Probing New Physics with Underground Accelerators and Radioactive Sources
Abstract
New light, weakly coupled particles can be efficiently produced at existing and future high-intensity accelerators and radioactive sources in deep underground laboratories. Once produced, these particles can scatter or decay in large neutrino detectors (e.g Super-K and Borexino) housed in the same facilities. We discuss the production of weakly coupled scalars φ via nuclear de-excitation of an excited element into the ground state in two viable concrete reactions: the decay of the 0+ excited state of 16O populated via a (p,α) reaction on fluorine and from radioactive 144Ce decay where the scalar is produced in the de-excitation of 144Nd*, which occurs along the decay chain. Subsequent scattering on electrons, e(φ,γ)e, yields a mono-energetic signal that is observable in neutrino detectors. We show that this proposed experimental set-up can cover new territory for masses 250\, keV≤ mφ ≤ 2 me and couplings to protons and electrons, 10-11 < ge gp < 10-7. This parameter space is motivated by explanations of the "proton charge radius puzzle", thus this strategy adds a viable new physics component to the neutrino and nuclear astrophysics programs at underground facilities.
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