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Creators/Authors contains: "Gonçalves, Dorival"

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  1. Abstract Some of the most astonishing and prominent properties of Quantum Mechanics, such as entanglement and Bell nonlocality, have only been studied extensively in dedicated low-energy laboratory setups. The feasibility of these studies in the high-energy regime explored by particle colliders was only recently shown and has gathered the attention of the scientific community. For the range of particles and fundamental interactions involved, particle colliders provide a novel environment where quantum information theory can be probed, with energies exceeding by about 12 orders of magnitude those employed in dedicated laboratory setups. Furthermore, collider detectors have inherent advantages in performing certain quantum information measurements and allow for the reconstruction of the state of the system under consideration via quantum state tomography. Here, we elaborate on the potential, challenges, and goals of this innovative and rapidly evolving line of research and discuss its expected impact on both quantum information theory and high-energy physics. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 1, 2026
  2. We estimate the reach of global Higgs analyses at a 27 TeV hadroncollider in terms of Higgs couplings and in terms of a gauge-invarianteffective Lagrangian, including invisible Higgs decays and the Higgsself-coupling. The new collider will indirectly probe new physics in theTeV range and allow for a meaningful test of the Higgs self-couplingalso embedded in a global analysis. 
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  3. First-principle simulations are at the heart of the high-energy physics research program. They link the vast data output of multi-purpose detectors with fundamental theory predictions and interpretation. This review illustrates a wide range of applications of modern machine learning to event generation and simulation-based inference, including conceptional developments driven by the specific requirements of particle physics. New ideas and tools developed at the interface of particle physics and machine learning will improve the speed and precision of forward simulations, handle the complexity of collision data, and enhance inference as an inverse simulation problem. 
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