ILC physics and detector activities in Japan

This is an archived site.

Please visit our new site at https://www-jlc.kek.jp/ilc2

 

Welcome to the webpages of the ILC physics and detector groups in Japan

Introduction

The International Linear Collider (ILC) is a proposed electron-positron collider, which the Japanese government is currently considering hosting.

The major aim of the ILC is to probe the nature of fundamental particles and forces at energies currently beyond our reach, but which were common at the early stages of our universe.

We will do this by precisely measuring the properties of various known states (most significantly the Higgs boson and the top quark): these properties are expected to be influenced by the nature of this as-yet unknown physics at higher scales. The ILC will also make use of it's rather clean experimental environment to make sensitive searches for the direct production of new types of particles not predicted by the currently widely-accepted "Standard Model" of particle physics.

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a view of the ILC complex, by Rey.Hori

 

ILC activities in Japan

Several groups based in universities and research institues in Japan are involved in ILC-related activities.

This includes studies of the physics which can be studied at ILC, designing the accelerator, detectors, infrastructure, and software which will be used to record and analyse the collisions, and working with international, national and local organisations and governments.

These activities are carried out in very close collaboration with research groups from around the globe: the ILC is truly an International project.

 

Groups in Japan:

KEK, Iwate University, Iwate Prefectural University, Tohoku University, ICEPP, IPMU (The University of Tokyo), Waseda University, Shinshu University, Niigata Dental University, Osaka University, Hiroshima University, Kyushu University, Saga University, and others.

 

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