Measurement of $b$-hadron branching fractions for two-body decays into charmless charged hadrons
LHCb collaboration: R. Aaij, C. Abellan Beteta, B. Adeva, M. Adinolfi,, C. Adrover, A. Affolder, Z. Ajaltouni, J. Albrecht, F. Alessio, M. Alexander,, S. Ali, G. Alkhazov, P. Alvarez Cartelle, A.A. Alves Jr, S. Amato, Y. Amhis,, J. Anderson, R.B. Appleby, O. Aquines Gutierrez

TL;DR
This paper reports precise measurements of branching fractions for various two-body charmless decays of b-hadrons, including the first observation of Bs -> pi+pi- with high significance, based on LHCb data from 2011.
Contribution
It provides the most precise measurements to date of several b-hadron decay branching fractions and reports the first observation of Bs -> pi+pi- decay.
Findings
Most precise measurements of B(Bs -> K+K-), B(Bs -> pi+K-), and B(B0 -> K+K-)
First observation of Bs -> pi+pi- decay with >5 sigma significance
Branching fractions are consistent with theoretical expectations
Abstract
Based on data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 0.37 fb^-1 collected by the LHCb experiment in 2011, the following ratios of branching fractions are measured: B(B0 -> pi+ pi-) / B(B0 -> K+pi-) = 0.262 +/- 0.009 +/- 0.017, (fs/fd) * B(Bs -> K+K-) / B(B^0 -> K+pi-) = 0.316 +/- 0.009 +/- 0.019, (fs/fd) * B(Bs ->pi+ K-) / B(B0 -> K+pi-) = 0.074 +/- 0.006 +/- 0.006, (fd/fs) * B(B0 -> K+K-) / B(Bs -> K+K-) = 0.018 {+ 0.008 - 0.007} +/- 0.009, (fs/fd) * B(Bs -> pi+pi-) / B(B0 -> pi+pi-) = 0.050 {+ 0.011 - 0.009} +/- 0.004, B(Lambda_b -> p pi-) / B(Lambda_b -> p K-) = 0.86 +/- 0.08 +/- 0.05, where the first uncertainties are statistical and the second systematic. Using the current world average of B(B0 -> K+pi-) and the ratio of the strange to light neutral B meson production fs/fd measured by LHCb, we obtain: B(B0 -> pi+pi-) = (5.08 +/- 0.17 +/- 0.37) x 10^-6, B(Bs…
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.
