in theoretical physics from the Universidad Nacional de La
Plata, Argentina, in 1991. After post-docs in Universita di Roma I,
La Sapienza, and CEA/Saclay she joined the
Physics Department at Ecole Normale Superieure de Paris in 1997.
She is currently a full professor at Universite Pierre et Marie
Curie in Paris and the director of Ecole de Physique des Houches
since
2007. Her research focuses on statistical physics and condensed
matter problems. She received the Marie Curie Excellence Award, the
Guggenheim Fellowship and the Prix Langevin of the French Physical
Society.
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