1 / 13

Outlook: Introduction LHCb performance Radiative decays: CP violation Bs  Φ γ

Outlook: Introduction LHCb performance Radiative decays: CP violation Bs  Φ γ Backward-forward Asymmetry B  K * μμ Branching ratio of very rare Bs  μμ Conclusions. Prospects for rare B decays in LHCb Jose A. Hernando

lang
Download Presentation

Outlook: Introduction LHCb performance Radiative decays: CP violation Bs  Φ γ

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Outlook: • Introduction • LHCb performance • Radiative decays: CP violation BsΦγ • Backward-forward Asymmetry BK*μμ • Branching ratio of very rare Bsμμ • Conclusions Prospects for rare B decays in LHCb Jose A. Hernando (CERN, on leave Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain) [On behalf of the LHCb collaboration] Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  2. LHCb experiment and conditions Luminosity range 2-5 1032 cm-2s-1 Nominal integrated luminosity 2 fb-1 / year (107s) 1012 bb produced/year  B, Bs, B+ But large backgrounds and small BR 0(10-6)of relevant decays 10 MHz visible interaction (1% bb) P. Vazquez Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  3. Rare B decays V. Gligorov • LHCb Physics • CP violation in B system: using tree and penguins processes (NP) • Rare B decays: test FCNC (bs) • Rare B decays • FCNC has a pivotal roll: • They are suppressed in SM, only realized via boxes or penguins • NP can show up as the same level of SM • Present results (i.e. bsγ) strongly limit extensions of SM • Indirect search of new particles: “visible” via loops • Experimental observables: ratios, asymmetries, branching ratios to leptons bsγRadiative decays: BK*γ, BsΦγ ΛbΛγ, ΛbΛ*γ Bρ0γ, Bωγ bsll: • BK*μμ, • B+K+μμ, B+K+ee Bqll Bsμμ β(Bsμμ) LFV Bqll’ Bsμe ACP(t) (BsΦγ) AFB(BK*μμ) Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  4. [1]NNLO [2]HFAG BsΦγ Motivation: Inclusive BR in agreement with SM LHCb can perform exclusive measurements And test the γ polarization In SM is bsγ is predominantly (at 0(ms/mb) left handed CP violation in the mixing and decay depends on the γ polarization Measured in BK*(Ksπ0)γACP at Belle[3], BaBar (SK*γ = -0.08 ±0.31±0.05) [4] LHCb can measure time-dependent CP asymmetry of BsΦγ ACP(t) (BsΦγ) [1] hep-ph/0607258 [2] arXiv/0704.3575 hep/ex [3] hep-ph/0507057, Phys.Rev D72,051103 [4] arXiv/0708.1614 hep/exp [5] hep-ph/0410036 [5] SM: C~0, S~-0.1±0.1%, AΔ~ sin2ψ Ψ fraction of “wrong” polarization Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  5. ACP(t) for BsΦγ MC stats: 37 M bb events Full detector simulation main background bb (37 M) Selection Et(γ) > 2.8 GeV, Yields (2 fb-1): Total efficiency ~ 0.3% Background bb inclusive:B/S ~ 0.55 @ 90 CL Issues: Acceptance function a(t) σ(t) as function of topology Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  6. AFB AFB(m2μμ) theory illustration BELLE ’06 Mmm2 (GeV2) m2[GeV2] AFB(BK*μμ) Motivation: BR in agreement with SM β(BK*μμ) 1.22+0.38-0.3210-6 But NP can show us in angular distributions AFB asymmetry vs m2μμ Decay described with 3 angles (θl,Φ,θK*) AFB of μin θl vs m2μμ SM zero point well predicted: SM: [1] 4.36+0.33-031 GeV2 BaBar and Belle [2] Measurements [1] hep-ph/0412400 [2] hep-ph/0603018 Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  