seriously disabled Posted March 12, 2010 Posted March 12, 2010 Hi, I have a question. In this physical review letters article, what particles do [math]\bar{v}[/math] and [math]v[/math] stand for?
timo Posted March 12, 2010 Posted March 12, 2010 Anti-neutrinos and neutrinos, respectively. It's the Greek letter "nu", not a "v", btw. 1
seriously disabled Posted March 12, 2010 Author Posted March 12, 2010 Thanks for the reply Timo. But what does the [math]\bar{b}[/math][math]b[/math] stand for?
seriously disabled Posted March 12, 2010 Author Posted March 12, 2010 Thanks Timo. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedWhat does B → Xcℓν mean?
timo Posted March 12, 2010 Posted March 12, 2010 I couldn't find that in the text, so I dunno. "l" probably means a charged lepton, nu probably still is a neutrino, the arrow indicates a decay. Could it be that the "B" is not a capital one and the "c" is not a subscript to the "X"? It might be the decay of a bottom-boson into a charm-boson, a lepton (i.e. electron, muon or tau), the neutrino fitting to the lepton (to preserve fermion number), and whatever crap possibly also produced but irrelevant to the discussion (some stuff X), then. But without knowing where you read that that is only a guess.
seriously disabled Posted March 12, 2010 Author Posted March 12, 2010 I took it from here: http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0907/0907.0379v2.pdf and it appears that c is a subscript of X.
timo Posted March 12, 2010 Posted March 12, 2010 Then it presumably means the decay of some hadron containing a b-quark to a hadron containing a u-quark and the lepton and neutrino that come from the decay of the b-quark into an up-quark. But that also is just a guess; I have little to no experience with hadrons and never read a b-physics paper myself.
timo Posted March 12, 2010 Posted March 12, 2010 Same as the [math]X_u[/math] except with a charm-quark instead of an up-quark.
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