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Heavy Flavors

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Title: CLEO-C: prospects and relevance to LHCb Author: sheldon stone Last modified by: sheldon stone Created Date: 11/1/2005 8:33:23 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Heavy Flavors


1
Heavy Flavors
  • Sheldon Stone,
  • Syracuse University

2
Introduction
  • Heavy flavors, defined as b c quarks, not t,
    which is heavier, as the top doesnt live long
    enough to form a meson and just decays 100
    directly to b quarks (In England we have Heavy
    flavours)
  • Charm is interesting in several special areas,
    but I will concentrate on bs
  • First I will discuss some specific b
    phenomenology and then point out why these
    studies are extremely important and interesting

3
Some B Meson Decay Diagrams
  • a) is dominant
  • b) is color suppressed
  • a) b) are called tree level diagrams

4
The Standard Model
  • Theoretical Background
  • Physical States in the Standard Model
  • The gauge bosons W, g Zo and the Higgs Ho
  • Lagrangian for charged current weak decays
  • Where

5
The CKM Matrix
  • Unitary with 92 numbers ? 4 independent
    parameters
  • Many ways to write down matrix in terms of these
    parameters

6
The Basics Quark Mixing the CKM Matrix
d s b
mass
u
c
m a s s
t
  • A, l, r and h are in the Standard Model
    fundamental constants of nature like G, or aEM
  • h multiplies i and is responsible for CP
    violation
  • We know l0.22 (Vus), A0.8 constraints on r h

7
The 6 CKM Triangles
  • From Unitarity
  • ds - indicates rows or columns used
  • There are 4 independent phases b, g, c, c? (a
    can be substituted for g or b, as abgp)

c?
c
g
b
a
Area of each ? A2l6h, the Jarlskog Invariant
8
Vcb
  • Both Vcb Vub can be determined
  • using diagram (a) when W-??-n
  • Can use either inclusive
  • decays B?X?-n, with B10or
  • exclusive B?D?-n with B6
  • Vcb(41.960.230.350.59)x10-3 inclusive

  • (see Kowalewski ICHEP 2006)
  • Very well based theoretically (HQET)
  • Note difference is 2.6x10-3, much larger than
    quoted
  • theoretical errors!

9
Vub
  • This is much more difficult because the b?u rate
    is so much smaller than b?c
  • Inclusive decays are studied with severe cuts to
    reduce b?u background
  • Vub(4.490.190.27)x10-3
  • For exclusive decays
  • use B?p?-n (in
  • principle also r ?-n)

Again difference between inclusive exclusive
10
Measurements of Bo BS mixing
11
Bo-Bo Mixing
  • Bo can transform to Bo, like neutral Ks
  • The eigenstates of flavor, degenerate in pure QCD
    mix under the weak interactions. Let QM basis be
    1gt,2gt? Bogt,Bogt, then

12
Mixing Measurements
  • Diagonalizing we have
  • Dm mBH-mBL2M12, DG0
  • R prob Bo?Bo/ prob Bo?Bo
  • First seen by ARGUS
  • P(Bo?Bo)
  • 0.5Ge-Gt1cos(Dmt)
  • Must tag the flavor of the
  • of the decaying B at t0
  • using the other B

13
Dmd Measurements
  • Dmd average
  • 0.5070.004 ps-1
  • Accuracy better than 1

14
Bd Mixing in the Standard Model
  • Relation between B mixing CKM elements
  • F is a known function, hQCD0.8
  • BB and fB are currently determined only
    theoretically
  • in principle, fB can be measured, but its very
    difficult, need to measure B- ?l-n
  • Current best hope is Lattice QCD

15
Bs Mixing in the Standard Model
  • Measurement of Bs mixing provides the ratio of
    Vtd/Vts which gives the same essential
    information as Bd mixing alone, but with much
    better control of theory parameters
  • Vtd2A2l4(1-r)2h2
  • Vtd2/ Vts2(1-r)2h2
  • Circle in (r,h) plane centered at (1,0)
  • To relate constraints on CKM matrix in terms of
    say r h need to use theoretical estimates of
    xfBs2BBs/ fBd2BBd

16
CDF Measurement of Dms
  • P(BS?BS)0.5X
  • GSe-GSt1cos(DmSt)
  • It is useful to analyze the data as a function of
    a test frequency w
  • g(t)0.5 GS
  • e-GSt1Acos(wt)
  • CDF
  • D0 90 cl bounds

