4.7 Article

Discovering the physics of (g-2)μ at future muon colliders

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 103, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.103.075028

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Canada Research Chair program
  3. Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics (PI)
  4. Government of Canada through the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada
  5. Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Colleges and Universities
  6. DOE [DE-SC0015655]
  7. Fermi Research Alliance, LLC [DE-AC0207CH11359]
  8. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of High Energy Physics

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The longstanding muon g - 2 anomaly may point towards the existence of new particles coupling to muons, with implications for fundamental discoveries about our Universe. Future experiments and muon collider programs could provide further evidence of new physics and potentially unveil solutions to the anomaly.
The longstanding muon g - 2 anomaly may indicate the existence of new particles that couple to muons, which could either be light (less than or similar to GeV) and weakly coupled, or heavy (>> 100 GeV) with large couplings. If light new states are responsible, upcoming intensity frontier experiments will discover further evidence of new physics. However, if heavy particles are responsible, many candidates are beyond the reach of existing colliders. We show that, if the (g - 2)(mu) anomaly is confirmed and no explanation is found at low-energy experiments, a high-energy muon collider program is guaranteed to make fundamental discoveries about our Universe. New physics scenarios that account for the anomaly can be classified as either singlet or electroweak (EW) models, involving only EW singlets or new EW-charged states respectively. We argue that a TeV-scale future muon collider will discover all possible singlet model solutions to the anomaly. If this does not yield a discovery, the next step would be a O(10 TeV)) muon collider. Such a machine would either discover new particles associated with high-scale EW model solutions to the anomaly, or empirically prove that nature is fine-tuned, both of which would have profound consequences for fundamental physics.

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