Title: Heavy Quarks and the Strong Potential
1Heavy Quarks and the
Strong Potential
- Sally Seidel
- Los Alamos National Laboratory
- 3 May 2006
2Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) is the theory of the
strong force. As it binds quarks to form
nucleons and nuclei, the strong force is to a
large degree responsible for the patterns that we
find in nature. QCD has been outstandingly
successful in describing whats observed,
including the evolution and scale dependence of
the coupling as, asymptotic freedom, scaling
violation, jet production rate and shape. But to
fully understand QCD, especially the unique
feature of quark confinement, one needs to be
able to predict the spectrum of bound states that
it permits.
3- Plan of the talk
- Approaches to calculations of bound quark states,
and the role of the potential in these - The role of the Bc meson family in mapping the
strong potential - The recent CDF precision measurement of the Bc
mass - Bcs at the LHC
4- Some subtexts of this talk...
- Heres one perspective on why particle physicists
keep looking for new particles, even though we
already have 500. Its not stamp collecting! We
will motivate the hunt for the Bc, the bound
state of the and c quarks. - Heres one way that heavy quarks (c, b, t), which
do not compose the proton or neutron valence and
may therefore appear to contribute little to the
structure of the everyday world, can elucidate
fundamental questions. - Theres more to life than the Higgs. While the
Fermilab Tevatrons and CERN Large Hadron
Colliders programs to search for Higgs and
Beyond the Standard Model exotics are very rich
and well motivated, their opportunities for
probing Standard Model processes are also
unmatched.
5A few numbers to remember about scales, masses,
and bound states in QCD...
6- The coupling as runs with energy. A scale, or
mass gap, ?QCD, characterizes the boundary
between the perturbative and non-perturbative
regimes. The value of ?QCD has been estimated to
be in the range 200 MeV to 450 MeV. - Compared to ?QCD, three quarks are light (1-100
MeV), and three are heavy (1-174 GeV). - A.C. Benvenuti, et al., Phys. Lett. B 223, 490
(1989).
G. Bodwin, et al., PRD 51, 3, 1125
(1995).
7The ability to predict the hadron spectrum is a
direct test of our understanding of the
confinement mechanism. QCD alone should be able
to describe the spectroscopy of bound states.
Recent breakthroughs have improved its
precision. Nonetheless it remains technically
challenging (especially for the heavy quarks) as
the theory must naturally describe phenomena at
multiple scales, perturbative and not. Lattice
calculation is difficult because the lattice
spacing must be small compared to 1/mQ but the
grid must be large compared to 1/mQv2, a large
number as the heavy quarks velocity is small.
Thus many approaches have been used to
complement lattice QCD. C.T.H. Davies et al.,
PRL 92, 022001 (2004) and references therein.
8- Effective Field Theory (EFT) is an alternative to
the lattice...a quantum field theory in which
different scales are factorized, leaving adequate
degrees of freedom to describe phenomena in a
specific range. Typically an EFT has a potential
which encodes the effect of degrees of freedom
that have been integrated out from full QCD. - EFTs can be classified by the trade-off they
make between hypotheses required (i.e.,
factorizations), and precision or range of
applicability obtained.
9- Theres been a convergence of results from
- pure QCD (lattice calculation)...While results
are limited by computational power associated
with lattice extent (large w.r.t. 1/mv2) and
granularity (small w.r.t. 1/m), recent
developments in discretization of light quarks
(staggered quarks) now permit predictions with
few-percent precision. - Non-relativistic QCD...integrates out modes of
energy and momentum of order mq and describes the
dynamics of heavy quark pairs at energies much
smaller than their masses. - A nice review is given in Heavy Quarkonium
Physics, Quarkonium Working Group,
hep-ph/0412158. - C.W. Bernard et al., Nucl. Phys Proc. Suppl.
60A, 297 (1998) G.P. Lepage, Nucl. Phys. Proc.
Suppl. 60A, 267 (1998) C.W. Bernard et al., PRD
58, 014503 (1998) G.P. Lepage, PRD 59, 074502
(1999), K. Orginos and D. Toussaint, Nucl. Phys.
Proc. Suppl. 73, 909 (1999) K. Orginos et al.,
PRD 60, 054503 (1999) C.W. Bernard et al., PRD
61, 111502 (2000) K. Orginos and D. Toussaint,
PRD 59, 014501 (1999).
10- also...
