Synopsis

Heavy-Flavor Properties Get an Update

Physics 16, s49
The Heavy Flavor Averaging Group has released new world averages for properties of “heavy-flavor” particle decays—an update aimed at improving our understanding of flavor physics.
Y. Amhis et al. (Heavy Flavor Averaging Group Collaboration) [1]

Researchers have identified several promising experimental directions for expanding the standard model of particle physics. One such direction involves studies of “heavy-flavor physics,” which focus on decays of the heaviest lepton (tau) and of particles containing heavy (bottom and charm) quarks. New knowledge might emerge from the comparison of standard-model-based predictions with measurements. Since 2002, the Heavy Flavor Averaging Group (HFLAV) has worked to improve measurement accuracy by averaging results from several measurements for each of hundreds of observables. Today, HFLAV releases its latest update of heavy-flavor properties. In a 500-page paper, the team presents state-of-the-art average values—and associated uncertainties—of quantities such as particle lifetimes, decay “branching ratios” (the relative probability of various decay channels of a given particle), and the degree to which the decays violate charge conjugation parity symmetry [1].

HFLAV is made up of researchers from all major collaborations, which include the three ongoing experiments dedicated to this type of measurements (Belle II in Japan, BES III in China, and LHCb at CERN) as well as CERN’s two general-purpose experiment (CMS and ATLAS). The collaboration makeup is crucial to the averaging process, says HFLAV coleader Ulrik Egede of LHCb and Monash University in Australia. “Obtaining an average number is the easy part. The hard thing is to get the uncertainty on that number.” A proper uncertainty assessment must account for experimental subtleties, such as whether the same systematic errors affect the measurements being averaged. “You really need to understand your measurements,” he says.

The HFLAV update will offer improved values to theorists but also guide new measurements, says Egede. Heavy-flavor experiments have traditionally focused on the “beauty” sector and on mesons, particles made of one quark and one antiquark. But the work shows the breadth and value of experiments that are being done on the “charm” sector and on baryons, which are made of three quarks, he says.

–Matteo Rini

Matteo Rini is the Editor of Physics Magazine.

References

  1. Y. Amhis et al. (Heavy Flavor Averaging Group Collaboration), “Averages of b-hadron, c-hadron, and 𝜏-lepton properties as of 2021,” Phys. Rev. D 107, 052008 (2023).

Subject Areas

Particles and FieldsNuclear Physics

Related Articles

Viewing a Quantum Spin Liquid through QED
Condensed Matter Physics

Viewing a Quantum Spin Liquid through QED

A numerical investigation has revealed a surprising correspondence between a lattice spin model and a quantum field theory. Read More »

Seven Astrophysical Tau Neutrinos Unmasked
Particles and Fields

Seven Astrophysical Tau Neutrinos Unmasked

Scientists have found seven astrophysical tau neutrinos—particles that are notoriously difficult to detect—in an analysis of data from the IceCube Neutrino Observatory in Antarctica. Read More »

Evidence of a New Subatomic Particle
Particles and Fields

Evidence of a New Subatomic Particle

A signal from the decay products of a meson—a quark and an antiquark—comes from two subatomic particles and not one, as previously thought. Read More »

More Articles