Cargando…

Correlating nonresonant di-electron searches at the LHC to the Cabibbo-angle anomaly and lepton flavor universality violation

In addition to the existing strong indications for lepton flavor universality violation in low-energy precision experiments, the CMS Collaboration at CERN recently released an analysis of nonresonant dilepton pairs which could constitute the first sign of lepton flavor universality violation in high...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Crivellin, Andreas, Manzari, Claudio Andrea, Montull, Marc
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.104.115016
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2758900
Descripción
Sumario:In addition to the existing strong indications for lepton flavor universality violation in low-energy precision experiments, the CMS Collaboration at CERN recently released an analysis of nonresonant dilepton pairs which could constitute the first sign of lepton flavor universality violation in high-energy searches at the LHC. In this article, we show that the Cabibbo-angle anomaly, an (apparent) violation of first row and column Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) matrix unitarity with <math display="inline"><mo>≈</mo><mn>3</mn><mi>σ</mi></math> significance, and the CMS result can be correlated and commonly explained in a model-independent way by the operator <math display="inline"><mo stretchy="false">[</mo><msubsup><mi>Q</mi><mrow><mo>ℓ</mo><mi>q</mi></mrow><mrow><mo stretchy="false">(</mo><mn>3</mn><mo stretchy="false">)</mo></mrow></msubsup><msub><mo stretchy="false">]</mo><mn>1111</mn></msub><mo>=</mo><mo stretchy="false">(</mo><msub><mover accent="true"><mo>ℓ</mo><mo stretchy="false">¯</mo></mover><mn>1</mn></msub><msup><mi>γ</mi><mi>μ</mi></msup><msup><mi>σ</mi><mi>I</mi></msup><msub><mo>ℓ</mo><mn>1</mn></msub><mo stretchy="false">)</mo><mo stretchy="false">(</mo><msub><mover accent="true"><mi>q</mi><mo stretchy="false">¯</mo></mover><mn>1</mn></msub><msub><mi>γ</mi><mi>μ</mi></msub><msup><mi>σ</mi><mi>I</mi></msup><msub><mi>q</mi><mn>1</mn></msub><mo stretchy="false">)</mo></math>. This is possible without violating the bounds from the nonresonant dilepton search of ATLAS (which interestingly also observed slightly more events than expected in the electron channel) nor from <math display="inline"><mi>R</mi><mo stretchy="false">(</mo><mi>π</mi><mo stretchy="false">)</mo><mo>=</mo><mi>π</mi><mo stretchy="false">→</mo><mi>μ</mi><mi>ν</mi><mo stretchy="false">/</mo><mi>π</mi><mo stretchy="false">→</mo><mi>e</mi><mi>ν</mi></math>. We find a combined preference for the new physics hypothesis of <math display="inline"><mn>4.5</mn><mi>σ</mi></math> and predict <math display="inline"><mn>1.0004</mn><mo>&lt;</mo><mi>R</mi><mo stretchy="false">(</mo><mi>π</mi><mo stretchy="false">)</mo><mo>&lt;</mo><mn>1.0009</mn></math> (95% C.L.) which can be tested in the near future with the forthcoming results of the PEN experiment.