4 research outputs found

    Evidence of a J/psi Lambda structure and observation of excited Xi(-) states in the Xi(-)(b) -> J/psi Lambda K- decay

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    First evidence of a structure in the J/ψΛJ/\psi \varLambda invariant mass distribution is obtained from an amplitude analysis of ΞbJ/ψΛK\varXi_b^- \to J/\psi \varLambda K^- decays. The observed structure is consistent with being due to a charmonium pentaquark with strangeness. Its mass and width are determined to be 4458.8\pm2.9\,^{+4.7}_{-1.1}MeV and 17.3\pm6.5\,^{+8.0}_{-5.7}MeV, where the quoted uncertainties are statistical and systematic, respectively. The structure is also consistent with being due to two resonances. In addition, the narrow excited Ξ\varXi^- states, Ξ(1690)\varXi(1690)^- and Ξ(1820)\varXi(1820)^-, are seen for the first time in a Ξb\varXi_b^- decay, and their masses and widths are measured with improved precision. The analysis is performed using pppp collision data corresponding to a total integrated luminosity of 9fb1^{-1}, collected with the LHCb experiment at centre-of-mass energies of 77, 88 and 1313TeV.Comment: All figures and tables, along with machine-readable versions and any supplementary material and additional information, are available at https://cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/p/LHCb-PAPER-2020-039.html (LHCb public pages

    Search for time-dependent CP violation in D-0 -> K+K- and D-0 -> pi(+)pi(-) decays

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    A search for time-dependent violation of the charge-parity symmetry in D0K+KD^0 \to K^+ K^- and D0π+πD^0 \to \pi^+ \pi^- decays is performed at the LHCb experiment using proton-proton collision data recorded from 2015 to 2018 at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 6 fb1^{-1}. The D0D^0 meson is required to originate from a D(2010)+D0π+D^*(2010)^+ \to D^0 \pi^+ decay, such that its flavour at production is identified by the charge of the accompanying pion. The slope of the time-dependent asymmetry of the decay rates of D0D^0 and Dˉ0\bar{D}^0 mesons into the final states under consideration is measured to be ΔYK+K=(2.3±1.5±0.3)×104\Delta Y_{K^+ K^-} = (-2.3 \pm 1.5 \pm 0.3) \times 10^{-4}, ΔYπ+π=(4.0±2.8±0.4)×104\Delta Y_{\pi^+ \pi^-} = (-4.0 \pm 2.8 \pm 0.4)\times 10^{-4}, where the first uncertainties are statistical and the second are systematic. These results are compatible with the conservation of the charge-parity symmetry at the level of 2 standard deviations and improve the precision by nearly a factor of two.Comment: Updated to match published version; all figures and tables, along with supplementary material and additional information, are available at https://cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/p/LHCb-PAPER-2020-045.htm

    Test of lepton universality in beauty-quark decays

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    The standard model of particle physics currently provides our best description of fundamental particles and their interactions. The theory predicts that the different charged leptons, the electron, muon and tau, have identical electroweak interaction strengths. Previous measurements have shown that a wide range of particle decays are consistent with this principle of lepton universality. This article presents evidence for the breaking of lepton universality in beauty-quark decays, with a significance of 3.1 standard deviations, based on proton–proton collision data collected with the LHCb detector at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. The measurements are of processes in which a beauty meson transforms into a strange meson with the emission of either an electron and a positron, or a muon and an antimuon. If confirmed by future measurements, this violation of lepton universality would imply physics beyond the standard model, such as a new fundamental interaction between quarks and leptons

    Search for massive long-lived particles decaying semileptonically at root s=13 TeV

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    A search is performed for massive long-lived particles (LLP) decaying semileptonically into a muon and two quarks. Two kinds of LLP production processes were considered. In the first, a Higgs-like boson with mass from 30 to 200 GeV is produced by gluon fusion and decays into two LLPs. The analysis covers LLP mass values from 10 GeV up to about one half the Higgs-like boson mass. The second LLP production mode is directly from quark interactions, with LLP masses from 10 to 90 GeV. The LLP lifetimes considered range from 5 to 200 ps. This study uses LHCb data collected from proton-proton collisions at sqrt(s)=13 TeV, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 5.4 1/fb. No evidence of these long-lived states has been observed, and upper limits on the production cross-section times branching ratio have been set for each model considered
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