In the near future, fundamental interactions at high-energy scales may be
most efficiently studied via precision measurements at low energies. A
universal language to assemble and interpret precision measurements is the
so-called SMEFT, which is an effective field theory (EFT) where the Standard
Model (SM) Lagrangian is extended by higher-dimensional operators. In this
paper we investigate the possible impact of the DUNE neutrino experiment on
constraining the SMEFT. The unprecedented neutrino flux offers an opportunity
to greatly improve the current limits via precision measurements of the trident
production and neutrino scattering off electrons and nuclei in the DUNE near
detector. We quantify the DUNE sensitivity to dimension-6 operators in the
SMEFT Lagrangian, and find that in some cases operators suppressed by an O(30)
TeV scale can be probed. We also compare the DUNE reach to that of future
experiments involving atomic parity violation and polarization asymmetry in
electron scattering, which are sensitive to an overlapping set of SMEFT
parameters.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures; v2, agrees the version published in JHE