New Constraints (and Motivations) for Abelian Gauge Bosons in the MeV-TeV Mass Range
M. Williams, C.P. Burgess, Anshuman Maharana, F. Quevedo

TL;DR
This paper reviews experimental constraints on MeV-TeV scale abelian gauge bosons, explores their theoretical motivations, and discusses how their weak couplings and potential anomalies influence low-energy phenomenology.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive survey of phenomenological constraints and theoretical motivations for light abelian gauge bosons, highlighting their naturalness in string and extra-dimensional models.
Findings
Gauge bosons with small couplings are natural in string compactifications.
Anomaly cancellation can occur without new light fermions.
Charge conservation can appear broken or conserved in low-energy theories.
Abstract
We survey the phenomenological constraints on abelian gauge bosons having masses in the MeV to multi-GeV mass range (using precision electroweak measurements, neutrino-electron and neutrino-nucleon scattering, electron and muon anomalous magnetic moments, upsilon decay, beam dump experiments, atomic parity violation, low-energy neutron scattering and primordial nucleosynthesis). We compute their implications for the three parameters that in general describe the low-energy properties of such bosons: their mass and their two possible types of dimensionless couplings (direct couplings to ordinary fermions and kinetic mixing with Standard Model hypercharge). We argue that gauge bosons with very small couplings to ordinary fermions in this mass range are natural in string compactifications and are likely to be generic in theories for which the gravity scale is systematically smaller than the…
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