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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026
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  4. Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
  5. We present details on a new measurement of the muon magnetic anomaly, a μ = ( g μ 2 ) / 2 . The result is based on positive muon data taken at Fermilab’s Muon Campus during the 2019 and 2020 accelerator runs. The measurement uses 3.1 GeV / c polarized muons stored in a 7.1-m-radius storage ring with a 1.45 T uniform magnetic field. The value of a μ is determined from the measured difference between the muon spin precession frequency and its cyclotron frequency. This difference is normalized to the strength of the magnetic field, measured using nuclear magnetic resonance. The ratio is then corrected for small contributions from beam motion, beam dispersion, and transient magnetic fields. We measure a μ = 116 592 057 ( 25 ) × 10 11 (0.21 ppm). This is the world’s most precise measurement of this quantity and represents a factor of 2.2 improvement over our previous result based on the 2018 dataset. In combination, the two datasets yield a μ ( FNAL ) = 116 592 055 ( 24 ) × 10 11 (0.20 ppm). Combining this with the measurements from Brookhaven National Laboratory for both positive and negative muons, the new world average is a μ ( exp ) = 116 592 059 ( 22 ) × 10 11 (0.19 ppm). Published by the American Physical Society2024 
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  6. Hüsken, N; Danilkin, I; Hagelstein, F (Ed.)
    The current three sigma tension in the unitarity test of the Cabbibo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) matrix is a notable problem with the Standard Model of elementary particle physics. A long-standing goal of the study of free neutron beta decay is to better determine the CKM elementVudthrough measurements of the neutron lifetime and a decay correlation parameter. The Nab collaboration intends to measurea, the neutrino-electron correlation, with accuracy sufficient for a competitive evaluation ofVudbased on neutron decay data alone. This paper gives a status report and an outlook. 
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