Abstract

Semileptonic flavor changing neutral current transitions with a pair of neutrinos in the final state are very accurately determined in the standard model (SM) and thus provide an accurate and sensitive probe for physics beyond the SM. Until recently, the poor tagging efficiency for the $B\to K^{(*)}\nu \bar{\nu}$ modes made them less advantageous as a probe of new physics (NP) compared to the charged lepton counterparts. The most recent Belle II result on $B\to K \nu \bar{\nu}$ uses an innovative inclusive tagging technique resulting in a higher tagging efficiency; this together with previous BaBar and Belle results indicates a possible enhancement in the branching fraction of $B^+\to K^+ \nu \bar{\nu}$. A reanalysis of the full Belle dataset together with upcoming Belle II dataset is expected to result in a much more precise measurement of this mode. If the branching ratio is indeed found to be enhanced with improved measurements, this would provide an unambiguous signal of NP without uncertainties due to long-distance non-factorizable effects or power corrections (in contrast to $B\to K^{(*)} \ell \ell$). We have explored the possibilities of such an enhancement as a signal of NP within several scenarios, which can also explain some of the other tensions observed in neutral as well as charged current $B$-decays. In an effective field theory approach, with the most general dimension-six Hamiltonian including light right-handed neutrinos, we explore the viability of all scalar and vector leptoquarks as well as the parameter space possible with a generic vector gauge boson $Z^\prime$ model assuming minimal new particle content. While being consistent with all data, correlations between the observed intriguing discrepancies in $B$-decays are also obtained, which will discriminate between the various NP scenarios.

Highlights

  • Flavor-changing neutral-current (FCNC) decays are expected to play a significant role in the search for physics beyond the Standard Model (SM), since they are one-loop suppressed in the SM

  • Transitions involving b → s decays have been the subject of attention due to the persistent observation of anomalies indicating the possible existence of new physics (NP)

  • A reanalysis of the full Belle dataset with the new tagging method and future Belle II results can significantly reduce the uncertainty

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Flavor-changing neutral-current (FCNC) decays are expected to play a significant role in the search for physics beyond the Standard Model (SM), since they are one-loop suppressed in the SM. Our goal in this paper is to study the impact of improvements in the observation of B → KðÃÞννon a few popular “simplified” NP models, such as the leptoquark and generic heavy Z0 models In this context, “simplified” refers to a single new heavy (above the electroweak scale) mediator particle that can be integrated out to contribute to one or more of the effective operators entering into the b → sννtransition. The computations of these NP contributions are performed in the Standard Model Effective Theory (SMEFT), as well as in the neutrino-Weak Effective Theory (ν-WET) basis Instead of requiring these NP models to just fulfill the bounds on b → sννchannels, we analyze whether the anticipated signal can bear any footprint on the discrepancies observed in NC and CC B decays.

THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
OBSERVABLES
Leptoquarks
32 S3 arises from the
33 R 2 and
U3 π αEM V tb V Ãts
23 U3 is necessary that can compensate for the reduction arising ðY
Generic Z0μ
Findings
DISCUSSION
SUMMARY
Full Text
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