Hunting down the X17 boson at the CERN SPS.
null nullE DeperoYu M AndreevD BanerjeeJ BernhardV E BurtsevN CharitonidisA G ChumakovD CookePaolo CrivelliA V DermenevS V DonskovR R DusaevT EnikA FeshchenkoV N FrolovA GardikiotisS G GerassimovS GirodS N GninenkoM HösgenV A KachanovA E KarneyeuG KekelidzeB KetzerD V KirpichnikovM M KirsanovV N KolosovI V KonorovS G KovalenkoV A KramarenkoL V KravchukN V KrasnikovS V KuleshovV E LyubovitskijV LysanV A MatveevYu V MikhailovL Molina BuenoD V PeshekhonovV A PolyakovB RadicsR RojasA RubbiaV D SamoylenkoD ShchukinH SieberV O TikhomirovvI TlisovaD A TlisovA N ToropinA Yu TrifonovB I VasilishinG Vasquez ArenasP V VolkovV Yu VolkovP UlloaPublished in: The European physical journal. C, Particles and fields (2020)
Recently, the ATOMKI experiment has reported new evidence for the excess of e + e - events with a mass ∼ 17 MeV in the nuclear transitions of 4 He, that they previously observed in measurements with 8 Be. These observations could be explained by the existence of a new vector X 17 boson. So far, the search for the decay X 17 → e + e - with the NA64 experiment at the CERN SPS gave negative results. Here, we present a new technique that could be implemented in NA64 aiming to improve the sensitivity and to cover the remaining X 17 parameter space. If a signal-like event is detected, an unambiguous observation is achieved by reconstructing the invariant mass of the X 17 decay with the proposed method. To reach this goal an optimization of the X 17 production target, as well as an efficient and accurate reconstruction of two close decay tracks, is required. A dedicated analysis of the available experimental data making use of the trackers information is presented. This method provides independent confirmation of the NA64 published results [1], validating the tracking procedure. The detailed Monte Carlo study of the proposed setup and the background estimate show that the goal of the proposed search is feasible.