BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Alexey A. Petrov Wayne State University Table of Contents: Introduction Mixing: current/future.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
: Section 3: Mixing and CP violation in (mostly) neutral mesons.
Advertisements

Phenomenology of Charmless Hadronic B Decays Denis Suprun University of Chicago Thanks to C.-W. Chiang, M. Gronau, Z. Luo, J. Rosner for enjoyable collaborations.
CKM Fits: What the Data Say Stéphane T’Jampens LAPP (CNRS/IN2P3 & Université de Savoie) On behalf of the CKMfitter group
Measurements of the angles of the Unitarity Triangle at B A B AR Measurements of the angles of the Unitarity Triangle at B A B AR PHENO06 Madison,15-18.
Charm 2006, June 5-7, Beijing Alexey Petrov (WSU) Alexey A. Petrov Wayne State University Table of Contents: Introduction Mixing: current/future experimental.
Charm results overview1 Charm...the issues Lifetime Rare decays Mixing Semileptonic sector Hadronic decays (Dalitz plot) Leptonic decays Multi-body channels.
S-Waves & the extraction of  s Sheldon Stone FPCP 2010, Torino, Italy, May 2010.
C.D. LuICFP31 Some progress in PQCD approach Cai-Dian Lü (IHEP, Beijing) Formalism of Perturbative QCD (PQCD) Direct CP asymmetry Polarization in B 
Title Gabriella Sciolla Massachusetts Institute of Technology Representing the BaBar Collaboration Beauty Assisi, June 20-24, 2005 Searching for.
CHARM-2007, Ithaca, NY Alexey Petrov (WSU) Alexey A. Petrov Wayne State University Table of Contents: Introduction CP-violation in charmed mesons Observables.
Radiative B Decays (an Experimental Overview) E.H. Thorndike University of Rochester CLEO Collaboration FPCP May 18, 2002.
Current Methods of determining V ub I. Endpoint of the inclusive lepton spectrum II. Exclusive decays Methods of determining V ub with small theoretical.
Marina Artuso 1 Beyond the Standard Model: the clue from charm Marina Artuso, Syracuse University  D o D o, D o  K -  + K-K- K+K+ ++  K-K-
1 B s  J/  update Lifetime Difference & Mixing phase Avdhesh Chandra for the CDF and DØ collaborations Beauty 2006 University of Oxford, UK.
1 V cb : experimental and theoretical highlights Marina Artuso Syracuse University.
1 D 0 D 0 Quantum Correlations, Mixing, and Strong Phases Werner Sun, Cornell University for the CLEO-c Collaboration Particles and Nuclei International.
FPCP 2002 May Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Theory of D 0 - D 0 mixing Alexey A Petrov Wayne State University Table of Contents: Introduction.
Sin2  1 /sin2  via penguin processes Beauty 2006 Sep.25-29, Univ. of Oxford Yutaka Ushiroda (KEK)
B Decays to Open Charm (an experimental overview) Yury Kolomensky LBNL/UC Berkeley Flavor Physics and CP Violation Philadelphia, May 18, 2002.
1. 2 July 2004 Liliana Teodorescu 2 Introduction  Introduction  Analysis method  B u and B d decays to mesonic final states (results and discussions)
1 Charm Mixing and Strong Phases Using Quantum Correlations at CLEO-c Werner Sun, Cornell University 5-8 August 2007, Charm07 Workshop, Ithaca, NY (Revised.
P Spring 2003 L14Richard Kass B mesons and CP violation CP violation has recently ( ) been observed in the decay of mesons containing a b-quark.
As a test case for quark flavor violation in the MSSM K. Hidaka Tokyo Gakugei University / RIKEN, Wako Collaboration with A. Bartl, H. Eberl, E. Ginina,
Large electroweak penguin contribution in B decays T. Yoshikawa ( Nagoya ) 基研研究会「CPの破れと物質生成」 2005年 1月1 2日~14日 This talk is based on S. Mishima and T.Y.
CP Violation and CKM Angles Status and Prospects Klaus Honscheid Ohio State University C2CR 2007.
D 0 -D 0 Mixing Mao-Zhi Yang ( 杨茂志 ) Jul. 23, 2008, KITPC Department of Physics Nankai University Program on Flavor Physics.
Philip J. Clark University of Edinburgh Rare B decays The Royal Society of Edinburgh 4th February 2004.
A window for New Physics in B s →KK decays Joaquim Matias Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona David London & JM, PRD (2004) David London &JM & Javier Virto,
ICFP05, NCU1 B → Kπ decays and new physics in the EW-penguin sector Yu, Chaehyun ( Yonsei University) October 6, 2005 In Collaboration with C.S. Kim, S.
D 0 D 0 bar Mixing and CP Violation at BESIII Kanglin He June 2006, Beijing.
Run-Hui Li Yonsei University Mainly based on R.H. Li, C.D. Lu, and W. Wang, PRD83:
Introduction to Flavor Physics in and beyond the Standard Model
