1 / 45

Near-term Prospect

Near-term Prospect. of B physics. Y. Kwon (Yonsei Univ.). What I said in FPCP2003, to announce “FPCP2004 in Korea”. and, this might be the sort that the organizers had in mind under the subject “ near-term prospect ”. overlaps... unavoidable.

yestin
Download Presentation

Near-term Prospect

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. Near-term Prospect of B physics Y. Kwon (Yonsei Univ.)

  2. What I said in FPCP2003, to announce “FPCP2004 in Korea”... and, this might be the sort thatthe organizers had in mind under the subject “near-term prospect”...

  3. overlaps... unavoidable • With so many good talks in B physics at this conference; on both present & future • “Agent Provocateur” on hot topics • “CKM summary” • “New physics in B decays” • “Super B Factories” • as well as prospects for B physics @ hadron machines • and all the excellent experimental result talks It’s very hard to avoid much overlaps... if I want to give a standardized talks on “Near-term prospect” • So, I will just focus on personal favorites which I want/expect to see in B physics in the near future • And, this talk will in no way be theoretical

  4. Prologue • Tomorrow (Oct.9) used to be a national holiday, in celebration of the invention of “Han-gul” (Korean alphabet system); a very successful system esp. in the modern digital era • It was a national project initiated (and finished) by the Great King Sejong in 15th C. • Before Han-gul, Koreans did not have its own alphabets, but borrowed Chinese characters for writing; not a very convenient choice, because they are two totally different languages • The best thing King Sejong did was to have thought differently; instead of imitating Chinese characters, Han-gul was based on 28 (now 24) character elements that have one-to-one (and onto) correspondence to phonetic sounds in Korean

  5. “Think different!” • During the last decade (plus more), everyone worked real hard in an anticipation of great things to come – preparing for the B-factories • And now, we are all enjoying a great success of B physics – in both experiment & theory • The next obvious path will be “Super-B”, but... Realistically, we still have a formidable task of convincing the tax-payers for one “Great, you now have your CP violations. Congratulations on a great job well ‘done’!” • So, we should not be afraid of searching for “crazy” things

  6. Contents • CPV & CKM • Rare B – esp. in leptonic modes • overlapping w/ my own talk here on Monday  will be very brief • Personal list • Distributions • Ordinary, but missing modes • Never ignore “crazy” modes

  7. What do we expect in a few years? -- by the time LHC turns on • Obviously, statistics will increase • Let’s aim at 1/ab per each B-factory • i.e. approx. factor 4 from current sample • stat. err.  ~½ x (now) • Better understanding of generic B & charm decays • some analyses are (somewhat) limited by background systematics • help from CLEO-c & BES? • Improved theory • L-QCD • Other improvements • And a few surprises, hopely...

  8. What do we expect in a few years? -- by the time LHC turns on • Obviously, statistics will increase • Let’s aim at 1/ab per each B-factory • i.e. approx. factor 4 from current sample • stat. err.  ~½ x (now) • Better understanding of generic B & charm decays • some analyses are (somewhat) limited by background systematics • help from CLEO-c & BES? • Improved theory • L-QCD • Other improvements • And a few surprises, hopely...

  9. Once upon a time, there was LEP

  10. What to anticipatein CP violation - still, mostly stat.-limited

  11. MilkyWay Babar New! B0 p+p- and f2(a) We hope to see this being resolved...

  12. Belle vs. BaBar on f3 (Dalitz)

  13. new

  14. CPV of non-CKM types

  15. CPV in di-leptons (++ vs. --) ~ O(10-3) in the SM biggest syst. err. from track selection and continuum subtraction 85M BB

  16. CLEO 1993 Belle 2003 B  Xsg truly amazing progress in ~10 years

  17. CPV in b  sg

  18. CPV in b  sg

  19. 152M BB 89M BB CP asymmetry in B  Xsg • CP asymmetry is expected to be small (<1%) in SM • some non-SM models allow large (~10%) ACP without changing the BF • possible contamination from Xdg (ACP can be large)  but negligible in the current measurements

  20. CKM side - esp. Vub

  21. Vub from inclusive B  Xu l n Using full-recon. tagging The lesson: no single dominant error, i.e. need to beat down every error source stat. / background / shape / theory, etc.

  22. Vub from exclusive B  Xu l n all about tagging ...

  23. Vub from exclusive B  Xu l n

  24. Vub using pln w/ high-q2 & L-QCD The error is dominated by exp. stat. and L-QCD error  a good sign, isn’t it?

  25. 2 4 BaBar: LCSR, low-q2 Belle: L-QCD, high-q2

  26. Shape function made possible by Eg spectrum in b  s g

  27. a theorist’s call ... In an illuminating talk by Bigi yesterday,

  28. Rare B decays - B  l n (g) modes - B  Xdg

  29. B  l n (g)

  30. How about then ? B  Xdg Grinstein, FPCP2004 : “Double Ratio”

  31. Distributions that we need or to watch out ...

  32. Important distributions • q2 in exclusive B  Xu l n • q2 in B  Xs l+l- (excl. & incl.) • AFB(q2) in B  Xs l+l- • Eg in B  Xs g etc.

  33. Background errors are not negligible, either What shall we do?

  34. Do we understand b  c ? Belle-Conf-0126 (submitted to LP-01) • Flavor-specific inclusive K using K-lepton corr. • Original motivation (Kagan, ’97) was to look for excess prompt Kaon from b  sg type decays • In interpretation, we were not sure whether we understand Kaon yield from b  c  s • We have to find out “missing modes” ...

  35. A new tool to explore missing modes • Full-recon. tagging is so powerful to constrain the kinematics of signal B • Then, why don’t we apply it to explore b  c modes that have not (or poorly) been measured because of missing neutrinos?

  36. (Ex1)BDp ln with full recon. Exclusive B SL decays in PDG2004  nothing much is known except for D and D* Exclusive measurements w/dB/B ~ O(10%)are feasible

  37. (Ex2) flavor-specific inclusive

  38. Never forget “crazy” modes We should not regret for not having tried...

  39. CLEO (Ex) “Neutrinoless 2b decay” in B?

  40. Summary • Went through a list of subjects which might be interesting in a near-future in B physics • Belle vs. BaBar : TCPV in B0 p+p- • Belle & BaBar vs. SM : TCPV in b  s vs. b  c • Many potentially interesting measurements are still stat.-limited, but... • For some parameters, esp. Vub, we do not have much budget for error in any source • Details, e.g. background understanding shall be important  explore missing, ordinary modes • We shall never give up searching for “crazy” things

More Related