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Electroweak Penguin Hunting Through $B\to\pi\pi,\pi Ky$ and Rare K and B Decays

The $B\to\pi K$ decays with significant electroweak penguin contributions show a puzzling pattern. We explore this "$B\to\pi K$ puzzle" through a systematic strategy. The starting point, which is essentially unaffected by electroweak penguins, is the determination of the angle $\gamma$ of...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Buras, Andrzej J., Fleischer, Robert, Recksiegel, Stefan, Schwab, Felix
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.021.0193
http://cds.cern.ch/record/912910
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author Buras, Andrzej J.
Fleischer, Robert
Recksiegel, Stefan
Schwab, Felix
author_facet Buras, Andrzej J.
Fleischer, Robert
Recksiegel, Stefan
Schwab, Felix
author_sort Buras, Andrzej J.
collection CERN
description The $B\to\pi K$ decays with significant electroweak penguin contributions show a puzzling pattern. We explore this "$B\to\pi K$ puzzle" through a systematic strategy. The starting point, which is essentially unaffected by electroweak penguins, is the determination of the angle $\gamma$ of the unitarity triangle through the CP-violating $B^0_d\to\pi^+\pi^-$, $B^0_d\to\pi^-K^+$ asymmetries, yielding $\gamma=(73.9^{+5.8}_{-6.5})^\circ$, and the extraction of hadronic parameters through the measured $B\to\pi\pi$ branching ratios. Using arguments related to the SU(3) flavour symmetry, we convert the hadronic $B\to\pi\pi$ parameters into their $B\to\pi K$ counterparts, allowing us to predict the $B\to\pi K$ observables in the Standard Model. We find agreement with the data for those quantities that are only marginally affected by electroweak penguins, while this is not the case for the observables with sizeable electroweak penguin contributions. Since we may also perform a couple of internal consistency checks of our working assumptions, which are nicely satisfied for the current data, and find a small sensitivity of our results to large non-factorizable SU(3)-breaking corrections, the "$B\to\pi K$" puzzle may be due to new physics in the electroweak penguin sector. We show that it can indeed be resolved through such a kind of new physics with a large CP-violating phase. Further insights into the electroweak penguins are provided by the $B^+\to\pi^0K^+$ and $B_d^0\to\pi^0K_{\rm S}$ CP asymmetries, and in particular through correlations with various rare $K$ and B decays.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2005
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spelling cern-9129102023-03-14T20:27:52Zdoi:10.22323/1.021.0193http://cds.cern.ch/record/912910engBuras, Andrzej J.Fleischer, RobertRecksiegel, StefanSchwab, FelixElectroweak Penguin Hunting Through $B\to\pi\pi,\pi Ky$ and Rare K and B DecaysParticle Physics - PhenomenologyThe $B\to\pi K$ decays with significant electroweak penguin contributions show a puzzling pattern. We explore this "$B\to\pi K$ puzzle" through a systematic strategy. The starting point, which is essentially unaffected by electroweak penguins, is the determination of the angle $\gamma$ of the unitarity triangle through the CP-violating $B^0_d\to\pi^+\pi^-$, $B^0_d\to\pi^-K^+$ asymmetries, yielding $\gamma=(73.9^{+5.8}_{-6.5})^\circ$, and the extraction of hadronic parameters through the measured $B\to\pi\pi$ branching ratios. Using arguments related to the SU(3) flavour symmetry, we convert the hadronic $B\to\pi\pi$ parameters into their $B\to\pi K$ counterparts, allowing us to predict the $B\to\pi K$ observables in the Standard Model. We find agreement with the data for those quantities that are only marginally affected by electroweak penguins, while this is not the case for the observables with sizeable electroweak penguin contributions. Since we may also perform a couple of internal consistency checks of our working assumptions, which are nicely satisfied for the current data, and find a small sensitivity of our results to large non-factorizable SU(3)-breaking corrections, the "$B\to\pi K$" puzzle may be due to new physics in the electroweak penguin sector. We show that it can indeed be resolved through such a kind of new physics with a large CP-violating phase. Further insights into the electroweak penguins are provided by the $B^+\to\pi^0K^+$ and $B_d^0\to\pi^0K_{\rm S}$ CP asymmetries, and in particular through correlations with various rare $K$ and B decays.The $B\to\pi K$ decays with significant electroweak penguin contributions show a puzzling pattern. We explore this $B\to\pi K$ puzzle through a systematic strategy. The starting point, which is essentially unaffected by electroweak penguins, is the determination of the angle $\gamma$ of the unitarity triangle through the CP-violating $B^0_d\to\pi^+\pi^-$, $B^0_d\to\pi^-K^+$ asymmetries, yielding $\gamma=(73.9^{+5.8}_{-6.5})^\circ$, and the extraction of hadronic parameters through the measured $B\to\pi\pi$ branching ratios. Using arguments related to the SU(3) flavour symmetry, we convert the hadronic $B\to\pi\pi$ parameters into their $B\to\pi K$ counterparts, allowing us to predict the $B\to\pi K$ observables in the Standard Model. We find agreement with the data for those quantities that are only marginally affected by electroweak penguins, while this is not the case for the observables with sizeable electroweak penguin contributions. Since we may also perform a couple of internal consistency checks of our working assumptions, which are nicely satisfied for the current data, and find a small sensitivity of our results to large non-factorizable SU(3)-breaking corrections, the $B\to\pi K$ puzzle may be due to new physics in the electroweak penguin sector. We show that it can indeed be resolved through such a kind of new physics with a large CP-violating phase. Further insights into the electroweak penguins are provided by the $B^+\to\pi^0K^+$ and $B_d^0\to\pi^0K_{\rm S}$ CP asymmetries, and in particular through correlations with various rare $K$ and B decays.hep-ph/0512059CERN-PH-TH-2005-242TUM-612-05MPP-2005-157CERN-PH-TH-2005-242MPP-2005-157TUM-2005-612oai:cds.cern.ch:9129102005-12-05
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Phenomenology
Buras, Andrzej J.
Fleischer, Robert
Recksiegel, Stefan
Schwab, Felix
Electroweak Penguin Hunting Through $B\to\pi\pi,\pi Ky$ and Rare K and B Decays
title Electroweak Penguin Hunting Through $B\to\pi\pi,\pi Ky$ and Rare K and B Decays
title_full Electroweak Penguin Hunting Through $B\to\pi\pi,\pi Ky$ and Rare K and B Decays
title_fullStr Electroweak Penguin Hunting Through $B\to\pi\pi,\pi Ky$ and Rare K and B Decays
title_full_unstemmed Electroweak Penguin Hunting Through $B\to\pi\pi,\pi Ky$ and Rare K and B Decays
title_short Electroweak Penguin Hunting Through $B\to\pi\pi,\pi Ky$ and Rare K and B Decays
title_sort electroweak penguin hunting through $b\to\pi\pi,\pi ky$ and rare k and b decays
topic Particle Physics - Phenomenology
url https://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.021.0193
http://cds.cern.ch/record/912910
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AT fleischerrobert electroweakpenguinhuntingthroughbtopipipikyandrarekandbdecays
AT recksiegelstefan electroweakpenguinhuntingthroughbtopipipikyandrarekandbdecays
AT schwabfelix electroweakpenguinhuntingthroughbtopipipikyandrarekandbdecays