I’m at the big yearly conference of my sub-field this week, called Amplitudes. This year, surprisingly for the first time, it’s at the very appropriate location of CERN.
Amplitudes keeps on growing. In 2019, we had 175 participants. We were on Zoom in 2020 and 2021, with many more participants, but that probably shouldn’t count. In Prague last year we had 222. This year, I’ve been told we have even more, something like 250 participants (the list online is bigger, but includes people joining on Zoom). We’ve grown due to new students, but also new collaborations: people from adjacent fields who find the work interesting enough to join along. This year we have mathematicians talking about D-modules, bootstrappers finding new ways to get at amplitudes in string theory, beyond-the-standard-model theorists talking about effective field theories, and cosmologists talking about the large-scale structure of the universe.
The talks have been great, from clear discussions of earlier results to fresh-off-the-presses developments, plenty of work in progress, and even one talk where the speaker’s opinion changed during the coffee break. As we’re at CERN, there’s also a through-line about the future of particle physics, with a chat between Nima Arkani-Hamed and the experimentalist Beate Heinemann on Tuesday and a talk by Michelangelo Mangano about the meaning of “new physics” on Thursday.
I haven’t had a ton of time to write, I keep getting distracted by good discussions! As such, I’ll do my usual thing, and say a bit more about specific talks in next week’s post.


“As we’re at CERN, there’s also a through-line about the future of particle physics, with a chat between Nima Arkani-Hamed and the experimentalist Beate Heinemann on Tuesday ”
Will this be publicly available?
LikeLike
It was advertised as in-person only, so I don’t think so, unless there’s a recording up somewhere unexpected!
LikeLiked by 1 person