The Physics Programme Of The MoEDAL Experiment At The LHC
B. Acharya, J. Alexandre, J. Bernab\'eu, M. Campbell, S. Cecchini, J., Chwastowski, M. De Montigny, D. Derendarz, A. De Roeck, J. R. Ellis, M., Fairbairn, D. Felea, M. Frank, D. Frekers, C. Garcia, G. Giacomelli, M., Giorgini, D. Ha\c{S}egan, T. Hott, J. Jak\r{u}bek, A. Katre

TL;DR
The MoEDAL experiment at the LHC is a passive detector designed to discover highly ionizing particles beyond the Standard Model, using nuclear track detectors and trapping volumes to extend the LHC's discovery potential.
Contribution
This paper presents an overview of MoEDAL's unique passive detection methods and its potential to explore new physics beyond existing LHC experiments.
Findings
MoEDAL employs nuclear track detectors and trapping volumes for detecting highly ionizing particles.
It offers a largely triggerless, passive detection approach complementing ATLAS and CMS.
The experiment extends the discovery horizon for new physics at the LHC.
Abstract
The MoEDAL experiment at Point 8 of the LHC ring is the seventh and newest LHC experiment. It is dedicated to the search for highly ionizing particle avatars of physics beyond the Standard Model, extending significantly the discovery horizon of the LHC. A MoEDAL discovery would have revolutionary implications for our fundamental understanding of the Microcosm. MoEDAL is an unconventional and largely passive LHC detector comprised of the largest array of Nuclear Track Detector stacks ever deployed at an accelerator, surrounding the intersection region at Point 8 on the LHC ring. Another novel feature is the use of paramagnetic trapping volumes to capture both electrically and magnetically charged highly-ionizing particles predicted in new physics scenarios. It includes an array of TimePix pixel devices for monitoring highly-ionizing particle backgrounds. The main passive elements of the…
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