- Perturbative non-relativistic QCD...further
integrates out phenomena at scale of momentum
transfer (mv) relative to scale of kinetic energy
(mv2). - Phenomenological potential models...which often
begin with - so are most applicable to the heaviest, least
relativistic, bound states.
11So a reasonable experimental goal is to map the
strong potential. We know that the detailed
shape of a potential determines the energies at
which its states are bound.
12- Heavy quark bound states are key to elucidating
the strong potential. - b quark mass mb is so much heavier than ?QCD that
a perturbative expansion in 1/mb is well
motivated. - The heavy quark and antiquark relative velocities
v are much less than c, permitting a
non-relativistic treatment... then in analogy
with QED, expect splittings between states with
the same quantum numbers to be of size mv2 and
hyperfine splittings of size mv4. - E. Eichten and C. Quigg, hep-ph/9402210.
13- Analogizing from positronium to quarkonium...
- For positronium
- neglecting relativistic corrections, the scale of
excitation energies is set by the Rydberg, R
½µa2 - energy levels given by principal quantum number
- Virial Thm applies to a
spherically symmetric potential, so - Thus for quarkonium
- photons?gluons and a?ascolor factors
- System is non-relativistic with velocity v as
evaluated at the size of a bound state v
as(1/r2) where r 1/mv - For more details see R.K. Ellis et al., QCD
and Collider Physics, Cambridge, 1996.
14- However...
- while bound states of light quarks can be modeled
by a perturbed Coulombic spectrum, the spectrum
of and states (which being heavy probe
closer to the non-perturbative regime) is known
to be not Coulombic.
A non-relativistic Coulomb potential would not
split 2S and 1P. So generalize the potential...
15At short distances, lowest order perturbation
theory gives a Coulomb-like potential for
one-gluon exchange but this does not include
confinement. Experimentally, production
typically occurs at an energy scale 1 GeV
(typical hadron mass) at a separation of 1 fm
(typical hadron size). So at long distances,
one-gluon exchange can be replaced by bunched
color flux tubes with linear energy density
s This gives the Cornell potential Phys.
Rev. D 17, 3090 (1978).
16- Spin-independent features of spectroscopy
have been shown to be described by this form.
Other proposed spin-independent potentials tuned
to match charmonium and bottomonium spectra
include the - Martin potential
- Logarithmic potential, produces mass-independent
level spacings - Phys. Lett. B 93, 338 (1980).
Phys. Lett. B
71, 153 (1977)
17- Richardson potential, which assumes one-gluon
exchange but explicitly incorporates the scale - Buchmüller-Tye potential, which includes 2-loop
running at small distances and interpolation
between the limits of large and small r - Phys. Lett. B 82, 272 (1979)
Phys. Rev. D 24, 132 (1981)
18- The QCD-inspired spin-dependent potential has
been written down - Transform QCD Lagrangian ? NRQCD Lagrangian.
- Write down the gauge-invariant Green
function G(T) in the path integral
representation. Insert a complete set of
eigenstates with eigenenergies En. - Make a Wick rotation and using the Feynman-Kac
formula obtain the ground state energy
E0(G(-iT)). - For an infinitely heavy quark, G is a product
involving a static Wilson loop - Heavy quark kinetic energy ? 0, leaving potential
- N. Brambilla and A. Vairo, hep-ph/9904330
B. Thacker and G. Lepage,
PRD 43, 196 (1991).
19- To order 1/m2, the result is
- but the resulting full spectrum has not been
calculated. - Phys. Rev. D 63, 014023 (2001) Phys. Rev. D 63,
054007 (2001) Phys. Rev. D 67, 034018 (2003)
Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 012003 (2002).
20- Each proposed potential function leads to a
hypothesized spectrum. For example from Godfrey
and Isgur, Phys. Rev. D 32, 189 (1986)
21What physical system is best to distinguish among
the models?
22An excellent laboratory for mapping the strong
potential...the Bc system bound states of one
charm and one anti-bottom quark (or their
antiparticles)
23- What makes Bc a good laboratory for comparing
data to theory on the shape of the strong
potential? - modeling the binding of a two-body ( ) system
is easier than modelling three bodies (qqq)---so
start with a meson! - The heavier the better, to suppress relativistic
effects---but cannot form, because top
quarks decay before binding. - bind but decay rapidly (?t
10-20-10-23 seconds) by annihilation... - Due to the uncertainty principle, small ?t means
resonance widths ?E
are large. Wide states are harder to distinguish
from background than narrow ones.