Theoretical comments on mixing V.Shevchenko (ITEP) 42d Rencontres de Moriond, La Thuile, Italy, March
Test Z’ Model in Annihilation Type Radiative B Decays Ying Li Yonsei University, Korea Yantai University, China Based on J. Hua, C.S Kim, Y. Li, arxiv:
M. Adinolfi - University of Bristol1/19 Valencia, 15 December 2008 High precision probes for new physics through CP-violating measurements at LHCb M. Adinolfi.
1 Multi-body B-decays studies in BaBar Ben Lau (Princeton University) On behalf of the B A B AR collaboration The XLIrst Rencontres de Moriond QCD and.
Physical Program of Tau-charm Factory V.P.Druzhinin, Budker INP, Novosibirsk.
Physics 222 UCSD/225b UCSB Lecture 5 Mixing & CP Violation (1 of 3) Today we focus on Matter Antimatter Mixing in weakly decaying neutral Meson systems.
Introduction to Particle Physics How to compute the Universe?
ITEP Meeting, July 24-25, Moscow Alexey Petrov (WSU) Alexey A. Petrov Wayne State University Table of Contents: Introduction Mixing: theoretical expectations.
Pavel Krokovny Heidelberg University on behalf of LHCb collaboration Introduction LHCb experiment Physics results  S measurements  prospects Conclusion.
Charmless B  VP Decays using Flavor SU(3) Symmetry hep-ph/ C.-W. Chiang, M. Gronau, Z. Luo, J. Rosner, DS Denis Suprun University of Chicago.
1 A New Physics Study in B  K  & B  K*  Decays National Tsing Hua University, October 23, 2008 Sechul OH ( 吳世哲 ) ( 오세철 ) C.S. Kim, S.O., Y.W. Yoon,
K.K. Gan The Ohio State University New Results on  Lepton July 17, 2003.
QFD, Weak Interactions Some Weak Interaction basics
CHARM MIXING and lifetimes on behalf of the BaBar Collaboration XXXVIIth Rencontres de Moriond  March 11th, 2002 at Search for lifetime differences in.
B. Golob, D Mixing & CPV 1/25Frontier of Particle Physics 2010, Hu Yu Village, Aug 2010 Boštjan Golob University of Ljubljana/Jožef Stefan Institute &
Interpreting CP asymmetries in. B   CP asymmetries Tree diagram: Penguin diagram: need |P/T| and  =arg(P/T) R t /R c R u /R c   
Impact of quark flavour violation on the decay in the MSSM K. Hidaka Tokyo Gakugei University / RIKEN, Wako Collaboration with A. Bartl, H. Eberl, E. Ginina,
Final state interactions in heavy mesons decays. A.B.Kaidalov and M.I. Vysotsky ITEP, Moscow.
B s Mixing Parameters and the Search for CP Violation at CDF/D0 H. Eugene Fisk Fermilab 14th Lomonosov Conference Moscow State University August ,
5 Jan 03S. Bailey / BaBar : B decays to Measure gamma1 B Decays to Measure  Stephen Bailey Harvard University for the BaBar Collaboration PASCOS 2003.
Introduction to Flavor Physics in and beyond the Standard Model Enrico Lunghi References: The BaBar physics book,
Nita Sinha The Institute of Mathematical Sciences Chennai.
P Spring 2002 L16Richard Kass B mesons and CP violation CP violation has recently ( ) been observed in the decay of mesons containing a b-quark.
1 Inclusive B → X c l Decays Moments of hadronic mass and lepton energy PR D69,111103, PR D69, Fits to energy dependence of moments based on HQE.
1 D 0 -D 0. First, I will review elements of charm mixing and associated CP violation. Then, I will review other searches for CP violation in the charm.
Zhi-zhong Xing 【 IHEP, Beijing 】 D0-D0bar Mixing and CP Violation in the Standard Model BES-Belle-CLEO-BaBar Joint Workshop on Charm Physics Beijing, November.
CLEO-c Workshop 1 Data Assumptions Tagging Rare decays D mixing CP violation Off The Wall Beyond SM Physics at a CLEO Charm Factory (some food for thought)
BBCB-2007 Joint Workshop, Beijing Alexey A Petrov (WSU) Alexey A. Petrov Wayne State University Table of Contents: Introduction Mixing: current/future.
Mats Selen, HEP Measuring Strong Phases, Charm Mixing, and DCSD at CLEO-c Mats Selen, University of Illinois HEP 2005, July 22, Lisboa, Portugal.
1 M. Selen, FPCP/02 Expectation Experiments Rate Asymmetries Other Approaches Outlook CP Violation in D Meson Decays CP Violation in D Meson Decays Mats.
1 outline ● Part I: some issues in experimental b physics ● why study b quarks? ● what does it take? ● Part II: LHCb experiment ● Part III: LHCb first.
CP violation and D Physics
Theory introduction to charm physics
Lecture 3 Rare and forbidden charm decays Neutral D mixing and CP violation Hai-Bo Li IHEP 8-10 July, Hai-Bo Li.
Charm Mixing, CPV and Rare D0 decays at BaBar
New Physics on Rare and Doubly Cabibbo-Suppressed D Decays
D0 Mixing and CP Violation from Belle
Run-Hui Li Yonsei University
Presentation transcript:

