Abstract

Understanding the nature of dark matter is one of the most exciting challenges in fundamental physics nowadays, requiring the synergy of different search techniques, as well as theoretical inputs. An interesting opportunity for the investigation of dark matter is the one offered by the B-factories. The Belle II experiment, located at the interaction point of the SuperKEKB asymmetric energy e + e − collider, is a new generation B-factory experiment operating at the Japanese KEK laboratory. With a machine design luminosity of 6 × 1035 cm−2 s −1, Belle II aims to record 50 ab−1 of data within the next decade. Thanks to this large data-sample and by using dedicated triggers, Belle II is expected to explore dark sector candidates with unprecedented sensitivity in the mass range up to 10 GeV/c 2. During 2018, the experiment concluded a commissioning run, collecting a data-sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 0.5 fb−1, while main operations started on March 2019 with an almost complete detector. So far the experiment collected an integrated luminosity of ∼ 90 fb−1. With these data-sets Belle II has already shown the possibility to search for a large variety of dark sector candidates in the GeV mass range. This paper reviews the status of the dark sector searches performed at the Belle II experiment, with a focus on the first obtained results and the discovery potential with the data-set available in the short term.

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