M3: A New Muon Missing Momentum Experiment to Probe (g-2)μ and Dark Matter at Fermilab

Abstract

New light, weakly-coupled particles are commonly invoked to address the persistent 4σ anomaly in (g-2)μ and serve as mediators between dark and visible matter. If such particles couple predominantly to heavier generations and decay invisibly, much of their best-motivated parameter space is inaccessible with existing experimental techniques. In this paper, we present a new fixed-target, missing-momentum search strategy to probe invisibly decaying particles that couple preferentially to muons. In our setup, a relativistic muon beam impinges on a thick active target. The signal consists of events in which a muon loses a large fraction of its incident momentum inside the target without initiating any detectable electromagnetic or hadronic activity in downstream veto systems. We propose a two-phase experiment, M3 (Muon Missing Momentum), based at Fermilab. Phase 1 with 1010 muons on target can test the remaining parameter space for which light invisibly-decaying particles can resolve the (g-2)μ anomaly, while Phase 2 with 1013 muons on target can test much of the predictive parameter space over which sub-GeV dark matter achieves freeze-out via muon-philic forces, including gauged U(1)Lμ - Lτ.

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