Invisible decay of muonium: Tests of the standard model and searches for new physics
S. N. Gninenko, N. V. Krasnikov, V. A. Matveev

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential for detecting the invisible decay of muonium, which could test the Standard Model and reveal new physics, by proposing a sensitive experimental search that could improve current limits by several orders of magnitude.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental approach to search for muonium's invisible decay, aiming to significantly tighten existing bounds and explore potential new physics such as mirror matter.
Findings
Current limit on muonium invisible decay is Br < 5.7×10^{-6}
Proposed experiment could reach sensitivity of Br < 10^{-12}
Detection of higher-than-predicted decay rates would indicate new physics
Abstract
In the Standard Model there are several canonical examples of pure leptonic processes involving the muon, the electron and the corresponding neutrinos which are connected by the crossing symmetry: i) the decay of muon, ii) the inverse muon decay, and iii) the annihilation of a muon and an electron into two neutrinos. Although the first two reactions have been observed and measured since long ago, the third process, resulting in the invisible final state, has never been experimentally tested. It may go either directly, or, at low energies, via the annihilation of a muon and an electron from an atomic bound state, called muonium (M=\mu^+e^-). The M\to \nu_\mu \nu_e decay is expected to be a very rare process, with the branching fraction predicted to be Br(M\to \nu_\mu\nu_e) = 6.6 10^{-12} with respect to the ordinary muon decay rate. Using the reported experimental results on precision…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
