Exploring the role of the charm quark in the I=1/2 rule
Abstract
We study the dependence on the charm quark mass of the leading-order low-energy constants of the S=1 effective Hamiltonian, with the aim of elucidating the role of the charm mass scale in the I=1/2 rule for Kππ decay. To that purpose, finite-volume Chiral Perturbation Theory predictions are matched to QCD simulations, performed in the quenched approximation with overlap fermions and mu=md=ms. Light quark masses range between a few MeV up to around one third of the physical strange mass, while charm masses range between mu and a few hundred MeV. Novel variance reduction techniques are used to obtain a signal for penguin contractions in correlation functions involving four-fermion operators. The important role played by the subtractions required to construct renormalised amplitudes for mc ≠ mu is discussed in detail. We find evidence that the moderate enhancement of the I=1/2 amplitude previously found in the GIM limit mc=mu increases only slightly as mc abandons the light quark regime. Hints of a stronger enhancement for even higher values of mc are also found, but their confirmation requires a better understanding of the subtraction terms.
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