Nonperturbative Corrections to Inclusive Beauty and Charm Decays: QCD versus Phenomenological Models
Abstract
We present a selfconsistent method for treating nonperturbative effects in inclusive nonleptonic and semileptonic decays of heavy flavour hadrons. These effects give rise to powerlike corrections 1/mQn\,, n 2 with mQ denoting the heavy quark mass.The leading correction to the semileptonic branching ratio occurs for n=2. It is expressed in terms of the vector-pseudoscalar mass splitting: δ BR∈dsl/BR∈dsl BR∈dnl\, · \,6\,(\,(MV2-MP2)/mQ2)· (c+2 - c-2)/2Nc and yields a reduction of BR∈dsl. This nonperturbative correction contributes to the nonleptonic width with a sign opposite to that of the perturbative terms that are non-leading in 1/Nc. In beauty decays the former reduces the latter by 20 \% whereas in charm decays they more or less cancel. This leads to a reduction of BR∈dsl by no more than 10 \% in beauty decays and by a factor of roughly two in charm decays. We confront these results with those obtained from phenomenological models of heavy flavour decays and find that such models are unable to mimic these leading corrections by a specific choice of quark masses or by invoking Fermi motion.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.