The Heavy Photon Search Experiment
Abstract
The Heavy Photon Search (HPS) experiment is designed to search for a new vector boson in the mass range of 20 MeV/ to 220 MeV/ that kinetically mixes with the Standard Model photon with couplings . In addition to the general importance of exploring light, weakly coupled physics that is difficult to probe with high-energy colliders, a prime motivation for this search is the possibility that sub-GeV thermal relics constitute dark matter, a scenario that requires a new comparably light mediator, where models with a hidden gauge symmetry, a "dark", "hidden sector", or "heavy" photon, are particularly attractive. HPS searches for visible signatures of these heavy photons, taking advantage of their small coupling to electric charge to produce them via a process analogous to bremsstrahlung in a fixed target and detect their subsequent decay to pairs in a compact spectrometer. In addition to searching for resonances atop large QED backgrounds, HPS has the ability to precisely measure decay lengths, resulting in unique sensitivity to dark photons, as well as other long-lived new physics. After completion of the experiment and operation of engineering runs in 2015 and 2016 at the JLab CEBAF, physics runs in 2019 and 2021 have provided datasets that are now being analyzed to search for dark photons and other new phenomena.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2203.08324,
title = {The Heavy Photon Search Experiment},
author = {Nathan Baltzell and Marco Battaglieri and Mariangela Bondi and Sergei Boyarinov and Cameron Bravo and Stephen Bueltmann and Volker Burkert and Pierfrancesco Butti and Tongtong Cao and Massimo Carpinelli and Andrea Celentano and Gabriel Charles and Chris Cuevas and Annalisa D'Angelo and Domenico D'Urso and Natalia Dashyan and Marzio De Napoli and Raffaella De Vita and Alexandre Deur and Miriam Diamond and Raphael Dupre and Rouven Essig and Vitaliy Fadeyev and R. Clive Field and Alessandra Filippi and Sarah Gaiser and Nerses Gevorgyan and Norman Graf and Mathew Graham and Michel Guidal and Ryan Herbst and Maurik Holtrop and John Jaros and Robert Johnson and Valery Kubarovsky and Dominique Marchand and Luca Marsicano and Takashi Maruyama and Samantha McCarty and Jeremy McCormick and Bryan McKinnon and Omar Moreno and Carlos Munoz-Camacho and Timothy Nelson and Silvia Niccolai and Rory O'Dwyer and Rafayel Paremuzyan and Emrys Peets and Nunzio Randazzo and Benjamin Raydo and Benjamin Reese and Philip Schuster and Gabriele Simi and Valeria Sipala and Matthew Solt and Alic Spellman and Stepan Stepanyan and Holly Szumila-Vance and Lauren Tompkins and Natalia Toro and Maurizio Ungaro and Hakop Voskanyan},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2203.08324},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
Submitted to the Proceedings of the US Community Study on the Future of Particle Physics (Snowmass 2021)