Abstract

We present results of a lattice QCD calculation of $B\to D^*$ and $B_s\to D_s^*$ axial vector matrix elements with both states at rest. These zero recoil matrix elements provide the normalization necessary to infer a value for the CKM matrix element $|V_{cb}|$ from experimental measurements of $\bar{B}^0\to D^{*+}\ell^-\bar{\nu}$ and $\bar{B}^0_s\to D_s^{*+}\ell^-\bar{\nu}$ decay. Results are derived from correlation functions computed with highly improved staggered quarks (HISQ) for light, strange, and charm quark propagators, and nonrelativistic QCD for the bottom quark propagator. The calculation of correlation functions employs MILC Collaboration ensembles over a range of three lattice spacings. These gauge field configurations include sea quark effects of charm, strange, and equal-mass up and down quarks. We use ensembles with physically light up and down quarks, as well as heavier values. Our main results are $\mathcal{F}^{B\to D^*}(1)= 0.895\pm 0.010_{\mathrm{stat}}\pm{{0.024}_{\mathrm{sys}}}$ and $\mathcal{F}^{B_s\to D_s^*}(1)= 0.883\pm 0.010_{\mathrm{stat}}\pm{0.028_{\mathrm{sys}}}$. We discuss the consequences for $|V_{cb}|$ in light of recent investigations into the extrapolation of experimental data to zero recoil.

Highlights

  • Precise measurements of quark flavor-changing interactions offer one way to uncover physics beyond the standard model

  • Results are derived from correlation functions computed with highly improved staggered quarks (HISQ) for light, strange, and charm quark propagators, and nonrelativistic QCD for the bottom quark propagator

  • The gluon field configurations that we use were generated by the MILC Collaboration and include 2 þ 1 þ 1 flavors of dynamical HISQ quarks in the sea and include 3 different lattice spacings [35,36,37]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Precise measurements of quark flavor-changing interactions offer one way to uncover physics beyond the standard model. Measurements of the exclusive semileptonic decay B 0 → DÃþl−νprovided the first estimations of the magnitude of CKM matrix element Vcb [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16] This channel still provides one of three precise methods of determining jVcbj. In this article we present the details and results of a lattice calculation of the zero-recoil form factor needed to extract jVcbj from experimental measurements of the B → DÃlν and Bs → DÃslν decay rates. II, VI, VII, and VIII, possibly referring to Appendix G

FORM FACTORS
LATTICE PARAMETERS AND METHODOLOGY
ONE-LOOP MATCHING
ANALYSIS OF NUMERICAL DATA
Fits to correlation functions
Chiral-continuum extrapolation
Isospin breaking effects
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
IMPLICATIONS FOR jVcbj
VIII. CONCLUSIONS
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