Department of Physics & Astronomy
University of New Mexico

Nuclear, Particle, Astroparticle and Cosmology (NUPAC) Seminars

First results from the Heavy Photon Search Experiment

Presented by Dr. Matt Graham, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center

The Heavy Photon Search (HPS) experiment at Jefferson Lab is searching for a new U(1) vector boson (``heavy photon'',``dark photon'' or A?) in the mass range of 20-500 MeV/c2. An A? in this mass range is theoretically favorable and may also mediate dark matter interactions. In these models, the A?couples to the ordinary photon through kinetic mixing, which induces their coupling to electric charge. Since heavy photons couple to electrons, they can be produced through a process analogous to bremsstrahlung, subsequently decaying to an e+e?, which can be observed as a narrow resonance above the dominant QED trident background. For suitably small couplings, heavy photons travel detectable distances before decaying, providing a second signature. Using the CEBAF electron beam at Jefferson Lab incident on a thin tungsten target, along with a compact, large acceptance forward spectrometer consisting of a silicon vertex tracker and lead tungstate electromagn etic calorimeter, HPS is accessing unexplored regions in the mass-coupling phase space. The HPS engineering run took place in spring of 2015 using a 1.056 GeV, 50 nA beam and collected 1165 nb?1 (7.29 mC) of data. This talk will present the first results of a resonance search for a heavy photon using the engineering run data an prospects for future searches and detector upgrades.

2:00 pm, Tuesday, May 9, 2017
PAIS-2540, PAIS

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