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      The anomalous magnetic moment of the muon in the Standard Model

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          Abstract

          We review the present status of the Standard Model calculation of the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. This is performed in a perturbative expansion in the fine-structure constant \(\alpha\) and is broken down into pure QED, electroweak, and hadronic contributions. The pure QED contribution is by far the largest and has been evaluated up to and including \(\mathcal{O}(\alpha^5)\) with negligible numerical uncertainty. The electroweak contribution is suppressed by \((m_\mu/M_W)^2\) and only shows up at the level of the seventh significant digit. It has been evaluated up to two loops and is known to better than one percent. Hadronic contributions are the most difficult to calculate and are responsible for almost all of the theoretical uncertainty. The leading hadronic contribution appears at \(\mathcal{O}(\alpha^2)\) and is due to hadronic vacuum polarization, whereas at \(\mathcal{O}(\alpha^3)\) the hadronic light-by-light scattering contribution appears. Given the low characteristic scale of this observable, these contributions have to be calculated with nonperturbative methods, in particular, dispersion relations and the lattice approach to QCD. The largest part of this review is dedicated to a detailed account of recent efforts to improve the calculation of these two contributions with either a data-driven, dispersive approach, or a first-principle, lattice-QCD approach. The final result reads \(a_\mu^\text{SM}=116\,591\,810(43)\times 10^{-11}\) and is smaller than the Brookhaven measurement by 3.7\(\sigma\). The experimental uncertainty will soon be reduced by up to a factor four by the new experiment currently running at Fermilab, and also by the future J-PARC experiment. This and the prospects to further reduce the theoretical uncertainty in the near future-which are also discussed here-make this quantity one of the most promising places to look for evidence of new physics.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          08 June 2020
          Article
          2006.04822
          1df0a232-4433-444f-aeeb-52bc882c4261

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

          History
          Custom metadata
          FERMILAB-PUB-20-207-T, INT-PUB-20-021, KEK Preprint 2020-5, MITP/20-028, CERN-TH-2020-075, IFT-UAM/CSIC-20-74, LMU-ASC 18/20, LTH 1234, LU TP 20-20, MAN/HEP/2020/003, PSI-PR-20-06, UWThPh 2020-14, ZU-TH 18/20
          194 pages, 103 figures, bib files for the citation references are available from: https://muon-gm2-theory.illinois.edu
          hep-ph hep-ex hep-lat nucl-ex nucl-th

          High energy & Particle physics,Nuclear physics
          High energy & Particle physics, Nuclear physics

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