Recent Progress in Low Energy Neutrino Scattering Physics and Its Implications for the Standard and Beyond the Standard Model Physics
V. Pandey

TL;DR
This review summarizes recent advances in low energy neutrino scattering, especially CEvNS, highlighting its significance for testing the Standard Model and exploring new physics beyond it, with recent experimental and theoretical developments.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the current status, formalism, uncertainties, and implications of low energy neutrino scattering, including recent experimental observations and potential for new physics searches.
Findings
CEvNS observed experimentally by COHERENT collaboration.
Theoretical uncertainties in CEvNS cross section are analyzed.
CEvNS experiments can probe physics beyond the Standard Model.
Abstract
Neutrinos continue to provide a testing ground for the structure of the standard model of particle physics as well as hints towards the physics beyond the standard model. Neutrinos of energies spanning over several orders of magnitude, originating in many terrestrial and astrophysical processes, have been detected via various decay and interaction mechanisms. At MeV scales, there has been one elusive process, until a few years ago, known as coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CEvNS) that was theoretically predicted over five decades ago but was never observed experimentally. The recent experimental observation of the CEvNS process by the COHERENT collaboration at a stopped pion neutrino source has inspired physicists across many subfields. This has vital implications for nuclear physics, high-energy physics, astrophysics, and beyond. CEvNS, being a low-energy process, provides…
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