5,431 research outputs found
Experimental limits on New Physics from charm decay
Recent measurements in the charm sector are reviewed, concentrating on
results which are sensitive to New Physics effects. The scope of the
presentation includes D0-D0bar mixing searches, a CPT / Lorentz invariance
study, and a range of searches for rare and forbidden decays. Results from the
BaBar, Belle, CDF, CLEO, and FOCUS collaborations are presented, including an
important first observation.Comment: 14 pages, 5 tables, 17 figures. Invited talk presented at the 21st
International Symposium On Lepton And Photon Interactions At High Energies
(LP03) 11-16 August 2003, Batavia, Illinois. To appear in the proceedings of
the symposiu
Hemotropic mycoplasmas in little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus).
BackgroundHemotropic mycoplasmas are epicellular erythrocytic bacteria that can cause infectious anemia in some mammalian species. Worldwide, hemotropic mycoplasmas are emerging or re-emerging zoonotic pathogens potentially causing serious and significant health problems in wildlife. The objective of this study was to determine the molecular prevalence of hemotropic Mycoplasma species in little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) with and without Pseudogymnoascus (Geomyces) destrucans, the causative agent of white nose syndrome (WNS) that causes significant mortality events in bats.MethodsIn order to establish the prevalence of hemotropic Mycoplasma species in a population of 68 little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) with (n = 53) and without (n = 15) white-nose syndrome (WNS), PCR was performed targeting the 16S rRNA gene.ResultsThe overall prevalence of hemotropic Mycoplasmas in bats was 47%, with similar (p = 0.5725) prevalence between bats with WNS (49%) and without WNS (40%). 16S rDNA sequence analysis (~1,200 bp) supports the presence of a novel hemotropic Mycoplasma species with 91.75% sequence homology with Mycoplasma haemomuris. No differences were found in gene sequences generated from WNS and non-WNS animals.ConclusionsGene sequences generated from WNS and non-WNS animals suggest that little brown bats could serve as a natural reservoir for this potentially novel Mycoplasma species. Currently, there is minimal information about the prevalence, host-specificity, or the route of transmission of hemotropic Mycoplasma spp. among bats. Finally, the potential role of hemotropic Mycoplasma spp. as co-factors in the development of disease manifestations in bats, including WNS in Myotis lucifugus, remains to be elucidated
Observation of and search for in B decays
We report a study of and
decay modes using events collected at the
\Upsilon(4S)e^+ e^-X(3872) \to J/\psi \gamma\chi_{c2} \to J/\psi \gammaB\to (X_{c\bar{c}}\gamma) KX(3872) \to \psi' \gamma\mathcal{B}(B^{\pm} \to X(3872)
K^{\pm}) \mathcal{B}(X(3872) \to J/\psi\gamma)=(1.78^{+0.48}_{-0.44}\pm
0.12)\times 10^{-6}\mathcal{B} (B^{\pm} \to\chi_{c2} K^{\pm})=(1.11^{+0.36}_{-0.34} \pm 0.09) \times 10^{-5}\mathcal{B}(B^{\pm} \to
X(3872) K^{\pm}) \mathcal{B}(X(3872) \to \psi'\gamma)<3.45\times 10^{-6}$
(upper limit at 90% C.L.) and also provide upper limits for other searches.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Observation of and Evidence for
We report the first observation of and first
evidence for , which are CP eigenstate decay modes.
These results are obtained from of data collected at
the resonance with the Belle detector at the KEKB
collider. We measure the branching fractions with a significance of , and
with a significance of . The last error
listed is due to uncertainty in the number of produced pairs.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, published in PR
Search for the X(1812) in
We report on a search for the X(1812) state in the decay with a data sample of pairs collected
with the Belle detector at the KEKB collider. No significant signal is
observed. An upper limit (90% C.L.) is determined. We also constrain the
three-body decay branching fraction to be 1.9 (90% C.L.).Comment: 5pages,2 figures(3 figure files). submitted to PRD(RC
Measurement Of |V_ub| From Inclusive Charmless Semileptonic B Decays
We present the partial branching fraction for inclusive charmless
semileptonic B decays and the corresponding value of the CKM matrix element
|Vub|, using a multivariate analysis method to access ~90% of the B -> Xu l nu
phase space. This approach dramatically reduces the theoretical uncertainties
from the b-quark mass and non-perturbative QCD compared to all previous
inclusive measurements. The results are based on a sample of 657 million B
-Bbar pairs collected with the Belle detector. We find that Delta BR(B -> Xu l
nu; p^*B_l>1.0 GeV/c=1.963 x (1 +/- 0.088(stat.) +/- 0.081(sys.)) x 10^-3.
Corresponding values of |Vub| are extracted using several theoretical
calculations.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables. Published in PR
Measurement of Inclusive Radiative B-meson Decays with a Photon Energy Threshold of 1.7 GeV
Using 605/fb of data collected at the Upsilon(4S) resonance we present a
measurement of the inclusive radiative B-meson decay channel, B to X_s gamma.
For the lower photon energy thresholds of 1.7, 1.8, 1.9 and 2.0GeV, as defined
in the rest frame of the B-meson, we measure the partial branching fraction and
the mean and variance of the photon energy spectrum. At the 1.7GeV threshold we
obtain the partial branching fraction BF(B to X_s gamma) = (3.45 +/- 0.15 +/-
0.40) x 10^-4, where the errors are statistical and systematic.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 2 table
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