2006 APS April Meeting
Saturday–Tuesday, April 22–25, 2006;
Dallas, TX
Session S6: Panofsky Prize Session
3:30 PM–5:18 PM,
Monday, April 24, 2006
Hyatt Regency Dallas
Room: Cumberland J
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPF
Chair: Bill Carithers, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.APR.S6.3
Abstract: S6.00003 : Impact of the Long B-Lifetime on Other Areas of Particle Physics
4:42 PM–5:18 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Nigel Lockyer
(University of Pennsylvania)
The surprisingly long b-lifetime has had an amazing impact on
many physics topics since it was first measured in 1983. The
development of sophisticated silicon vertex detectors needed to
``tag'' the long lived $b$-quark followed at LEP, the Tevatron, the
$B$-factories, and today at the LHC. These technological
developments and the history of the first measurement in the
MarkII detector will be discussed by J. Jaros
in this session. This presentation will concentrate primarily on
physics topics pursued at the Tevatron Collider and CDF in
particular that were made possible by the long lifetime of the
$b$-quark. First, the TeV collider program, LEP, and the $B$
factories at SLAC and KEK have made remarkably precise
measurements of the $B$ mesons and baryons that utilized the
long $b$-lifetime in addition to the pioneering $B$ measurements
at Cornell and DESY. The B-factory measurements, including $CP$
violation, will be discussed by W.T. Ford in this session
as well as the first measurement in the MAC detector.
The Tevatron and LEP have made remarkable measurements of the
$B_s$ and $\Lambda_b$ which continue to improve. Perhaps the
biggest role of the long b-lifetime has been in the discovery and
study of the top quark. Both CDF and D0 use the lifetime as one
of the main selection criteria of top
events in addition to a high $P_T$ lepton. Our present knowledge
of the top cross section and mass are a result of measurements that
identify top by tagging the $b$-jets. CDF also had a first look
at $CP$ violation in the B system resulting in a 2-sigma
measurement, which hinted that $CP$ violation in the $b$-system
appeared to be large and consistent with the standard model.
Presently, the long lifetime of
the $B_s$ meson is being used to measure mixing in that system,
a much anticipated result expected from the Tevatron. The long
$b$-lifetime is critical for searches of the standard model and
supersymmetric Higgs bosons decaying into $b \bar b$
quarks. The LHC$_b$ experiment at the LHC will make next generation
measurements in the $b$-quark system, again, made possible by the
long $b$-lifetime. The Atlas and CMS detectors at the LHC will
exploit the long $b$-lifetime in their searches for
the Higgs bosons and supersymmtry and the detectors being
designed for the International Linear Collider will also
utilize the long lived $b$-quark.
A brief discussion of these measurements will be presented.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.APR.S6.3