24- The strong and electromagnetic forces conserve
flavor, so the two flavors (b and c) of the Bc
cannot annihilate via them. Bc must decay weakly - Weak decays intrinsically take longer (?t 10-12
sec) so Bc should be narrow.
p
J/?
Bc
Bs
Bc
p
Bc
Ds
25We expect the energy levels of Bc and its excited
states to lie in the same range as the known
bound states of . Those
particles have splittings much smaller than their
quark masses... implying bound quark
velocities vcharm 0.5 in vbottom 0.3 in
...so the bound states are approximately
non-relativistic. Bc should be likewise
non-relativistic, simplifying the form that can
be used to describe its potential.
26The Bc has a high mass...about 6 GeV...so it can
only be produced at the highest energy colliders.
Precision measurements of it and its excited
states Bc should in principal provide a map of
the strong potential. And the data?...
27- Only about 130 events containing a ground-state
Bc have been observed. The first observations
were made at the Fermilab Tevatron through
semileptonic decays - via
- events (CDF, 4.8s significance)
- mass 6.4 0.39 0.13 GeV/c2
- Phys. Rev. Lett. 81, 2432 (1998)
- via
- 95 12 11 events (D0),
- mass
- DØNote 4539-Conf (2004)
28The presence of the neutrino prevented full
reconstruction of events, leading to a relatively
large uncertainty on the Bc mass. A precision
mass measurement requires full reconstruction of
the decay, for example
29The definitive mass measurement came from CDF in
November 2005 (hep-ex/0505076).
30- Measurement of the Bc mass through the decay
Bc ?J/? p - Analysis relies on the very efficient J/??µµ-
trigger which provides a high purity data sample. - 360 pb-1 in at
- Silicon microstrip tracker (L00SVXISL) in 1.4
T axial field - Open-cell wire drift chamber (COT)
- muon chambers (CMUCMX) to ? lt 1.0
31- Muon selection
- Require candidate tracks match in COT and CMU or
CMX - Select µµ- pairs with pT gt 1.5(2.0) GeV/c in
CMU(CMX) to form J/? candidate with mass
2.7 lt M(µµ-) lt
4.0 GeV/c2.
32- Reconstructing Bc?J/?p offline
- every track has r-f measurement on 3 SVX layers
- reconfirm COT - CMU/CMX track match
- 3.042 lt M(µµ-) lt 3.152 GeV/c2
- assign pion ID to every other charged track with
pT gt 400 MeV/c - Constrain M(µµ-) to world average for J/?, 3.096
GeV/c2 - Fit J/? and p to common 3D vertex save all
combinations for which fit converges - Form primary vertex from remaining tracks
33- The remaining cuts were selected in blind
analysis mode to avoid bias. Data in the search
mass window 5.6 lt M(Bc) lt
7.2 GeV/c2
were temporarily hidden by substituting
a known 3-track invariant mass value. Window
width is 2s about Bc mass obtained from CDF
semileptonic search and 100x wider than expected
mass resolution of 14 MeV/c2. - Using Monte Carlo, vary cuts to maximize
- The 1.5 selects signals 3s above background
fluctuation. - G. Punzi, PHYSTAT2003 and arXivphysics/0308063.
34- Cuts were developed for variables in fully
simulated Monte Carlo events with - Bc mass 6.4 GeV/c2
- Bc lifetime 0.46 ps
- theoretical pT spectrum, checked by a harder
spectrum - C.-H. Chang et al., hep-ph/0309120.
- A. V. Berezhnoy et al., Z. Phys A 356, 79 (1996).
35- Variables used in selection
- 3-track 3-d vertex fit ?2 lt 9 (4 d.o.f.)
- pion contribution to the fit ?2p lt 2.6
- impact parameter of the Bc candidate lt 65 µm in
r-f - (ct)max lt 750 µm where t is Bc proper decay time
- pion pT gt 1.8 GeV/c
- 3-d angle between Bc candidate and vector from
primary to secondary vertex lt 0.4 rad - significance of the projected decay length of the
Bc onto its transverse momentum direction,
Lxy/s(Lxy) gt 4.4. - 390 candidates remain.
36- Validate cuts (minus ct) on control data sample
B ? J/? K - reconstruct 2378 57 B, with correct mass
(5279.0 0.3 MeV/c2) including B ? J/? p
contribution - mass resolution 11.5 0.3 MeV/c2
37- Predict Bc events from
- B yield
- trigger and recon efficiency in range 0.35-0.85,
depending on Bc lifetime and pT spectrum -
measured by CDF semileptonically - theoretical calculations of
BR(Bc ?J/?p)/ BR(Bc
?J/?l?)
