New physics has traditionally been expected in the high-pT region at
high-energy collider experiments. If new particles are light and
weakly-coupled, however, this focus may be completely misguided: light
particles are typically highly concentrated within a few mrad of the beam line,
allowing sensitive searches with small detectors, and even extremely
weakly-coupled particles may be produced in large numbers there. We propose a
new experiment, ForwArd Search ExpeRiment, or FASER, which would be placed
downstream of the ATLAS or CMS interaction point (IP) in the very forward
region and operated concurrently there. Two representative on-axis locations
are studied: a far location, 400m from the IP and just off the beam
tunnel, and a near location, just 150m from the IP and right behind
the TAN neutral particle absorber. For each location, we examine leading
neutrino- and beam-induced backgrounds. As a concrete example of light,
weakly-coupled particles, we consider dark photons produced through light meson
decay and proton bremsstrahlung. We find that even a relatively small and
inexpensive cylindrical detector, with a radius of ∼10cm and
length of 5−10m, depending on the location, can discover dark photons
in a large and unprobed region of parameter space with dark photon mass mA′∼10MeV−1GeV and kinetic mixing parameter ϵ∼10−7−10−3. FASER will clearly also be sensitive to many other forms of
new physics. We conclude with a discussion of topics for further study that
will be essential for understanding FASER's feasibility, optimizing its design,
and realizing its discovery potential.Comment: 35 Pages, 12 figures. Version 2, references added, minor change