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Alexey A. Petrov Wayne State University Table of Contents: Introduction Mixing: current/future experimental constraints Mixing: theoretical expectations CP violation in charm Conclusions and outlook Mixing and CP violation in charm

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Murphy’s law: Modern charm physics experiments acquire ample statistics; many decay rates are quite large. THUS: It is very difficult to provide model-independent theoretical description of charmed quark systems. Introduction 27

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Charm transitions serve as excellent probes of New Physics 1.Processes forbidden in the Standard Model to all orders (or very rare) Examples: 2.Processes forbidden in the Standard Model at tree level Examples: 3.Processes allowed in the Standard Model Examples: relations, valid in the SM, but not necessarily in general Introduction: charm and New Physics 26

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Introduction: mixing  Q=2: only at one loop in the Standard Model: possible new physics particles in the loop  Q=2 interaction couples dynamics of D 0 and D 0  Time-dependence: coupled Schrödinger equations  Diagonalize: mass eigenstates flavor eigenstates Mass and lifetime differences of mass eigenstates: 25

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Introduction: mixing  Q=2: only at one loop in the Standard Model: possible new physics particles in the loop  Q=2 interaction couples dynamics of D 0 and D 0  Time-dependence: coupled Schrödinger equations  Diagonalize: mass eigenstates flavor eigenstates Mass and lifetime differences of mass eigenstates: 25

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Introduction: why do we care? mixing intermediate down-type quarks SM: b-quark contribution is negligible due to V cd V ub * (zero in the SU(3) limit) intermediate up-type quarks SM: t-quark contribution is dominant (expected to be large) 1. Sensitive to long distance QCD 2. Small in the SM: New Physics! (must know SM x and y) 1. Computable in QCD (*) 2. Large in the SM: CKM! (*) up to matrix elements of 4-quark operators Falk, Grossman, Ligeti, and A.A.P. Phys.Rev. D65, , nd order effect!!! 24

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) How would new physics affect mixing? Real intermediate states, affect both x and y Standard Model 1. : signal for New Physics? : Standard Model? 2. CP violation in mixing/decay With b-quark contribution neglected: only 2 generations contribute real 2x2 Cabibbo matrix  Look again at time development :  Expand mass matrix: Local operator, affects x, possible new phsyics new CP-violating phase  23

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) How would CP violation manifest itself in charm?  Possible sources of CP violation in charm transitions :  CPV in decay amplitudes (“direct” CPV)  CPV in mixing matrix  CPV in the interference of decays with and without mixing 22

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Experimental constraints on mixing 1.Time-dependent or time-integrated semileptonic analysis 2.Time-dependent analysis (lifetime difference) 3.Time-dependent analysis Quadratic in x,y: not so sensitive Sensitive to DCS/CF strong phase  Idea: look for a wrong-sign final state 21