38- Expect 10-50 Bc events
- Scan search region in 10 MeV/c2 intervals with a
sliding window from -100 MeV/c2 to 200 MeV/c2
about each nominal peak. Asymmetric window
minimizes contributions from partially
reconstructed decays (see below). There are 131
possible such windows. - For each window fit Gaussianlinear bkg, Gaussian
width linear in mass from 13 to 19 GeV/c2. Fit
parameters are Signal, Background, and Bkg
slope. - For the data, measure
39- Predict the Smax distribution for the null
hypothesis. Use Monte Carlo background sample
linear (combinatoric) physical (inclusive
Bc?J/?X with BRs from theory). - Smax near 6290 MeV/c2 with 19 6 events.
Probability that this is a random fluctuation
0.17. - V.V. Kiselev, Phys. Atom.Nucl. 67, 1559 (2004).
40- Scrutinize events in the signal region. Discover
2 classes of unacceptable fitted tracks used as
pions - insufficient COT hits for good mass resolution,
so incompatible with presumed narrow Gaussian - poor SVX resolution in z-direction
- These are found to contribute 10 of signal but
40 of the combinatorial bkg. Remove these
events. 220 candidates remain. Demand good
silicon z information on the pion and at least
one muon.
41- Perform an unbinned likelihood fit over the full
mass range. - 14.6 4.6 events are observed (probability of
random fluctuation 0.012) - Mass 6285.7 5.3 1.2 MeV/c2 (0.08
uncertainty). - The broad low-mass enhancement is real but
partially reconstructed Bc decays.
42- To confirm the broad peaks identity, note
- physical bkg pions (left side band LSB) should
have small impact parameter dxy, but combinatoric
pions (right side band RSB) should not.
Strategy - Relax cuts on impact parameter of the Bc
candidate and on ?2 of the 3-d vertex fit, to
make a signal in the dxy distribution rise above
the combinatorics. Plot dxy. - Subtract LSB-RSB of dxy.
- Result the curve for Bu data also describes well
the pattern in the Bc. - Low dxy excess (224 59 events) consistent with
MC.
43- Systematics
- measurement of track parameters (0.3 MeV/c2)
- momentum scale (0.6 MeV/c2)
- These are evaluated from the B control data.
- possible differences between B and Bc pT spectra
(0.5 MeV/c2) - fitting uncertainties knowledge of background
shape and signal width (0.9 MeV/c2)
44This precision measurement of the Bc mass
provides the baseline against which models of the
strong potential can be calibrated. But to map
the shape of the potential, we need to know what
other stationary states it supports, and we need
precision mass measurements on them. So we need
the excited states Bc too.
45To see the excited states in substantial numbers,
we probably need more energy. The Large Hadron
Collider will provide proton-proton collisions at
center-of-mass energy 14 TeV (compare Tevatrons
2 TeV) beginning 2007.
46And they really mean 2007!...
LHC
Construction and Installation Schedule
Ready June 2007
47The new CERN control room...
48The ATLAS and CMS Experiments will be there.
49- A conservative estimate predicts 10,000
events could be fully reconstructed
from one years ATLAS data at luminosity 1033
cm-2s-1 (integrated, 10 fb-1), assuming - s( ) 500 µb ? 5 x 1012 pairs
- trigger muon pT gt 6 GeV/c and ? lt 1.6
- Prob(b ?Bc()) 10-3
- BR(Bc ? J/?p J/? ? µµ) 10-4
- Combined detection efficiency 1
- F. Albiol et al., ATLAS Note ATL-PHYS-94-058
(1994).
50A comparable number of Bc should be produced in
approximately 15 narrow bc states predicted to
lie below the BD flavor threshold (7.14
GeV). These are reconstructed through and
with electromagnetic decays expected to dominate
for all but the 2S levels. The challenge
efficient detection of a 72 MeV M1-photon in
coincidence with an observed Bc decay. This is
needed to distinguish Bc(2S) ? Bc(1S) pp from
Bc(2S) ? Bc(1S) pp . C. Quigg, Proc.
Snowmass 1993, 439.
51- First steps Seeing the 1S, 2S and 2P levels at
LHC... - reconstruct the hadronic decays
- detect Bc?(455 MeV)
- detect ?(353 MeV), ?(382 MeV), ?(397 MeV) in
coincidence with Bc?Bc?(72 MeV) - This could be enough to definitively specify the
strong potential.