LUXE-NPOD: new physics searches with an optical dump at LUXE
Zhaoyu Bai, Thomas Blackburn, Oleksandr Borysov, Oz Davidi, Anthony, Hartin, Beate Heinemann, Teng Ma, Gilad Perez, Arka Santra, Yotam Soreq, Noam, Tal Hod

TL;DR
The paper proposes a novel experimental setup using high-energy electron-laser collisions to produce and detect feebly interacting particles, leveraging the unique properties of laser-induced photon fluxes to explore new physics parameter space.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of an optical dump (NPOD) for new physics searches, combining electron-laser interactions with photon detection to probe previously unexplored particle models.
Findings
Potential to probe scalar and pseudo-scalar particles above 100 MeV
Background-free search with short physical dump
Feasibility demonstrated with LUXE experiment parameters
Abstract
We propose a novel way to search for feebly interacting massive particles, exploiting two properties of systems involving collisions between high energy electrons and intense laser pulses. The first property is that the electron-intense-laser collision results in a large flux of hard photons, as the laser behaves effectively as a thick medium. The second property is that the emitted photons free-stream inside the laser and thus for them the laser behaves effectively as a very thin medium. Combining these two features implies that the electron-intense-laser collision is an apparatus which can efficiently convert UV electrons to a large flux of hard, co-linear photons. We further propose to direct this unique large and hard flux of photons onto a physical dump which in turn is capable of producing feebly interacting massive particles, in a region of parameters that has never been probed…
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.
