Bulletin of the American Physical Society
6th Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan
Sunday–Friday, November 26–December 1 2023; Hawaii, the Big Island
Session 2WAA: Scientific Opportunities in Nuclear Physics with High-Intensity, Low-Energy Electron Accelerators IInvited Workshop
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Chair: Toshimi Suda Room: Hilton Waikoloa Village Kings 1 |
Sunday, November 26, 2023 2:00PM - 2:30PM |
2WAA.00001: Search for new physics in e+e- final states with an invariant mass of 10-20 MeV using the ARIEL electron accelerator Invited Speaker: Katherine Pachal The DarkLight collaboration is constructing an experiment to search for a new boson which couples to leptons and has a mass in the 10-20 MeV range. Such a new boson could address various observed anomalies including the muon g-2 discrepancy and the "X17" excess. This result will be complementary to other existing and planned experiments, which have largely relied on pion couplings, since at DarkLight the production and decay of the new boson rely solely on leptonic interactions. This new experiment will be hosted at the ARIEL e-linac at TRIUMF, a low-energy (30-50 MeV) electron accelerator able to deliver up to 10 mA of current to the DarkLight fixed target. This talk will discuss the experiment status and plans as well as why its physics program is so well suited to the TRIUMF electron accelerator. |
Sunday, November 26, 2023 2:30PM - 3:00PM |
2WAA.00002: Opportunities to Search for New Physics Using Low-Energy Electron Accelerators Invited Speaker: Susan V Gardner I present an overview of the new physics searches made possible by low-energy accelerators with intense electron beams. We |
Sunday, November 26, 2023 3:00PM - 3:30PM |
2WAA.00003: Future high-intensity accelerators in Europe and their nuclear physics program Invited Speaker: Jan C Bernauer With the advent of energy recovering linacs, the field of nuclear physics at the intensity frontier was revigorated. The European physics community is in the process of building a series of such machines, spanning the energy range from few MeV to about 1 GeV, including MESA at Mainz and PERLE at Orsay. In the talk, I will present an overview of the planned machines and their nuclear physics program, from precision measurements of the proton form factors to measurements on rare isotopes. |
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