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Physics Beyond Colliders is an exploratory study aimed at exploiting the full scientific potential of CERNs accelerator complex and its scientific infrastructure in the next two decades through projects complementary to the LHC, HL-LHC and other possible future colliders. These projects should target fundamental physics questions that are similar in spirit to those addressed by high-energy colliders, but that require different types of beams and experiments. A kick-off workshop held in September 2016 identified a number of areas of interest and working groups have been set-up to study and develop these directions. All projects currently under consideration are presented including physics motivation, a brief outline of the experimental set-up and the status of the corresponding beam and detector technological studies. The proposals are also put in context of the worldwide landscape and their implementation issues are discussed.
The Physics Beyond Colliders initiative is an exploratory study aimed at exploiting the full scientific potential of the CERNs accelerator complex and scientific infrastructures through projects complementary to the LHC and other possible future coll
The work contained herein constitutes a report of the Beyond the Standard Model working group for the Workshop Physics at TeV Colliders, Les Houches, France, 2-20 May, 2005. We present reviews of current topics as well as original research carried ou
The work contained herein constitutes a report of the ``Beyond the Standard Model working group for the Workshop Physics at TeV Colliders, Les Houches, France, 26 May--6 June, 2003. The research presented is original, and was performed specifically f
This report documents the results obtained by the Working Group on Quantum Chromodynamics and the Standard Model for the Workshop `Physics at TeV Colliders, Les Houches, France, 26 May - 6 June 2003. After a Monte Guide description, the first contrib
The physics programme and the design are described of a new collider for particle and nuclear physics, the Large Hadron Electron Collider (LHeC), in which a newly built electron beam of 60 GeV, up to possibly 140 GeV, energy collides with the intense