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. 2018 Jun 2;78(6):443. doi: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-018-5758-4

Studies of the resonance structure in D0Kπ±π±π decays

R Aaij 40, B Adeva 39, M Adinolfi 48, Z Ajaltouni 5, S Akar 59, J Albrecht 10, F Alessio 40, M Alexander 53, A Alfonso Albero 38, S Ali 43, G Alkhazov 31, P Alvarez Cartelle 55, A A Alves Jr 59, S Amato 2, S Amerio 23, Y Amhis 7, L An 3, L Anderlini 18, G Andreassi 41, M Andreotti 17, J E Andrews 60, R B Appleby 56, F Archilli 43, P d’Argent 12, J Arnau Romeu 6, A Artamonov 37, M Artuso 61, E Aslanides 6, M Atzeni 42, G Auriemma 26, M Baalouch 5, I Babuschkin 56, S Bachmann 12, J J Back 50, A Badalov 38, C Baesso 62, S Baker 55, V Balagura 7, W Baldini 17, A Baranov 35, R J Barlow 56, C Barschel 40, S Barsuk 7, W Barter 56, F Baryshnikov 32, V Batozskaya 29, V Battista 41, A Bay 41, L Beaucourt 4, J Beddow 53, F Bedeschi 24, I Bediaga 1, A Beiter 61, L J Bel 43, N Beliy 63, V Bellee 41, N Belloli 21, K Belous 37, I Belyaev 32,40, E Ben-Haim 8, G Bencivenni 19, S Benson 43, S Beranek 9, A Berezhnoy 33, R Bernet 42, D Berninghoff 12, E Bertholet 8, A Bertolin 23, C Betancourt 42, F Betti 15, M O Bettler 40, M van Beuzekom 43, Ia Bezshyiko 42, S Bifani 47, P Billoir 8, A Birnkraut 10, A Bizzeti 18, M Bjørn 57, T Blake 50, F Blanc 41, S Blusk 61, V Bocci 26, T Boettcher 58, A Bondar 36, N Bondar 31, I Bordyuzhin 32, S Borghi 40,56, M Borisyak 35, M Borsato 39, F Bossu 7, M Boubdir 9, T J V Bowcock 54, E Bowen 42, C Bozzi 17,40, S Braun 12, J Brodzicka 27, D Brundu 16, E Buchanan 48, C Burr 56, A Bursche 16, J Buytaert 40, W Byczynski 40, S Cadeddu 16, H Cai 64, R Calabrese 17, R Calladine 47, M Calvi 21, M Calvo Gomez 38, A Camboni 38, P Campana 19, D H Campora Perez 40, L Capriotti 56, A Carbone 15, G Carboni 25, R Cardinale 20, A Cardini 16, P Carniti 21, L Carson 52, K Carvalho Akiba 2, G Casse 54, L Cassina 21, M Cattaneo 40, G Cavallero 20,40, R Cenci 24, D Chamont 7, M G Chapman 48, M Charles 8, Ph Charpentier 40, G Chatzikonstantinidis 47, M Chefdeville 4, S Chen 16, S F Cheung 57, S-G Chitic 40, V Chobanova 39, M Chrzaszcz 42, A Chubykin 31, P Ciambrone 19, X Cid Vidal 39, G Ciezarek 40, P E L Clarke 52, M Clemencic 40, H V Cliff 49, J Closier 40, V Coco 40, J Cogan 6, E Cogneras 5, V Cogoni 16, L Cojocariu 30, P Collins 40, T Colombo 40, A Comerma-Montells 12, A Contu 16, G Coombs 40, S Coquereau 38, G Corti 40, M Corvo 17, C M Costa Sobral 50, B Couturier 40, G A Cowan 52, D C Craik 58, A Crocombe 50, M Cruz Torres 1, R Currie 52, C D’Ambrosio 40, F Da Cunha Marinho 2, C L Da Silva 73, E Dall’Occo 43, J Dalseno 48, A Davis 3, O De Aguiar Francisco 40, K De Bruyn 40, S De Capua 56, M De Cian 12, J M De Miranda 1, L De Paula 2, M De Serio 14, P De Simone 19, C T Dean 53, D Decamp 4, L Del Buono 8, H-P Dembinski 11, M Demmer 10, A Dendek 28, D