Fundamental Physics in Small Experiments
T. Blum, P. Winter, T. Bhattacharya, T.Y. Chen, V. Cirigliano, D., DeMille, A. Gerarci, N.R. Hutzler, T.M. Ito, O. Kim, R. Lehnert, W.M. Morse,, Y.K. Semertzidis

TL;DR
High-precision small- and mid-scale experiments are increasingly vital in particle physics, offering complementary insights to large-scale experiments by probing fundamental particles and interactions with advanced techniques and unprecedented sensitivities.
Contribution
This paper reviews recent progress and potential of small-scale experiments in high-energy physics, emphasizing their role in exploring physics beyond the Standard Model.
Findings
Significant advancements in experimental techniques for small-scale experiments.
Projected four orders of magnitude improvement in electric dipole moment sensitivities.
Small-scale experiments provide unique observables complementing large-scale efforts.
Abstract
High energy physics aims to understand the fundamental laws of particles and their interactions at both the largest and smallest scales of the universe. This typically means probing very high energies or large distances or using high-intensity beams, which often requires large-scale experiments. A complementary approach is offered through high-precision measurements in small- and mid-scale size experiments, often at lower energies. The field of such high-precision experiments has seen tremendous progress and importance for particle physics for at least two reasons. First, they exploit synergies to adjacent areas of particle physics and benefit by many recent advances in experimental techniques. Together with intensified phenomenological explorations, these advances led to the realization that challenges associated with weak couplings or the expected suppression factors from the mass…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Computational Physics and Python Applications
