Cargando…

The SHiP experiment at CERN

Research for new physics is currently one of the main tasks of particle physics, looking for new particles having high masses (energy frontier) or very feebly interacting (intensity frontier). The SHiP experiment has been proposed in 2015 to search for hidden particles at the intensity frontier. It...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Iuliano, Antonio
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: SISSA 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.352.0246
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2693738
_version_ 1780964102910246912
author Iuliano, Antonio
author_facet Iuliano, Antonio
author_sort Iuliano, Antonio
collection CERN
description Research for new physics is currently one of the main tasks of particle physics, looking for new particles having high masses (energy frontier) or very feebly interacting (intensity frontier). The SHiP experiment has been proposed in 2015 to search for hidden particles at the intensity frontier. It is designed to be located in a new beam dump facility, receiving 400 GeV protons from the CERN SPS accelerator. A total of $2 \times 10^{20}$ protons on target is expected to be collected in five years of data taking. The experiment plans to explore a wide domains of couplings and masses for light long-lived exotic particles. Their decays in a 50 m long vacuum vessel can be reconstructed in a background free environment, allowing for a high sensitivity of the experiment. Moreover, the experiment is suitable to reconstruct tau neutrino interactions, with expected yields orders of magnitude larger than previous experiments. This provides interesting possibilities of study such as the first observation of $\bar{\nu}_\tau$, the measurement of $\nu_\tau$ and $\bar{\nu}_\tau$ cross-sections with high statistics and the exploration of the charm content of the nucleon. Ancillary measurements to validate the Monte Carlo predictions have been performed in July 2018, and their analysis is currentlyongoing.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1756471
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2019
publisher SISSA
record_format invenio
spelling oai-inspirehep.net-17564712022-08-10T12:22:43Zdoi:10.22323/1.352.0246http://cds.cern.ch/record/2693738engIuliano, AntonioThe SHiP experiment at CERNParticle Physics - ExperimentDetectors and Experimental TechniquesResearch for new physics is currently one of the main tasks of particle physics, looking for new particles having high masses (energy frontier) or very feebly interacting (intensity frontier). The SHiP experiment has been proposed in 2015 to search for hidden particles at the intensity frontier. It is designed to be located in a new beam dump facility, receiving 400 GeV protons from the CERN SPS accelerator. A total of $2 \times 10^{20}$ protons on target is expected to be collected in five years of data taking. The experiment plans to explore a wide domains of couplings and masses for light long-lived exotic particles. Their decays in a 50 m long vacuum vessel can be reconstructed in a background free environment, allowing for a high sensitivity of the experiment. Moreover, the experiment is suitable to reconstruct tau neutrino interactions, with expected yields orders of magnitude larger than previous experiments. This provides interesting possibilities of study such as the first observation of $\bar{\nu}_\tau$, the measurement of $\nu_\tau$ and $\bar{\nu}_\tau$ cross-sections with high statistics and the exploration of the charm content of the nucleon. Ancillary measurements to validate the Monte Carlo predictions have been performed in July 2018, and their analysis is currentlyongoing.SISSAoai:inspirehep.net:17564712019
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Iuliano, Antonio
The SHiP experiment at CERN
title The SHiP experiment at CERN
title_full The SHiP experiment at CERN
title_fullStr The SHiP experiment at CERN
title_full_unstemmed The SHiP experiment at CERN
title_short The SHiP experiment at CERN
title_sort ship experiment at cern
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.352.0246
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2693738
work_keys_str_mv AT iulianoantonio theshipexperimentatcern
AT iulianoantonio shipexperimentatcern