Derkach 35, O Deschamps 5, F Dettori 54, B Dey 65, A Di Canto 40, P Di Nezza 19, H Dijkstra 40, F Dordei 40, M Dorigo 40, A Dosil Suárez 39, L Douglas 53, A Dovbnya 45, K Dreimanis 54, L Dufour 43, G Dujany 8, P Durante 40, J M Durham 73, D Dutta 56, R Dzhelyadin 37, M Dziewiecki 12, A Dziurda 40, A Dzyuba 31, S Easo 51, M Ebert 52, U Egede 55, V Egorychev 32, S Eidelman 36, S Eisenhardt 52, U Eitschberger 10, R Ekelhof 10, L Eklund 53, S Ely 61, S Esen 12, H M Evans 49, T Evans 57, A Falabella 15, N Farley 47, S Farry 54, D Fazzini 21, L Federici 25, D Ferguson 52, G Fernandez 38, P Fernandez Declara 40, A Fernandez Prieto 39, F Ferrari 15, L Ferreira Lopes 41, F Ferreira Rodrigues 2, M Ferro-Luzzi 40, S Filippov 34, R A Fini 14, M Fiorini 17, M Firlej 28, C Fitzpatrick 41, T Fiutowski 28, F Fleuret 7, M Fontana 16,40, F Fontanelli 20, R Forty 40, V Franco Lima 54, M Frank 40, C Frei 40, J Fu 22, W Funk 40, E Furfaro 25, C Färber 40, E Gabriel 52, A Gallas Torreira 39, D Galli 15, S Gallorini 23, S Gambetta 52, M Gandelman 2, P Gandini 22, Y Gao 3, L M Garcia Martin 71, J García Pardiñas 39, J Garra Tico 49, L Garrido 38, P J Garsed 49, D Gascon 38, C Gaspar 40, L Gavardi 10, G Gazzoni 5, D Gerick 12, E Gersabeck 56, M Gersabeck 56, T Gershon 50, Ph Ghez 4, S Gianì 41, V Gibson 49, O G Girard 41, L Giubega 30, K Gizdov 52, V V Gligorov 8, D Golubkov 32, A Golutvin 55,69, A Gomes 1, I V Gorelov 33, C Gotti 21, E Govorkova 43, J P Grabowski 12, R Graciani Diaz 38, L A Granado Cardoso 40, E Graugés 38, E Graverini 42, G Graziani 18, A Grecu 30, R Greim 9, P Griffith 16, L Grillo 56, L Gruber 40, B R Gruberg Cazon 57, O Grünberg 67, E Gushchin 34, Yu Guz 37, T Gys 40, C Göbel 62, T Hadavizadeh 57, C Hadjivasiliou 5, G Haefeli 41, C Haen 40, S C Haines 49, B Hamilton 60, X Han 12, T H Hancock 57, S Hansmann-Menzemer 12, N Harnew 57, S T Harnew 48, C Hasse 40, M Hatch 40, J He 63, M Hecker 55, K Heinicke 10, A Heister 9, K Hennessy 54, P Henrard 5, L Henry 71, E van Herwijnen 40, M Heß 67, A Hicheur 2, D Hill 57, P H Hopchev 41, W Hu 65, W Huang 63, Z C Huard 59, W Hulsbergen 43, T Humair 55, M Hushchyn 35, D Hutchcroft 54, P Ibis 10, M Idzik 28, P Ilten 47, R Jacobsson 40, J Jalocha 57, E Jans 43, A Jawahery 60, F Jiang 3, M John 57, D Johnson 40, C R Jones 49, C Joram 40, B Jost 40, N Jurik 57, S Kandybei 45, M Karacson 40, J M Kariuki 48, S Karodia 53, N Kazeev 35, M Kecke 12, F Keizer 49, M Kelsey 61, M Kenzie 49, T Ketel 44, E Khairullin 35, B Khanji 12, C Khurewathanakul 41, T Kirn 9, S Klaver 19, K Klimaszewski 29, T Klimkovich 11, S Koliiev 46, M Kolpin 12, R Kopecna 12, P Koppenburg 43, A Kosmyntseva 32, S Kotriakhova 31, M Kozeiha 5, L Kravchuk 34, M Kreps 50, F Kress 55, P Krokovny 36, W Krzemien 29, W Kucewicz 27, M Kucharczyk 27, V Kudryavtsev 36, A K Kuonen 41, T Kvaratskheliya 32,40, D Lacarrere 40, G Lafferty 56, A Lai 16, G Lanfranchi 19, C