21gtDmSgt17 ps-1
17
Constraint on r - h plane
  • Need to use theory value for
  • Using both Vub/Vcb B mixing
  • In principle, could measure fBVub using B-?t-n,
    but difficult Belle discovery was corrected
    Vub error is significant, so use D decays

See http//ckmfitter.in2p3.fr/
18
Leptonic Decays D(s) ? ? n
_
  • c and q can annihilate, probability is ? to
    wave function overlap
  • Diagram

or cs

(s)
19
Measuring Charm at Threshold
  • DD production at threshold used by Mark III,
    and more recently by CLEO-c and BES-II.
  • Unique event properties
  • Only DD not DDx produced
  • Ease of B measurements using "double tags
  • BA of A/ of D's
  • Beam Constrained Mass

20
Measurement of fD
  • To find signal, look for events consistent with
    one m track opposite a D- tag with a missing n
  • Compute
  • Find

21
DS?mn tn, t ?pn
  • DS?mn tn, t ?pn Sum contains 100 mn tn
    events for MM2 lt0.2 GeV2
  • Also, DS?tn, t ?enn
  • Weighted Average fDs280.111.66.0 MeV, the
    systematic error is mostly uncorrelated between
    the measurements
  • Thus fDs/fD1.260.110.03
  • (CLEO-c)

22
Comparisons with Theory
  • CLEO-c data are consistent with most models, more
    precision needed, for both

23
Measurements of CP Violating Angles
24
Formalism of CP Violation
  • CP Eigenstates
  • Because of mixing mass eigenstates are a
    superposition of aBogtbBogt that obey the
    Schrödinger equation

25
Bo CP Formalism II
  • For CP not being conserved, instead of B1 B2
  • CP is violated if q/p ? 1
  • Time dependence is given by

26
Bo CP Formalism III
  • This leads to the time evolution of flavor
    amplitudes as
  • DmmH-mL, G? GL? GH (true for Bd, not
    necessarily for Bs)
  • Probability of a Bo decay is given by
    ltBo(t)Bo(t)gt is pure exponential in the
    absence of CP violation

27
CP violation using CP eigenstates
  • CPV requires the interference of two amplitudes.
    We use the direct decay for one amplitude and
    mixing for the other one
  • Define
  • AltfHBogt
  • AltfHBogt
  • A/A?1 is evidence of CP violation in the decay
    amplitude (direct CPV)
  • With mixing included, we have CPV if

28
CP V using CP eigenstates II
  • CP asymmetry
  • for q/p 1
  • When there is only one decay amplitude, l1 then
  • Time integrated

good luck, maximum is 0.5
29
CPV using CP eigenstates III
  • For Bd,
  • Now need to add A/A
  • for J/y Ks

30
Ambiguities
  • Suppose we measure sin(2b) using yKs, what does
    that tell us about b?
  • Ans 4 fold ambiguity- b, p/2-b, pb, 3p/2-b
  • Only reason hgt0, is Bkgt0 from theory, and related
    theoretical interpretation of e?

31
B Kinematics at the Y(4S) (Babar Belle)
Asymmetric ee- machines at Y(4S)
From Abe
32
Fit to Dt Distributions
B0 tag
  • resolution, wrong tags

B0 tag
33
2006 BaBar Belle
From Hazumi ICHEP 2006
34
b (not sin2b) measurements
Preliminary
B0gDD-Ks Time-dependent Dalitz analysis
(T.Browder, A. Datta et al. 2000) ? cos2b gt
0 (94CL, model-dependent)
B0gDh0 (h0 p0 etc.) Time-dependent Dalitz
analysis ? cos2b gt 0 Belle 98.3CL (hep-ex/0605
023, accepted by PRL) BaBar 87 CL
(BABAR-CONF06/017)
35
CPV in Charmless B Decays
  • Can have both tree loop diagrams in pp- (or
    rr-)
  • The weak phase in the tree graph is g. The weak
    phase in the Penguin is different. Therefore, the
    Penguin can (and does) mess up CP via mixing in
    pp-
  • Penguin is unmasked by evidence of popo

