Snowmass White Paper: Precision Studies of Spacetime Symmetries and Gravitational Physics
Eric Adelberger, Dmitry Budker, Ron Folman, Andrew A. Geraci, Jason T., Harke, Daniel M. Kaplan, Derek F. Jackson Kimball, Ralf Lehnert, David Moore,, Gavin W. Morley, Anthony Palladino, Thomas J. Phillips, Giovanni M., Piacentino, William Michael Snow, Vivishek Sudhir

TL;DR
This white paper discusses the growing importance of precision, low-energy experiments in probing fundamental spacetime symmetries and gravitational physics, complementing traditional high-energy methods in particle physics.
Contribution
It highlights the potential of high-sensitivity, low-energy measurements to uncover new physics beyond the Standard Model and advocates for increased support and investment in these experimental approaches.
Findings
Low-energy experiments can overcome weak coupling challenges.
Recent technological advances enhance experimental sensitivity.
Such methods broaden the observable phenomena in particle physics.
Abstract
High-energy physics is primarily concerned with uncovering the laws and principles that govern nature at the fundamental level. Research in this field usually relies on probing the boundaries of established physics, an undertaking typically associated with extreme energy and distance scales. It is therefore unsurprising that particle physics has traditionally been dominated by large-scale experimental methods often involving high energies, such as colliders and storage rings, cosmological and astrophysical observations, large-volume detector systems, etc. However, high-sensitivity measurements in smaller experiments, often performed at lower energies, are presently experiencing a surge in importance for particle physics for at least two reasons. First, they exploit synergies to adjacent areas of physics with recent advances in experimental techniques and technology. Together with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Earth Systems and Cosmic Evolution · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
