SHIFT@LHC: Searches for New Physics with Shifted Interaction on a Fixed Target at the Large Hadron Collider
Jeremi Niedziela

TL;DR
This paper proposes installing a fixed gaseous target near the LHC to detect long-lived, low-mass particles like Dark Photons and Hidden Valleys, significantly expanding the collider's physics reach at low cost.
Contribution
It introduces the SHIFT fixed target setup at LHC, enabling new searches for long-lived particles with minimal additional infrastructure.
Findings
Potential to extend Dark Photon search sensitivity by up to 150 times.
Enhanced Hidden Valley scenario detection reach by up to 1000 times.
Feasibility of low-cost, high-impact physics program extension at LHC.
Abstract
New low-mass particles with very small couplings to standard model particles that travel significant distances before decaying are interesting candidates to address some of the most intriguing questions of modern physics. In this paper, I propose to extend the LHC's research program by installing a gaseous fixed target referred to as SHIFT at around 160 meters from the CMS interaction point. When the LHC proton beam collides with this target, interactions at a center of mass energy of 113 GeV would occur. The particles produced in such collisions, or their decay products, would travel through the rock and other material on their path, potentially reaching the CMS detector where they can be registered and studied. Such an approach would allow us to access otherwise uncovered regions of parameters phase space at a relatively low cost since it does not require constructing a new…
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