Evidence of CP violation in the charm sector has been observed recently by
the LHCb and CDF Collaborations. Adopting the topological diagram approach, we
study flavor SU(3) symmetry breaking effects in the weak decay tree amplitudes
of singly Cabibbo-suppressed D→PP decays. The symmetry breaking in the
color-allowed and color-suppressed amplitudes is estimated with the help of the
factorization ansatz, while that in the W-exchange amplitude is done by
fitting to related branching fraction data. We find that the W-exchange
amplitudes stay in the second quadrant relative to the color-allowed tree
amplitude, albeit there are two possibilities for one type of W-exchange
amplitude. The weak decay penguin amplitudes, on the other hand, are evaluated
within the framework of QCD factorization. Using the input of topological tree
amplitudes extracted from the Cabibbo-favored decay modes and the perturbative
results for QCD penguin amplitudes, we make predictions for the branching
fractions and CP asymmetries of singly Cabibbo-suppressed modes. The
predictions of branching fractions are generally improved from those in the
SU(3) limit. We conclude that the direct CP asymmetry difference between D0→K+K− and D0→π+π− is about −(0.139±0.004) and
−(0.151±0.004) for the two solutions of W-exchange amplitudes,
respectively. We also find that the CP asymmetry of D^0\to K^0\ov K^0
dominated by the interference between W-exchange amplitudes ranges from
−0.62×10−3 to −1.82×10−3. We study phenomenological
implications of two new physics scenarios for explaining the observed CP
asymmetry in the charm sector, one with large penguin amplitudes and the other
with a large chromomagnetic dipole operator. We find that the two scenarios can
be discriminated by the measurements of CP asymmetries of a set of decay modes.Comment: 23 pages, three new paragraphs added in the beginning of Sec. III.
Version to appear in PRD. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1201.078