The Physics Beyond Colliders initiative is an exploratory study aimed at exploiting the full scientific potential of the CERN's accelerator complex and scientific infrastructures through projects complementary to the LHC and other possible future colliders. These projects will target fundamental physics questions in modern particle physics.ii 7 Physics reach of PBC projects 66 8 Physics reach of PBC projects in the sub-eV mass range 66 8.1 Axion portal with photon dominance (BC9) 66 9 Physics reach of PBC projects in the MeV-GeV mass range 73 9.1 Vector Portal 78 9.1.1 Minimal Dark Photon model (BC1) 78 9.1.2 Dark Photon decaying to invisible final states (BC2) 83 9.1.3 Milli-charged particles (BC3) 90 9.2 Scalar Portal 93 9.2.1 Dark scalar mixing with the Higgs (BC4 and BC5) 93 9.3 Neutrino Portal 97 9.3.1 Neutrino portal with electron-flavor dominance (BC6) 98 9.3.2 Neutrino portal with muon-flavor dominance (BC7) 101 9.3.3 Neutrino portal with tau-flavor dominance (BC8) 103 9.4 Axion Portal 106 9.4.1 Axion portal with photon-coupling (BC9) 106 9.4.2 Axion portal with fermion-coupling (BC10) 110 9.4.3 Axion portal with gluon-coupling (BC11) 113 10 Physics reach of PBC projects in the multi-TeV mass range 115 10.1 Measurement of EDMs as probe of NP in the multi TeV scale 115 10.2 Experiments sensitive to Flavour Violation 116 10.3 B physics anomalies and BR(K → πνν) 120 11 Conclusions and Outlook 121 A ALPS: prescription for treating the FCNC processes 123 B ALPs: production via π 0 , η, η mixing 126 Executive SummaryThe main goal of this document follows very closely the mandate of the Physics Beyond Colliders (PBC) study group, and is "an exploratory study aimed at exploiting the full scientific potential of CERN's accelerator complex and its scientific infrastructure through projects complementary to the LHC, HL-LHC and other possible future colliders. These projects would target fundamental physics questions that are similar in spirit to those addressed by high-energy colliders, but that require different types of beams and experiments 1 ". Fundamental questions in modern particle physics as the origin of the neutrino masses and oscillations, the nature of Dark Matter and the explanation of the mechanism that drives the baryogenesis are still open today and do require an answer.So far an unambiguous signal of New Physics (NP) from direct searches at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), indirect searches in flavour physics and direct detection Dark Matter experiments is absent. Moreover, theory provides no clear guidance on the NP scale. This imposes today, more than ever, a broadening of the experimental effort in the quest for NP. We need to explore different ranges of interaction strengths and masses with respect to what is already covered by existing or planned initiatives.Low-mass and very-weakly coupled particles represent an attractive possibility, theoretically and phenomenologically well motivated, but currently poorly explored: a systematic investigation should be pursued in the next decades both at acc...
In the past decade, one of the major challenges of particle physics has been to gain an in-depth understanding of the role of quark flavor. In this time frame, measurements and the theoretical interpretation of their results have advanced tremendously. A much broader understanding of flavor particles has been achieved; apart from their masses and quantum numbers, there now exist detailed measurements of the characteristics of their interactions allowing stringent tests of Standard Model predictions. Among the most interesting phenomena of flavor physics is the violation of the CP symmetry that has been subtle and difficult to explore. In the past, observations of CP violation were confined to neutral K mesons, but since the early 1990s, a large number of CP-violating processes have been studied in detail in neutral B mesons. In parallel, measurements of the couplings of the heavy quarks and the dynamics for their decays in large samples of K, D, and B mesons have been greatly improved in accuracy and the results are being used as probes in the search for deviations from the Standard Model. In the near future, there will be a transition from the current to a new generation of experiments; thus a review of the status of quark flavor physics is timely. This report is the result of the work of physicists attending the 5th CKM workshop, hosted by the University of Rome "La Sapienza", September 9-13, 2008. It summarizes the results of the current generation of experiments that are about to be completed and it confronts these results with the theoretical understanding of the field which has greatly improved in the past decade. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
NA62 is a fixed-target experiment at the CERN SPS dedicated to measurements of rare kaon decays. Such measurements, like the branching fraction of the K+ → π+ ν ν̄ decay, have the potential to bring significant insights into new physics processes when comparison is made with precise theoretical predictions. For this purpose, innovative techniques have been developed, in particular, in the domain of low-mass tracking devices. Detector construction spanned several years from 2009 to 2014. The collaboration started detector commissioning in 2014 and will collect data until the end of 2018. The beam line and detector components are described together with their early performance obtained from 2014 and 2015 data.
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The exploration of long-lived particles in the MeV-GeV region is a formidable task but it may provide us a unique access to dark sectors. Fixed-target facilities with sufficiently energetic and intense proton beams are an ideal tool for this challenge. In this work we show that the production rate of Axion-Like-Particles (ALPs) coupled pre-dominantly to photons receives a significant contribution from daughter-photons of secondary π 0 and η mesons created in the proton shower. We carefully compare the PYTHIA simulated spectra of such secondaries to experimental literature, compute the ALP flux from the Primakoff conversion of these photons, and finally revisit existing limits on ALPs and update the prospects for a set of existing and future searches. Our results show that taking this production mechanism into account significantly enhances the sensitivity compared to previous studies based on coherent ALP production in primary proton-nucleus interactions.
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