1 September 2024 to 1 April 2025
Europe/Zurich timezone

The Forward Physics Facility at the Large Hadron Collider

Not scheduled
1m

Description

The Forward Physics Facility (FPF) is a proposal developed to exploit the unique scientific potential made possible by the intense hadron beams produced in the far-forward direction at the high luminosity LHC (HL-LHC). Housed in a well-shielded cavern 627 m from the LHC interactions, the facility will enable a broad and deep scientific programme which will greatly extend the physics capability of the HL-LHC. Instrumented with a suite of four complementary detectors – FLArE, FASERν2, FASER2 and FORMOSA – the FPF has unique potential to shed light on neutrino physics, QCD, astroparticle physics, and to search for dark matter and other new particles. This contribution describes some of the key scientific drivers for the facility, the engineering and technical studies that have been made in preparation for it, the design of its four complementary experiments, and the status of the project’s partnerships and planning.

Authors

Alan Barr (University of Oxford (GB)) Albert De Roeck (CERN) Felix Kling (DESY) Jamie Boyd (CERN) Josh McFayden (University of Sussex) Juan Rojo Chacon (Nikhef National institute for subatomic physics (NL))

Presentation materials