Anatomy of New Physics in B-Bbar mixing
A. Lenz (U. Dortmund), U. Nierste (U. Regensburg, KIT Karlsruhe),, J. Charles (CPT Marseille), S. Descotes-Genon (LPT Orsay), A. Jantsch (MPI, Munchen), C. Kaufhold (LAPP Annecy), H. Lacker (Humboldt U. Berlin), S., Monteil, V. Niess (LPC Clermont), S. T'Jampens (LAPP Annecy)

TL;DR
This paper investigates various New Physics scenarios affecting B and K meson mixing, using recent data to constrain parameters and identify potential deviations from the Standard Model, with implications for upcoming LHCb measurements.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of three New Physics scenarios in meson mixing, employing global CKM fits and identifying evidence for New Physics in B_d and B_s systems.
Findings
Evidence of New Physics in B_d and B_s mixing with high statistical significance.
Disfavoring of the Standard Model hypothesis with p-values of 3.6 sigma and 3.3 sigma.
Predictions for CP phase in B_s -> J/psi phi and semileptonic asymmetry differences for LHCb.
Abstract
We analyse three different New Physics scenarios for Delta F=2 flavour-changing neutral currents in the quark sector in the light of recent data on neutral-meson mixing. We parametrise generic New Physics contributions to B_q-Bbar_q mixing (q=d,s), in terms of one complex quantity Delta_q, while three parameters Delta_K^tt, Delta_K^ct and Delta_K^cc are needed to describe K-Kbar mixing. In Scenario I, we consider uncorrelated New Physics contributions in the B_d, B_s, and K sectors. In this scenario, it is only possible to constrain the parameters Delta_d and Delta_s whereas there are no non-trivial constraints on the kaon parameters. In Scenario II, we study the case of Minimal Flavour Violation (MFV) and small bottom Yukawa coupling and Scenario III is the generic MFV case with large bottom Yukawa couplings. Our quantitative analyses consist of global CKM fits within the Rfit…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
