MATHUSLA: A Detector Proposal to Explore the Lifetime Frontier at the HL-LHC
The observation of long-lived particles at the LHC would reveal physics beyond the Standard Model, could account for the many open issues in our understanding of our universe, and conceivably point to a more complete theory of the fundamental interactions. Such long-lived particle signatures are fun...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The observation of long-lived particles at the LHC would reveal physics
beyond the Standard Model, could account for the many open issues in our
understanding of our universe, and conceivably point to a more complete theory
of the fundamental interactions. Such long-lived particle signatures are
fundamentally motivated and can appear in virtually every theoretical construct
that address the Hierarchy Problem, Dark Matter, Neutrino Masses and the Baryon
Asymmetry of the Universe. We describe in this document a large detector,
MATHUSLA, located on the surface above an HL-LHC $pp$ interaction point, that
could observe long-lived particles with lifetimes up to the Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis limit of 0.1 s. We also note that its large detector area
allows MATHUSLA to make important contributions to cosmic ray physics. Because
of the potential for making a major breakthrough in our conceptual
understanding of the universe, long-lived particle searches should have the
highest level of priority. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1901.04040 |