The Belle II Physics Book
E. Kou, P. Urquijo, W. Altmannshofer, F. Beaujean, G. Bell, M. Beneke,, I. I. Bigi, F. Bishara M. Blanke, C. Bobeth, M. Bona, N. Brambilla, V. M., Braun, J. Brod, A. J. Buras, H. Y. Cheng, C. W. Chiang, G. Colangelo, H., Czyz, A. Datta, F. De Fazio, T. Deppisch, M. J. Dolan

TL;DR
The Belle II Physics Book outlines the experiment's comprehensive physics program, emphasizing potential discoveries in B physics, charm, tau, and dark sector searches, supported by theoretical and experimental analyses of expected impacts and uncertainties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, collaborative overview of Belle II's physics goals, methodologies, and expected advancements with a large dataset and upgraded detector capabilities.
Findings
Identification of key channels with high potential impact
Estimated theoretical uncertainties for various measurements
Projected improvements with Belle II's large dataset and upgraded detector
Abstract
We present the physics program of the Belle II experiment, located on the intensity frontier SuperKEKB collider. Belle II collected its first collisions in 2018, and is expected to operate for the next decade. It is anticipated to collect 50/ab of collision data over its lifetime. This book is the outcome of a joint effort of Belle II collaborators and theorists through the Belle II theory interface platform (B2TiP), an effort that commenced in 2014. The aim of B2TiP was to elucidate the potential impacts of the Belle II program, which includes a wide scope of physics topics: B physics, charm, tau, quarkonium, electroweak precision measurements and dark sector searches. It is composed of nine working groups (WGs), which are coordinated by teams of theorist and experimentalists conveners: Semileptonic and leptonic B decays, Radiative and Electroweak penguins, phi_1 and phi_2…
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.
