Abstract
The standard model of particle physics (SM) is a theoretical
framework that describes fundamental interactions and constituents
of matter. Although very successful in predicting phenomena, in
recent years experiments worldwide have reported tensions arising
from anomalies observed in the decays of B mesons and in properties
of leptons. Most of these tensions strongly point towards new
interactions which treat, unlike the SM, leptons of different
generations or flavors differently. Such kind of interactions are
said to violate lepton flavor universality (LFUV) and might also be
the link between ordinary and dark matter (DM). I will discuss an
approach to the solution of this problem based on the analysis of
the data collected by the Belle II detector at the Super-KEKB, the
world's brightest particle accelerator. Three unique searches and
some of their by-products will be presented: a search for DM in Z'
decays, a search for LFUV in leptonic tau decays and a search for
lepton flavor violating (LFV) decays of Y resonances. The three
searches are all characterized by final states containing leptons
and missing energy that can therefore be analyzed by the same
cutting-edge techniques, based on advanced algorithms of machine
learning and deep learning that allow to efficiently identify the
signals and reject background. Thanks to a new effective field
theory approach, these searches will probe additional scenarios of
new physics, even beyond the observed anomalies, significantly
complementing other searches and experiments.