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Example: experimental constraints on y CP Several groups have measured y CP Experiment Value, % FOCUS (2000) 3.4 ± 1.4 ± 0.7 E791(2001) 0.8 ± 2.9 ± 1.0 CLEO (2002) -1.2 ± 2.5 ± 1.4 Belle (2002) -0.5 ± 1.0 ± 0.8 BaBar (2003) 0. 2± 0.5. Belle (2003) 1.2 ± 0.7 ± 0.4 BaBar (2003, K + K - ) 1.2 ± 0.7 ± 0.4 BaBar (2003,  +  - ) 1.7 ± 1.2. World average: y CP = (0.9 ± 0.4)% a. What if time-dependent studies are not possible? b. What are the expectations for x and y? B. Yabsley 20

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) What if time-dependent studies are not possible I? f3f3 f1f1 f2f2  -charm factory (CLEO-c) f4f4 Time-integrated analysis: DCSD contribution cancels out for double-tagged decays! CFDCS Quadratic in x,y: not so sensitive wanted: linear in x or y H. Yamamoto; I. Bigi, A. Sanda 19

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) What if time-dependent studies are not possible II?  If CP violation is neglected mass eigenstates = CP eigenstates  CP eigenstates do NOT evolve with time, so can be used for “tagging” KSKS 00 CP Eigenstate (-) f1f1 f2f2  CLEO-c has good CP-tagging capabilities CP anti-correlated  (3770): CP(tag) (-1) L = [CP(K S ) CP(  0 )] (-1) = +1 CP correlated  (4140) (-)  -charm factory (CLEO-c) Can still measure y: D. Atwood, A.A.P., hep-ph/

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Mixing: theoretical estimates  Theoretical predictions are all over the board… so:  Can x,y ~ 1% be convincingly accommodated?  What is the relationship between x and y (x ~ y, x > y, x < y?) in the Standard Model? x from new physics y from Standard Model Δ x from Standard Model (papers from SPIRES ) Updated predictions A.A.P. hep-ph/

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Theoretical estimates I A. Short distance gives a tiny contribution, consider y as an example … as can be seen form the straightforward computation… with 4 unknown matrix elements similar for x (trust me!) m c IS large !!! 16

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Theoretical estimates I A. Short distance + “subleading corrections” (in 1/m c expansion): …subleading effects? 4 unknown matrix elements 15 unknown matrix elements Twenty-something unknown matrix elements Guestimate: x ~ y ~ ? Leading contribution!!! H. Georgi, … I. Bigi, N. Uraltsev 15

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Resume: model-independent computation with model-dependent result 14

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Theoretical estimates II B. Long distance physics dominates the dynamics… If every Br is known up to O(1%) the result is expected to be O(1%)! m c is NOT large !!! … with n being all states to which D 0 and D 0 can decay. Consider  K, KK intermediate states as an example… cancellation expected! The result here is a series of large numbers with alternating signs, SU(3) forces 0 x = ? Extremely hard… J. Donoghue et. al. P. Colangelo et. al. Need to “repackage” the analysis: look at the complete multiplet contribution 13

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Resume: model-dependent computation with model-dependent result 12

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Theoretical expectations  Let’s compute both x and y. Consider the correlator   p D (q) is an analytic function of q. To write a disp. relation, go to to HQET: A. Falk., Y. Grossman, Z. Ligeti, Y. Nir and A.A.P., hep-ph/ Now we can interpret  p D (q) for all q 11

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Theoretical expectations  …this implies for the correlator  HQ mass dependence drops out for the second term, so for  v (q) =  p D (q)/m D mass and width difference of a heavy meson with mass E Rapidly oscillates for large m c  Thus, a dispersion relation Compute , then find  m! 10

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Results:  Product is naturally O(1%) No (symmetry-enforced) cancellations Naturally implies that y ~ 1%! What about x? A.F., Y.G., Z.L., and A.A.P. Phys.Rev. D65, , 2002 From each multiplet: 9

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Results:  m/  =x/y: Computation naturally implies that y ~ x ~ 1%!  Also: 1.Assume 2-parameter model for 2.Compute r F for 4-body and 2- body intermediate multiplets 3.Model dependence remains… A. Falk., Y. Grossman, Z. Ligeti, Y. Nir and A.A.P., hep-ph/

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) A bit more about CP violation in charm 7