7. AFB(BK*μμ) An example 0.1fb-1 experiment Yields Efficiency ~ 1% Background B/S  0.5+0.2 @ 90% CL bb: bμ,bμ bb: bμ,c (cμ) Issues Acceptance function a(θl,m2μμ,) Sensitivity 0.07 fb-1 competitive with BaBar & Belle AFB An example 0.5fb-1 experiment Mmm2 (GeV2) Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  8. β(Bsμμ) Motivation Bsμμ very rare Helicity suppress (mμ/mB)2 SM well predicted SM: β(Bsμμ) = (3.55±0.33) x 10-9 Very sensitive to (pseudo) scalar operators MSSM ~ tan6β/M4A MSSM (NUHM) fit favor large tanβ ~ 30 • μ g-2 results (deviate from SM 3.4 σ) Current limits [2] CDF BR < 4.7 10-8 90% CL @ 2fb-1 [3] D0 BR < 7.5 10-8 90% CL [1] [1] arXiv:0709.0098v1 [hep-ph] [2] arXiv:0712.1708v1 [hep-ex] [3] arXiv:0705.300v1 [hep-ex] Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  9. Bs  μμ Bs KK Mass (MeV) β(Bsμμ) Small signal and large background, but Efficient trigger: ~1.5 kHz inclusive μ. Di-μ Mass resolution: σ ~20 MeV Vertexing: GL: Combine geometrical variables Background: Main background (bμ,bμ, bμ , bcμ) Bhh, small compared with bμ,bμ Bc+J/Ψμν dominant of exclusive, but still small Analysis: Divide (GL, Mass) space in N bins Expected events/bin for signal, signal+bkg Yield : Total efficiency ~10% (all GL values) S ~30 events, Bkg ~ 83 @ 2fb-1 (GL>0.5) Control channels: Signal description: Bhh ~200 k @ 2fb-1 background (from sidebands) Normalization: B+J/Ψ K+ 2 M @ 2fb-1 Red: signal Blue: bb inc. Black: b μb μ Green: Bc+  J/Ψμν arbitrary units GL (geometry) Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  10. 90% CL imit on BR (only bkg is observed) Expected final CDF+D0 limit BR (x10–9) 10-7 Uncertainty in background prediction 2x10-8 (~0.05 fb-1) SM prediction 5x10-9 (~ 0.4 fb-1) Integrated luminosity (fb–1) β(Bsμμ) [1] SM agreement 2 fb–1 3 evidence 6 fb–1 5 observation Exclusion: 0.1 fb–1 BR < 10-8 0.5 fb–1 < SM [1] arXiv:0709.0098v1 Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  11. Conclusions LHCb finishing installation, getting ready for 1st collisions Rare B decays in LHCb will constrain extensions of SM or find NP Already with first “year” data 0.1, 0.5 fb-1 Bsμμ excluded at SM value with 0.5 fb-1 AFB(B K*μμ) σ(s0) ~0.8 GeV2 @ 0.5 fb-1 And above 2 fb-1 Bsμμ evidence if SM 2 fb-1, observation 6 fb-1 BK*μμσ(s0) ~0.5 (0.3) GeV2 @ 2 (10) fb-1 other observables: A(2)T, FL BsΦγACP asymmetry >2 fb-1 Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  12. π-K separation: Kaon ID ~ 88% Pion mis-ID ~ 3% LHCb expected performance Trigger: 1MHz @ L0  2 kHz @ HLT B signature : “large” Pt and displaced tracks HLT: ~ 1.5 kHz μ + di-μ inclusive sample Mass resolution σ(Mass) Bsμμ ~20 MeV BK*μμ ~14 MeV BsΦγ ~90 MeV efficiency (L0xHLT) Bsμμ ~90 % BK*μμ ~70 % B Φγ ~40 % P. Vazquez Particle ID Vertexing σ(proper time) BsΦγ ~50-110 fs μ ID Bqhh (~0.5%)2 (mu-ID eff 95%) Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

  13. Asymmetry AT(2) Longitudinal polarization FL 2 fb-1 SM NLO MSSM tan=5 MSSM tan=5 A(2)T ,FT (BK*μμ) Other observables [1] in BK*μμ Expresed in terms of transversity amplitudes Fit individual angular distributions (θl,Φ,θK*) vs m2μμ Sensitivity with An example 2 fb-1 experiment [1] hep-ph/0612166 Lake Louise Winter Institute 2008

More Related