
TL;DR
This review discusses recent anomalies in lepton flavour universality observed in B meson decays, which may indicate physics beyond the Standard Model, highlighting experimental results and future prospects.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the current experimental hints of LFU violation and discusses their implications for new physics beyond the Standard Model.
Findings
Hints of LFU violation in $b o c ext{ and }b o s$ transitions
Tensions in angular observables and branching fractions
Potential first signs of physics beyond the Standard Model
Abstract
The concept of lepton flavour universality (LFU), according to which the three lepton families are equivalent except for their masses, is a cornerstone prediction of the Standard Model (SM). LFU can be violated in models beyond the SM by new physics particles that couple preferentially to certain generations of leptons. In the last few years, hints of LFU violation have been observed in both tree-level and loop-level transitions. These measurements, combined with the tensions observed in angular observables and branching fractions of rare semileptonic decays, point to a coherent pattern of anomalies that could soon turn into the first observation of physics beyond the SM. These proceedings review the anomalies seen by the LHC experiments and the factories, and give an outlook for the near future.
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