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) CP violation: experimental constraints 1. Standard analysis: rate asymmetries ModeE791, %FOCUS, %CLEO, % D 0 → K + K ±4.9± ±2.2±1.50.0±2.2±0.8 D0 → +-D0 → +- -4.9±7.8±3.04.8±3.9±2.51.9±3.2±0.8 D 0 → K S  0 0.1±1.3 D0 → 0+K-D0 → 0+K- -3.1±8.6 … which is of the first order in CPV parameters, but requires tagging 2. Recall that CP of the states in are anti-correlated at  (3770):  a simple signal of CP violation: … which is of the second order in CPV parameters, i.e. tiny 6

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) CP violation: new experimental possibilities 1 1.Time dependent (lifetime difference analysis): separate datasets for D 0 and D 0 This analysis requires 1. time-dependent studies 2. initial flavor tagging (“the D * trick”) Cuts statistics/sensitivity 5

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) CP violation: new experimental possibilities 2 2. Look for CPV signals that are 1. first order in CPV 2. do not require flavor tagging Consider the final states that can be reached by both D 0 and D 0, but are not CP eigenstates ( , KK *, K , K , …) where A.A.P., PRD69, (R), 2004 hep-ph/

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) CP violation: untagged asymmetries Expect time-dependent asymmetry… … whose coefficients are computed to be This is true for any final state f … and time-integrated asymmetry 3

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) CP violation: untagged asymmetries (K +   ) For a particular final state K , the time-integrated asymmetry is simple This asymmetry is 1. non-zero due to large SU(3) breaking 2. contains no model-dependent hadronic parameters (R and  are experimental observables) 3. could be as large as 0.04% for NP Note: larger by O(100) for SCS decays ( , …) where R ~ 1 A.A.P., PRD69, (R), 2004 hep-ph/

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Conclusions  Charm provides great opportunities for New Physics studies –large available statistics –mixing: x, y = 0 in the SU(3) limit (as V * cb V ub is very small) –mixing is a second order effect in SU(3) breaking –it is quite possible that y~ x ~ 1% in the Standard Model  Expect new data from BaBar/Belle/CLEO-c/CDF  Quantum coherence will allow CLEO-c/BES to perform new measurements of strong phases in charm mixing studies –important inputs to time-dependent studies of mixing  Quantum coherence will allow CLEO-c to perform new studies of mixing –no DCSD contamination in double-tag K  studies –new mixing measurements unique to CLEO-c  Observation of CP-violation or FCNC transitions in the current round of experiments provide “smoking gun” signals for New Physics - untagged asymmetries are more sensitive to CPV 1

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Additional slides 0

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Questions: 1. Can any model-independent statements be made for x or y ? 2. Can one claim that y ~ 1% is natural? What is the order of SU(3) breaking? i.e. if what is n?

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Theoretical expectations At which order in SU(3) F breaking does the effect occur? Group theory? is a singlet with that belongs to 3 of SU(3) F (one light quark) Introduce SU(3) breaking via the quark mass operator All nonzero matrix elements built of must be SU(3) singlets The  C=1 part of H W is -2

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Theoretical expectations note that D i D j is symmetric belongs to 6 of SU(3) F D mixing is prohibited by SU(3) symmetry Explicitly, 1. No in the decomposition of no SU(3) singlet can be formed 2. Consider a single insertion of transforms as still no SU(3) singlet can be formed NO D mixing at first order in SU(3) breaking 3. Consider double insertion of D mixing occurs only at the second order in SU(3) breaking A.F., Y.G., Z.L., and A.A.P. Phys.Rev. D65, ,

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Example: PP intermediate states n=PP transforms as, take 8 as an example: This gives a calculable effect! Numerator: 1.Repeat for other states 2.Multiply by Br Fr to get y Denominator: phase space function -4

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.)  : SU(3) and phase space “Repackage” the analysis: look at the complete multiplet contribution Does it help? If only phase space is taken into account: no (mild) model dependence Each is 0 in SU(3) y for each SU(3) multiplet if CP is conserved Can consistently compute A.F., Y.G., Z.L., and A.A.P. Phys.Rev. D65, ,

BEACH 2004, IIT, Chicago Alexey Petrov (Wayne State Univ.) Quantum coherence: supporting measurements Time-dependent analysis A. Falk, Y. Nir and A.A.P., JHEP 12 (1999) 019 Strong phase can be measured at CLEO-c! where and Strong phase  is zero in the SU(3) limit and strongly model-dependent With 3 fb -1 of data cos  can be determined to |  cos  | < 0.05! Silva, Soffer; Gronau, Grossman, Rosner