13–17 May 2024
University of Pittsburgh / Carnegie Mellon University
US/Eastern timezone

The New Physics Case for Beam-Dump Experiments with Accelerated Muon Beams

16 May 2024, 14:45
15m
David Lawrence Hall 207 (University of Pittsburgh)

David Lawrence Hall 207

University of Pittsburgh

Speaker

Rikab Gambhir (MIT)

Description

As the field examines a future muon collider as a possible successor to the LHC, we must consider how to fully utilize not only the high-energy particle collisions, but also any lower-energy staging facilities necessary in the R&D process. An economical and efficient possibility is to use the accelerated muon beam from either the full experiment or from cooling and acceleration tests in beam-dump experiments.Beam-dump experiments are complementary to the main collider as they achieve sensitivity to very small couplings with minimal instrumentation. We demonstrate the utility of muon beam-dump experiments for new physics searches at energies from 10 GeV to 5 TeV. We find that, even at low energies like those accessible at staging or demonstrator facilities, it is possible to probe new regions of parameter space for a variety of generic BSM models, including muonphilic, leptophilic, Lμ−Lτ, and dark photon scenarios. Such experiments could therefore provide opportunities for discovery of new physics well before the completion of the full multi-TeV collider.

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