I am proud, along with Dr. Erica Caden and Dr. Thomas Brunner, to have been a co-leader of the effort to organize and execute the 24th International Workshop on Next Generation Nucleon Decay and Neutrino Detectors (NNN'25). Preceding this was the first ever Extreme Nuclear Half-Lives: New Theories and Experiments (ENT1/2ENTE) workshop, whose focus was on new ideas to help propel the field to ultra-rare nuclear phenomena.

From the event website:

NNN25 is jointly organized by SNOLAB, the McDonald Institute, and McGill University. We are grateful to the Canadian Institute of Nuclear Physics (CINP), which has generpusly provided financial support for a limited number of Canadian highly qualified personnel (HQP), connected to CINP, to participate in the conference at reduced cost.

Over the last 25 years, the NNN series of workshops has been providing the international community a forum for in-depth discussions on future large-scale detectors for research on nucleon decay and neutrino physics since its inaugural workshop in 1999 at Stony Brook (NY). The main physics topics of the workshop include: searches for proton decay, CP violation in the lepton sector, determination of the neutrino mass hierarchy, and observation of neutrinos from core-collapse supernovae.

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