Abstract
One of the most rapidly developing areas of research in particle
physics nowadays is to look for new, light, extremely
weakly-interacting particles that could have avoided detection in
previous years due to the lack of luminosity. These, so-called
intensity frontier searches, have also broad cosmological connections
to e.g. dark matter, as well as can help to unravel the mystery of
neutrino masses. In this talk, we will summarize the current status of
this field with a particular emphasis on a new experiment
to search for such particles produced in the far-forward region of the
LHC, namely FASER, the ForwArd Search ExpeRiment. FASER has been
proposed as a relatively cheap detector to supplement traditional
experimental programmes searching for heavy new physics particles in
the high-pT region and, therefore, to increase the whole BSM physics
potential of the LHC. On top of potentially far-reaching implications
to BSM particle physics and cosmology, the newly proposed detector can
also be used to measure high-energy SM neutrino cross sections
providing the first neutrino measurement at the LHC.