Sensitivity to light weakly-coupled new physics at the precision frontier
Matthias Le Dall, Maxim Pospelov, Adam Ritz

TL;DR
This paper explores how precision measurements can detect light, weakly-coupled new physics, especially hidden sectors, which do not necessarily involve high-energy scales, expanding the scope of the precision frontier in particle physics.
Contribution
It identifies classes of precision observables sensitive to light hidden sector physics with small couplings, broadening the search for new physics beyond high-energy scales.
Findings
Hadronic electric dipole moments can indicate light hidden sectors.
Lepton flavor violation and g-2 are sensitive to light new physics.
Electron EDM near current sensitivity suggests new physics at or above electroweak scale.
Abstract
Precision measurements of rare particle physics phenomena (flavor oscillations and decays, electric dipole moments, etc.) are often sensitive to the effects of new physics encoded in higher-dimensional operators with Wilson coefficients given by , where C is dimensionless, , and is an energy scale. Many extensions of the Standard Model predict that should be at the electroweak scale or above, and the search for new short-distance physics is often stated as the primary goal of experiments at the precision frontier. In rather general terms, we investigate the alternative possibility: , and , to identify classes of precision measurements sensitive to light new physics (hidden sectors) that do not require an ultraviolet completion with additional states at or above the…
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