A New Approach to Inclusive Decay Spectra
Einan Gardi, Jeppe R. Andersen (Cambridge)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that resummed perturbation theory, accounting for infrared renormalons and power corrections, can accurately predict inclusive decay spectra in QCD despite non-perturbative effects, improving precision in heavy meson decay measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a method to use perturbative QCD with renormalon resummation for predicting decay spectra, reducing reliance on non-perturbative models.
Findings
Renormalon ambiguities cancel between Sudakov factor and pole mass.
Perturbative predictions for B decay spectra match experimental data.
Power corrections are significant only near the endpoint.
Abstract
The main obstacle in describing inclusive decay spectra in QCD - which, in particular, limits the precision in extrapolating the measured \bar{B} \to X(s) gamma rate to the full phase space as well as in extracting |V_{ub}| from inclusive measurements of charmless semileptonic decays - is their sensitivity to the non-perturbative momentum distribution of the heavy quark in the meson. We show that, despite this sensitivity, resummed perturbation theory has high predictive power. Conventional Sudakov-resummed perturbation theory describing the decay of an on-shell heavy quark yields a divergent expansion. Detailed understanding of this divergence in terms of infrared renormalons has paved the way for making quantitative predictions. In particular, the leading renormalon ambiguity cancels out between the Sudakov factor and the quark pole mass. This cancellation requires renormalon…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAdvancements in PLL and VCO Technologies · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Cellular Automata and Applications