Langenbruch 9, T Latham 50, C Lazzeroni 47, R Le Gac 6, A Leflat 33,40, J Lefrançois 7, R Lefèvre 5, F Lemaitre 40, E Lemos Cid 39, O Leroy 6, T Lesiak 27, B Leverington 12, P-R Li 63, T Li 3, Y Li 7, Z Li 61, T Likhomanenko 68, R Lindner 40, F Lionetto 42, V Lisovskyi 7, X Liu 3, D Loh 50, A Loi 16, I Longstaff 53, J H Lopes 2, D Lucchesi 23, M Lucio Martinez 39, H Luo 52, A Lupato 23, E Luppi 17, O Lupton 40, A Lusiani 24, X Lyu 63, F Machefert 7, F Maciuc 30, V Macko 41, P Mackowiak 10, S Maddrell-Mander 48, O Maev 31,40, K Maguire 56, D Maisuzenko 31, M W Majewski 28, S Malde 57, B Malecki 27, A Malinin 68, T Maltsev 36, G Manca 16, G Mancinelli 6, D Marangotto 22, J Maratas 5, J F Marchand 4, U Marconi 15, C Marin Benito 38, M Marinangeli 41, P Marino 41, J Marks 12, G Martellotti 26, M Martin 6, M Martinelli 41, D Martinez Santos 39, F Martinez Vidal 71, A Massafferri 1, R Matev 40, A Mathad 50, Z Mathe 40, C Matteuzzi 21, A Mauri 42, E Maurice 7, B Maurin 41, A Mazurov 47, M McCann 40,55, A McNab 56, R McNulty 13, J V Mead 54, B Meadows 59, C Meaux 6, F Meier 10, N Meinert 67, D Melnychuk 29, M Merk 43, A Merli 22,40, E Michielin 23, D A Milanes 66, E Millard 50, M-N Minard 4, L Minzoni 17, D S Mitzel 12, A Mogini 8, J Molina Rodriguez 1, T Mombächer 10, I A Monroy 66, S Monteil 5, M Morandin 23, M J Morello 24, O Morgunova 68, J Moron 28, A B Morris 52, R Mountain 61, F Muheim 52, M Mulder 43, D Müller 56, J Müller 10, K Müller 42, V Müller 10, P Naik 48, T Nakada 41, R Nandakumar 51, A Nandi 57, I Nasteva 2, M Needham 52, N Neri 22,40, S Neubert 12, N Neufeld 40, M Neuner 12, T D Nguyen 41, C Nguyen-Mau 41, S Nieswand 9, R Niet 10, N Nikitin 33, T Nikodem 12, A Nogay 68, D P O’Hanlon 50, A Oblakowska-Mucha 28, V Obraztsov 37, S Ogilvy 19, R Oldeman 16, C J G Onderwater 72, A Ossowska 27, J M Otalora Goicochea 2, P Owen 42, A Oyanguren 71, P R Pais 41, A Palano 14, M Palutan 19, A Papanestis 51, M Pappagallo 52, L L Pappalardo 17, W Parker 60, C Parkes 56, G Passaleva 18,40, A Pastore 14, M Patel 55, C Patrignani 15, A Pearce 40, A Pellegrino 43, G Penso 26, M Pepe Altarelli 40, S Perazzini 40, D Pereima 32, P Perret 5, L Pescatore 41, K Petridis 48, A Petrolini 20, A Petrov 68, M Petruzzo 22, E Picatoste Olloqui 38, B Pietrzyk 4, G Pietrzyk 41, M Pikies 27, D Pinci 26, F Pisani 40, A Pistone 20, A Piucci 12, V Placinta 30, S Playfer 52, M Plo Casasus 39, F Polci 8, M Poli Lener 19, A Poluektov 50, I Polyakov 61, E Polycarpo 2, G J Pomery 48, S Ponce 40, A Popov 37, D Popov 11,40, S Poslavskii 37, C Potterat 2, E Price 48, J Prisciandaro 39, C Prouve 48, V Pugatch 46, A Puig Navarro 42, H Pullen 57, G Punzi 24, W Qian 50, J Qin 63, R Quagliani 8, B Quintana 5, B Rachwal 28, J H Rademacker 48, M Rama 24, M Ramos Pernas 39, M S Rangel 2, I Raniuk 45, F Ratnikov 35, G Raven 44, M Ravonel Salzgeber 40, M Reboud 4, F Redi 41, S Reichert 10, A C