Tree
Penguin
36
CPV in B?rr-
  • First done by BaBar confirmed by Belle
  • Not a CP eigenstate, but final state is almost
    fully longitudinally polarized
  • fL0.9780.0240.015 (BaBar)
  • However, Penguin pollution revealed at 3s level
    (BaBar)
  • B(roro)( 1.20.40.3)x10-6
  • B(rr-)(23.52.24.1)x10-6

-0.013
37
CPV in B?rr- II
  • Constraints on a

38
Results on a
39
g B?DoK decays, Do ?Kspp-
  • Can have CPV in B decays
  • Just need two interfering
  • amplitudes
  • For the B- decay
  • A(B-?DoK-) ?AB
  • A(B-?DoK-) ?ABrBei(dB-g)
  • Use modes where the Do is indistinguishable from
    the Do. Then use Daltiz plot analysis to find g
    see A. Giri et al., hep-ph/0303187

40
g from B?DoK-, Do ?Kspp-
d2 ln L/d2?
sensitivity
  • Belle first saw a
  • clear difference
  • Now data show a smaller effect

41
Poor Constraints on g
See http//www.utfit.org/
42
Putting It All Together Status
  • Global fit using all available inputs
  • eK is from CP violation in Ko system

43
Reasons for Further B Physics Studies
  • There is New Physics out there Standard Model is
    violated by the Baryon Asymmetry of Universe by
    Dark Matter
  • I will show that B physics will be crucial
    towards interpreting New Physics found at the LHC

44
The Enigma of Baryogenesis
  • When the Universe began, the Big Bang, there was
    an equal amount of matter antimatter
  • Now we have most matter. How did it happen?
  • Sakharov criteria
  • Baryon (B) number violation
  • Departure from thermal equilibrium
  • C CP violation

45
Sakharov Criteria All Satisfied
  • B is violated in Electroweak theory at high
    temperature, B-L is conserved (need quantum
    tunneling, powerfully suppressed at low T)
  • Non-thermal equilibrium is provided by
    electroweak phase transition
  • C CP are violated by weak interactions. However
    the violation is too small!
  • nB-nB/ng 6x10-10, while SM can provide only
    10-20
  • Therefore, there must be new physics

46
Dark Matter
  • Discovered by Zwicky in 1933 by measuring
    rotation curves of galaxies in the Coma cluster
  • Also gravitational lensing of galaxy clusters
  • Is dark matter composed of
  • Supersymmetric particles?

47
The Hierarchy Problem
  • Physics at the Planck scale 1019 GeV is much
    larger than at the 100-1000 TeV electroweak
    scale, requires delicate cancellations between
    fundamental quantities and quantum corrections.
  • New Physics is needed to solve this problem

48
Loop Diagrams - Penguins
  • Effects of New Particles on B Decays
  • These decays are suppressed, so New Particles can
    show enhanced effects

49
MSSM Measurements, from Hinchcliff Kersting
(hep-ph/0003090)
  • Contributions to Bs mixing

CP asymmetry ? 0.1sinfmcosfAsin(Dmst), 10 x SM
50
Supersymmetry
  • Supersymmetry contains squarks and sleptons.
  • Squark mass matrixes contain information
    on SUSY breaking mechanisms /or GUT
    scale interactions.
  • Quark flavor changing neutral current processes,
    e.g. BS or D0 mixing, are sensitive to the
    off-diagonal elements of the squark mass matrix.

51
Examples
SUSY GUT BS Mixing
SM
CP Violation in BS
BS mixing
  • T.Goto,Y.O.Y.Shimizu,Y.Shindou,and M.Tanaka,2003

From Okada ICHEP 2006
52
SO(10)ala Chang, Masiero Murayama
hep-ph/0205111
  • Large mixing between nt and nm (from atmospheric
    n oscillations) can lead to large mixing between
    bR and sR.
  • This does not violate any known measurements
  • Leads to large CPV in Bs mixing, deviations from
    sin(2b) in Bo?f Ks and changes in the phase g



53
New Physics Effects in Some Different Models
  • Different models give different patterns (2003
    SLAC WS Proceedings)

54
Possible Size of New Physics Effects
  • From Hiller hep-ph/0207121

55
b?s Transitions (Penguins)
  • In SM t in loop dominates and CP asymmetry should
    be equal to that in J/yKs
  • Other objects in loop, new virtual particles,
  • could interfere
  • So this process is sensitive to new physics

56
CPV Measurements In b?s
  • We cannot just average these modes, but ....
  • ltSgtsin2b
  • 0.500.06
  • DS.52.05-.68.03 -0.16 0.06
  • Does u c parts of Penguin contribute? Yes but
    DS gt0, 0.1
  • New Physics???

