The Qweak Experiment -- A search for new physics at the TeV Scale
Qweak Collaboration: Willem T. H. van Oers

TL;DR
The Qweak experiment aims to precisely measure the proton's weak charge via parity-violating electron scattering at low Q^2 to test the Standard Model and search for signs of new physics beyond it.
Contribution
This work presents a new high-precision measurement of the proton's weak charge, providing a stringent test of the Standard Model's predictions at low energy scales.
Findings
Expected 4% total error in weak charge measurement
Potential to detect deviations indicating new physics
Complementary to electron weak charge measurements at higher energies
Abstract
A new precision measurement of the parity violating analyzing power in longitudinally polarized electron scattering from the proton at very low Q^2 at an incident energy of 1.16 GeV is in the final stages of preparation for execution at Jefferson Laboratory (JLab). A 2200 hour measurement of the parity violating asymmetry in elastic electron-proton scattering at Q^2 = 0.03 (GeV/c)^2 employing 180 microamp of 85% polarized beam on a 0.35 m long liquid hydrogen target will determine the weak charge of the proton, Q_w = 1 - 4sin^2(theta_W), with 4% combined statistical and systematic errors. The Standard Model makes a firm prediction of Q_w, based on the `running' of the weak mixing angle sin^2(theta_W) from the Z-pole down to lower energies. Any significant deviation of sin^2(theta_W) from its Standard Model prediction at low Q^2 would constitute a signal of new physics. In the absence of…
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