Project overview

Particle physics is the study of the fundamental building blocks of nature, how they interact and how they lead to what we observe from the smallest scales to the largest. The Standard Model, which is built on quantum field theory, is an impressively accurate description of all data to date, from colliders to astronomical observations. Nevertheless, there are many aspects we do not understand from the pattern of particle masses to our lack of a quantum theory of gravity. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) continues to accumulate data; it famously discovered the Higgs particle in 2012 and could yet discover new physics beyond the SM. Currently there are possible hints of new physics in the muon g-2 experiment and in b-quark physics at LHC. We are actively engaged, through the NExT institute, in understanding these and other possible signatures, for example, through our easy-to-use interface to supercomputers (HEPMDB) and the definition of new experimental triggers. We are also developing models of what new physics could be and how they impact cosmology (early-universe physics). We try to explain the sizes of the different particle masses and why the Universe is dominated by matter rather than anti-matter. Many signatures involve hadrons, such as protons, made of quarks bound by the strong nuclear force. The strong force is poorly understood but we have expertise in using supercomputer simulations to study these particles. These simulations are vital to understand the LHC b-quark anomalies. It is important to continue to develop Quantum Field Theories, the structure that underpins all particle physics work. We study how to make very precise calculations of how particles scatter, trying to reduce the complexity of these computations. Understanding how the strong nuclear force generates hadron masses and how the Higgs field contributes other masses to particles such as the electron remain open questions we work on. There is also as yet no complete quantum theory of gravity and we work towards developing new ideas for gravity. String theory is a leading candidate for this theory and we study many aspects of this theory including scattering signatures. The notion of holography, that emerged from string theory, has linked apparently very different systems such as QCD and Black Holes. We are developing it to learn more about a quantum gravity, and use gravity to study QCD including in extreme environments such as the cores of neutron stars. How black holes encode information is also a very deep question which shows we do not yet understand what happens at a black hole event horizon (the edge of a black hole from which even light can't escape). We are developing models of black holes and their microstates and we test their consistency. Quantum gravity should underpin the physics of the very early universe and we develop holographic models to model the physics of the Big Bang. We are extending lattice field theory simulations to study gravity and cosmology, including testing holographic models.

Staff

Lead researchers

Professor Kostas Skenderis

Chair in Mathematical Physics
Connect with Kostas

Other researchers

Professor Nicholas Evans

Professor of Particle Physics
Research interests
  • Strongly Coupled Gauge Theories including QCD and composite Higgs models
  • Holographic Descriptions of Gauge Theories
  • The origin of mass
Connect with Nicholas

Professor Stefano Moretti PhD, FilDrHC

Professor
Research interests
  • His research interests include: Standard Model (QCD and EW Interactions), Supersymmetry, Non-…
  • Prof Moretti’s scientific activity is in particle phenomenology, particularly in the area of …
  • Prof Moretti is also author of two textbooks, S. Khalil and S. Moretti, `Supersymmetry Beyond…
Connect with Stefano

Professor Alexander Belyaev

Professor of Physics
Research interests
  • Theory and phenomenology of elementary particle physics and cosmology beyond the standard mod…
  • Supersymmetry, extra-dimensions and technicolor and their Dark Matter cosmological connection…
Connect with Alexander

Professor Pasquale Di Bari

Professor of Physics And Astronomy
Research interests
  • Particle Cosmology and Neutrino Physics:
  • BSM physics, grand-unified models, flavour models
  • Seesaw models and phenomenology
Connect with Pasquale

Dr Benjamin Withers

Principal Research Fellow
Research interests
  • Gravity
  • Holography
  • String theory
Connect with Benjamin

Dr Carlos Mafra

Principal Research Fellow
Research interests
  • Covariant quantization of the superstring
  • Pure spinor formalism
  • Superstring scattering amplitudes
Connect with Carlos

Dr Ömer Gürdoğan

Principal Research Fellow
Research interests
  • Scattering amplitudes in Quantum Field Theory (QFT) and their mathematical properties
  • Multi-loop pertrubative calculations using bootstrap techniques
  • Applications of cluster algebras and related concepts to QFT
Connect with Ömer

Professor James Drummond

Professor
Research interests
  • Quantum field theory, string theory, scattering amplitudes, integrable systems, holography, a…
Connect with James

Professor Oscar Dias

Professor
Research interests
  • Einstein's gravity
  • Black holes
  • Holographic dualities (gravity/gauge theory dualities)
Connect with Oscar

Professor Andreas Schmitt

Professor
Research interests
  • Quantum chromodynamics
  • Superconductivity and superfluidity of dense nuclear and quark matter
Connect with Andreas

Dr David Turton

Principal Research Fellow
Research interests
  • String theory
  • Black holes
  • Holography
Connect with David

Dr Ines Aniceto

Principal Research Fellow
Research interests
  • 1. Perturbation theory and asymptotic analysis of N=non-perturbative phenomena in AdS/CFT
  • 2. Exponential Asymptotics and resurgence in non-linear ODEs and discrete equations
  • 3.  Exact quantisation methods for field theoretic observables
Connect with Ines

Dr Bipasha Chakraborty

Associate Professor
Research interests
  • Theoretical particle physics;
  • Lattice QCD;
  • Flavour physics & precision tests of the Standard Model;
Connect with Bipasha

Dr Itamar Yaakov

Lecturer
Research interests
  • Quantum Field Theory
  • String Theory
  • Mathematical Physics
Connect with Itamar

Research outputs

Paolo Arnaudo, Javier Carballo & Benjamin Withers, 2025, Journal of High Energy Physics, 2025(9)
Type: article
Javier Carballo, Christiana Pantelidou & Benjamin Withers, 2025, Journal of High Energy Physics, 2025(8)
Type: article
Jérémy Besson, Javier Carballo, Christiana Pantelidou & Benjamin Withers, 2025, Frontiers in Physics, 13
Type: review
Michal P. Heller, Alexandre Serantes, Michał Spaliński & Benjamin Withers, 2024, Nature Physics, 20(12), 1948-1954
Type: article
Javier Carballo & Benjamin Withers, 2024, Journal of High Energy Physics, 2024(10)
Type: article
Michal P. Heller, Alexandre Serantes, Michał Spaliński & Benjamin Withers, 2024
Type: other