57
Electroweak penguins B?K()ll-
  • With ll- pair, can have either pseudoscalar or
    vector mesons
  • New physics can affect both rates and kinematic
    distributions.

58
B?K()ll- Lepton F-B Asymmetry
Lepton angular distribution in l l- rest frame
Belle lepton
hep-ex/0508009
386 M BB
But large errors somewhat contradictory data
from BaBar
SM
NP scenarios
59
Constraints on New Physics
  • Next to Minimal Flavor Violation construction
  • Assume NP in tree decays is negligible
  • Is there NP in Bo-Bo mixing?
  • Use Vub, ADK, SyK, Srr, Dmd, ASL
  • semileptonic asymmetry
  • Fit to h, r, rd, qd (or h, s)

Agashe, Papucci, Perez, Pirjol hep-ph/0509117
60
New Physics Constraints
  • Amplitudes 20 of SM still allowed in any
    region, more near 0o
  • Still a lot of room for New Physics in Bd system

s
h
61
BS System
  • New Physics almost unconstrained

62
DG in BS Decays
  • DG GL- GH, where G1/t of light vs heavy
  • In Bd system DG is small, driven by common
    channels for Bo Bo (i.e. pp-)
  • BS?DS() DS-(), where CP outweighs CP- BS
    (recall CDF measured DmS), CDF D0 have
    measurements, order of B(B?D()DS())10
  • Recall
  • DG 2G12cosfS, where fS is the CP violating
    phase in BS mixing, expected to be tiny in SM
    -2l2h-.04 rad but effected by NP
  • Can measure DG using t measurements

63
Measuring f Phase of BS mixing
  • CP violation in BS mixing
  • hf 1, depending on f CP or CP -
  • Contrast with Bo
  • G(Bo?f)e-t/t1AdircosDmtsinfDmt

64
Measuring f Without Flavor Tagging
  • Sum
  • Some sensitivity to f without flavor tagging

65
Measuring f with BS?J/y h (or f)
  • BS?J/y h (where h ?gg or pp-po) is a CP
    eigenstate similar to Bo?J/y KS. However,
    detecting the h is difficult for some hadron
    collider detectors
  • J/y f is not a CP eigenstate, but is very useful
    in all experiments. Must take into account
    different spins S, P, D.
  • ?use Transversity analysis
  • Most sensitivity expected using flavor tagged
    analysis

66
D0 Untagged Analysis
  • D0 has 97845 events
  • fS-0.790.560.01 (rad)
  • DGS0.170.090.04 ps-1
  • ?DG/G0.250.13

67
Future Experiments
68
B experiments at the LHC
LHCb
  • LHCb first dedicated b experiment at a hadron
    collider, the LHC
  • Excellent vertexing
  • Excellent particle id
  • Super B? Two efforts, one at Frascati and
    SuperBelle in Japan

CMS
ATLAS
69
LHCb Projections
  • Kmm-
  • 2 fb-1

(0.02 rad)
70
Also ATLAS CMS
BS?J/y f
  • ATLAS
  • CMS

71
Will There Be a Super-B ee- Machine?
  • Two proposals currently being pursued to make
    L1036, 100 times current B factories
  • Super Belle at KEK
  • Linear-B scheme

HER injection
LER injection
LER
HER
LER Bunch compressor and FF
HER Bunch compressor and FF
IP
72
Conclusions
  • Much has been learned about the structure of
    matter fundamental forces in nature using
    flavor decays contributions from several
    generations of experiments at ee-, fixed target
    and hadron colliders
  • b c decays will be used as incisive probes of
    New Physics. These effects appear in loops. We
    already are probing the TeV scale. Flavor decays
    will be ever more important in understanding the
    nature of NP effects found at the LHC or Tevatron
    (i.e. SUSY, Extra Dimensions, Little Higgs
    etc...)
  • The next few years will see more results from
    BaBar, Belle, CDF D0, but only Belle will
    remain post 2009
  • LHCb will be the first dedicated B physics
    experiment at a Hadron Collider. ATLAS CMS also
    have B physics capability. There may be a Super B
    factory, possibly at KEK or at Frascati
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