New Technologies for Discovery
Z. Ahmed, A. Apresyan, M. Artuso, P. Barry, E. Bielejec, F. Blaszczyk,, T. Bose, D. Braga, S.A. Charlebois, A. Chatterjee, A. Chavarria, H.-M. Cho,, S. Dalla Torre, M. Demarteau, D. Denisov, M. Diefenthaler, A. Dragone, F., Fahim, C. Gee, S. Habib, G. Haller, J. Hogan

TL;DR
This paper emphasizes the importance of investing in innovative, cost-effective detector technologies and instrumentation development to sustain progress and leadership in high energy physics amidst budget constraints and technological challenges.
Contribution
It highlights the current status, challenges, and future needs of detector technologies, proposing prioritized research areas for advancing high energy physics instrumentation.
Findings
Current technologies are reaching sensitivity limits.
New approaches are needed to overcome technological challenges.
Prioritized research areas can guide future instrumentation development.
Abstract
For the field of high energy physics to continue to have a bright future, priority within the field must be given to investments in the development of both evolutionary and transformational detector development that is coordinated across the national laboratories and with the university community, international partners and other disciplines. While the fundamental science questions addressed by high energy physics have never been more compelling, there is acute awareness of the challenging budgetary and technical constraints when scaling current technologies. Furthermore, many technologies are reaching their sensitivity limit and new approaches need to be developed to overcome the currently irreducible technological challenges. This situation is unfolding against a backdrop of declining funding for instrumentation, both at the national laboratories and in particular at the universities.…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Particle Detector Development and Performance · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
