A new direct detection electron scattering experiment to search for the X17 particle
D. Dutta (1), H. Gao (2), A. Gasparian (3), T. J. Hague (3, 4), N., Liyanage (5), R. Paremuzyan (6), C. Peng (7), W. Xiong (8), P. Achenbach (6),, A. Ahmidouch (3), S. Ali (5), H. Avakian (6), C. Ayerbe-Gayoso (1), X. Bai, (5), M. Battaglieri (9), H. Bhatt (1), A. Bianconi (10

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new direct detection experiment at Jefferson Lab to search for the X17 particle and similar hidden sector particles in the 3-60 MeV mass range using a high-resolution calorimeter and PRad setup, aiming to clarify their role in various anomalies.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, cost-effective experimental approach using the PRad setup to search for hidden sector particles in an unexplored mass range with high sensitivity.
Findings
Designed a new experiment with the PRad apparatus for hidden sector particle detection.
Projected sensitivity of 8.9×10⁻⁸ to 5.8×10⁻⁹ in the kinetic mixing parameter.
Aims to confirm or refute the X17 particle hypothesis in nuclear transitions.
Abstract
A new electron scattering experiment (E12-21-003) to verify and understand the nature of hidden sector particles, with particular emphasis on the so-called X17 particle, has been approved at Jefferson Lab. The search for these particles is motivated by new hidden sector models introduced to account for a variety of experimental and observational puzzles: excess in pairs observed in multiple nuclear transitions, the 4.2 disagreement between experiments and the standard model prediction for the muon anomalous magnetic moment, and the small-scale structure puzzle in cosmological simulations. The aforementioned X17 particle has been hypothesized to account for the excess in pairs observed from the Be M1, He M0, and, most recently, C E1 nuclear transitions to their ground states observed by the ATOMKI group. This experiment will use a high resolution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
