8,621 research outputs found
Tests of Factorization and SU(3) Relations in B Decays into Heavy-Light Final States
Using data from the B factories and the Tevatron, we perform tests of how
well non-leptonic B decays of the kind B -> D^{(*)}_{(s)} P, where P is a pion
or kaon, are described within the factorization framework. We find that
factorization works well - as is theoretically expected - for color-allowed,
tree-diagram-like topologies. Moreover, also exchange topologies, which have a
non-factorizable character, do not show any anomalous behavior. We discuss also
isospin triangles between the B -> D^{(*)} pi decay amplitudes, and determine
the corresponding amplitudes in the complex plane, which show a significant
enhancement of the color-suppressed tree contribution with respect to the
factorization picture. Using data for B -> D^{(*)} K decays, we determine
SU(3)-breaking effects and cannot resolve any non-factorizable SU(3)-breaking
corrections larger than \sim 5%. In view of these results, we point out that a
comparison between the \bar B^0_d -> D^+\pi^- and \bar B^0_s -> D_s^+\pi^-
decays offers an interesting new determination of f_d/f_s. Using CDF data, we
obtain the most precise value of this ratio at CDF, and discuss the prospects
for a corresponding measurement at LHCb.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, matches published version in Physical Review
A study of rare B-meson decay with muons in the final state with the LHCb detector
The Standard Model (SM) gives a successful description of known phenomena in particle physics, however there are many indications of the existence of New Physics (NP) at the TeV scale. Physicists are building a very large and expensive machine in this belief: the LHC (Large Hadron Collider), which is foreseen to start in the middle 2008. Three of the experiments of the LHC are mainly devoted to the search of NP. Among these, the LHCb experiment is dedicated to the physics of b-hadrons. It will look for indirect evidences of new particles or new degrees of freedom, measuring branching ratios, decay amplitudes and CP asymmetries, which can be sensitive to New Physics effects. Three analysis will be presented: the sensitivity to the decays, the sensitivity to the decays and the correction of angular biases in the decay. The decays are forbidden in the SM, being lepton flavor violating, but are allowed in some of its extensions. The CL upper bounds that the LHCb experiment can set in year, running at nominal luminosity, will be presented. These results will be discussed in the context of some Pati-Salam models. The branching ratio of the decays can be enhanced by NP contributions, such as SUSY contributions. Th e LHCb sensitivity to these decays will be presented. %NP can affect the angular distributions of the B_d^0 \rightarrrow K^{*0} \mu^+ \mu^-. The asymmetry in the decay is sensitive to NP involving right-handed currents. This asymmetry can be extracted by looking at the angular distributions of the decay products. However this measurement is not straightforward. Two methods for the angular distribution recovering, using the as a control channel, will be presented
Searching for new physics in rare B meson decays
The b → sl+l− transitions are flavour-changing neutral currents, where new physics can enter in competing loop diagrams with respect to the Standard Model contributions. In these decays several observables sensitive to new
physics and where theoretical uncertainties are under control can be built. Particularly interesting are the angular asymmetries in the decay Bd → K ∗ μ+μ− and the
measurement of the branching ratio of the decays Bs,d →
μ+μ−. Recent measurements of these observables and implications for the search of physics beyond the Standard Model will be discussed. Measurements of the isospin asymmetry in the decays B → K(∗)l+l− and the measurement of the branching ratio of the decay B+ → π+μ+μ− will also be discussed
Association between novel object recognition/spontaneous alternation behavior and emission of ultrasonic vocalizations in rats: Possible relevance to the study of memory
Rats emit ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) in situations with emotional valence, and USVs have also been proposed as a marker for memories conditioned to those situations. This study investigated whether USV emissions can predict and/or be associated with the behavior of rats in tests that evaluate unconditioned memory. To this end, rats were subjected to “tickling”, a procedure of heterospecific play that has emotional valence and elicits the emission of USVs, and afterwards evaluated in the novel object recognition test (NOR) and in the single trial continuous spontaneous alternation behavior (SAB) test in a Y-maze. The number of 22-kHz USVs (aversive) and 50-kHz USVs (appetitive) emitted in response to tickling and during NOR and SAB tests were scored, and the correlations among them and with rats’ behavior evaluated. Rats emitted 50-kHz USVs, but not 22-kHz USVs, during the NOR and SAB tests, and such calling behavior was not linked with the behavioral readouts indicative of memory function in either test. However, rats that prevalently emitted 22-kHz USVs in response to tickling displayed an impaired NOR performance. These findings suggest that measuring the emission of USVs could be of interest in studies of unconditioned memory, at least with regard to 22-kHz USVs
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