Prospects for rare B decays at Belle II
Sam Cunliffe

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential of the Belle II experiment to study rare B meson decays, which are crucial for exploring physics beyond the Standard Model, especially in light of recent anomalies and lepton-universality tests.
Contribution
It provides an overview of the prospects for measuring various rare B decays at Belle II and highlights its complementary role to LHCb in probing new physics.
Findings
Belle II aims to measure rare B decays with high precision.
The experiment will explore processes like $b o s o ext{leptons}$ and $b o s uar u$.
Results could clarify anomalies in lepton universality tests.
Abstract
Rare and flavour-changing neutral current decays of the B meson are an important probe in the search for physics beyond the Standard Model. There have recently been several anomalies in rare B decays, and lepton-universality measurements, specifically involving the quark transition. These results tend towards a non-Standard-Model interpretation. The Belle II experiment is a next-generation b physics experiment located at SuperKEKB, an upgraded B factory collider, in Tsukuba, Japan. The first collisions are expected in early 2018 with full physics data expected in 2019. This document describes prospects for several rare B decays at Belle II including processes and others, such as and . Areas where the Belle II program is complementary to that of the currently running LHCb experiment are highlighted.
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions · Neutrino Physics Research
