Cargando…
The strange side of LHCb
We provide general effective-theory arguments relating present-day discrepancies in semileptonic B-meson decays to signals in kaon physics, in particular lepton-flavor violating ones of the kind K→(π)e±μ∓. We show that K-decay branching ratios of around 10-12–10-13 are possible, for effective-theory...
Autores principales: | , , , , |
---|---|
Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2018
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.99.055017 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2635125 |
Sumario: | We provide general effective-theory arguments relating present-day discrepancies in semileptonic B-meson decays to signals in kaon physics, in particular lepton-flavor violating ones of the kind K→(π)e±μ∓. We show that K-decay branching ratios of around 10-12–10-13 are possible, for effective-theory cutoffs around 5–15 TeV compatible with discrepancies in B→K(*)μμ decays. We perform a feasibility study of the reach for such decays at LHCb, taking K+→π+μ±e∓ as a benchmark. In spite of the long lifetime of the K+ compared to the detector size, the huge statistics anticipated as well as the overall detector performance translate into encouraging results. These include the possibility to reach the 10-12 ballpark, and thereby significantly improve current limits. Our results advocate LHC’s high-luminosity Upgrade phase, and support analogous sensitivity studies at other facilities. Given the performance uncertainties inherent in the Upgrade phase, our conclusions are based on a range of assumptions we deem realistic on the particle identification performance as well as on the kinematic |
---|