Constraining new physics in $b\to c\ell\nu$ transitions
Martin Jung, David M. Straub

TL;DR
This paper performs a comprehensive, model-independent analysis of new physics effects in $b\to c\ell\nu$ decays, incorporating differential distributions and exploring implications for $V_{cb}$ and lepton flavor universality.
Contribution
It introduces the first use of differential $B\to D^*\ell\nu$ angular observables to constrain new physics in a model-independent way.
Findings
Differential distributions effectively constrain scalar and tensor currents.
Zero-recoil endpoint of $B\to D\ell\nu$ is highly sensitive to scalar interactions.
Maximum-recoil endpoint of $B\to D^*\ell\nu$ with transversely polarized $D^*$ is sensitive to tensor interactions.
Abstract
decays proceeding via transitions with or are tree-level processes in the Standard Model. They are used to measure the CKM element , as such forming an important ingredient in the determination of e.g. the unitarity triangle; hence the question to which extent they can be affected by new physics contributions is important, specifically given the long-standing tension between determinations from inclusive and exclusive decays and the significant hints for lepton flavour universality violation in and decays. We perform a comprehensive model-independent analysis of new physics in , considering all combinations of scalar, vector and tensor interactions occuring in single-mediator scenarios. We include for the first time differential distributions of angular observables for…
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