Probing Novel Scalar and Tensor Interactions from (Ultra)Cold Neutrons to the LHC
Tanmoy Bhattacharya, Vincenzo Cirigliano, Saul D. Cohen, Alberto, Filipuzzi, Martin Gonzalez-Alonso, Michael L. Graesser, Rajan Gupta, Huey-Wen, Lin

TL;DR
This paper reviews constraints on scalar and tensor interactions from low-energy experiments and collider searches, highlighting future prospects for more stringent bounds from neutron decay and the LHC, supported by new lattice QCD calculations.
Contribution
It provides the first lattice estimate of the scalar charge, compiles existing tensor charge results, and analyzes future experimental sensitivities to these interactions.
Findings
Current LHC data probes scalar and tensor interactions at 10^-2 level.
Upcoming neutron beta decay experiments will improve bounds with lattice input.
Future collider measurements could reach 10^-3 sensitivity.
Abstract
Scalar and tensor interactions were once competitors to the now well-established V-A structure of the Standard Model weak interactions. We revisit these interactions and survey constraints from low-energy probes (neutron, nuclear, and pion decays) as well as collider searches. Currently, the most stringent limit on scalar and tensor interactions arise from 0+ -> 0+ nuclear decays and the radiative pion decay pi -> e nu gamma, respectively. For the future, we find that upcoming neutron beta decay and LHC measurements will compete in setting the most stringent bounds. For neutron beta decay, we demonstrate the importance of lattice computations of the neutron-to-proton matrix elements to setting limits on these interactions, and provide the first lattice estimate of the scalar charge and a new average of existing results for the tensor charge. Data taken at the LHC is currently probing…
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