dos Reis 1, C Remon Alepuz 71, V Renaudin 7, S Ricciardi 51, S Richards 48, M Rihl 40, K Rinnert 54, P Robbe 7, A Robert 8, A B Rodrigues 41, E Rodrigues 59, J A Rodriguez Lopez 66, A Rogozhnikov 35, S Roiser 40, A Rollings 57, V Romanovskiy 37, A Romero Vidal 39,40, M Rotondo 19, M S Rudolph 61, T Ruf 40, P Ruiz Valls 71, J Ruiz Vidal 71, J J Saborido Silva 39, E Sadykhov 32, N Sagidova 31, B Saitta 16, V Salustino Guimaraes 62, C Sanchez Mayordomo 71, B Sanmartin Sedes 39, R Santacesaria 26, C Santamarina Rios 39, M Santimaria 19, E Santovetti 25, G Sarpis 56, A Sarti 19, C Satriano 26, A Satta 25, D M Saunders 48, D Savrina 32,33, S Schael 9, M Schellenberg 10, M Schiller 53, H Schindler 40, M Schmelling 11, T Schmelzer 10, B Schmidt 40, O Schneider 41, A Schopper 40, H F Schreiner 59, M Schubiger 41, M H Schune 7, R Schwemmer 40, B Sciascia 19, A Sciubba 26, A Semennikov 32, E S Sepulveda 8, A Sergi 47, N Serra 42, J Serrano 6, L Sestini 23, P Seyfert 40, M Shapkin 37, I Shapoval 45, Y Shcheglov 31, T Shears 54, L Shekhtman 36, V Shevchenko 68, B G Siddi 17, R Silva Coutinho 42, L Silva de Oliveira 2, G Simi 23, S Simone 14, M Sirendi 49, N Skidmore 48, T Skwarnicki 61, I T Smith 52, J Smith 49, M Smith 55, l Soares Lavra 1, M D Sokoloff 59, F J P Soler 53, B Souza De Paula 2, B Spaan 10, P Spradlin 53, S Sridharan 40, F Stagni 40, M Stahl 12, S Stahl 40, P Stefko 41, S Stefkova 55, O Steinkamp 42, S Stemmle 12, O Stenyakin 37, M Stepanova 31, H Stevens 10, S Stone 61, B Storaci 42, S Stracka 24, M E Stramaglia 41, M Straticiuc 30, U Straumann 42, J Sun 3, L Sun 64, K Swientek 28, V Syropoulos 44, T Szumlak 28, M Szymanski 63, S T’Jampens 4, A Tayduganov 6, T Tekampe 10, G Tellarini 17, F Teubert 40, E Thomas 40, J van Tilburg 43, M J Tilley 55, V Tisserand 5, M Tobin 41, S Tolk 49, L Tomassetti 17, D Tonelli 24, R Tourinho Jadallah Aoude 1, E Tournefier 4, M Traill 53, M T Tran 41, M Tresch 42, A Trisovic 49, A Tsaregorodtsev 6, P Tsopelas 43, A Tully 49, N Tuning 40,43, A Ukleja 29, A Usachov 7, A Ustyuzhanin 35, U Uwer 12, C Vacca 16, A Vagner 70, V Vagnoni 15,40, A Valassi 40, S Valat 40, G Valenti 15, R Vazquez Gomez 40, P Vazquez Regueiro 39, S Vecchi 17, M van Veghel 43, J J Velthuis 48, M Veltri 18, G Veneziano 57, A Venkateswaran 61, T A Verlage 9, M Vernet 5, M Vesterinen 57, J V Viana Barbosa 40, D Vieira 63, M Vieites Diaz 39, H Viemann 67, X Vilasis-Cardona 38, M Vitti 49, V Volkov 33, A Vollhardt 42, B Voneki 40, A Vorobyev 31, V Vorobyev 36, C Voß 9, J A de Vries 43, C Vázquez Sierra 43, R Waldi 67, J Walsh 24, J Wang 61, Y Wang 65, D R Ward 49, H M Wark 54, N K Watson 47, D Websdale 55, A Weiden 42, C Weisser 58, M Whitehead 40, J Wicht 50, G Wilkinson 57, M Wilkinson 61, M Williams 56, M Williams 58, T Williams 47, F F Wilson 40,51, J Wimberley 60, M Winn 7, J Wishahi 10, W Wislicki 29, M Witek 27, G Wormser 7, S A Wotton 49, K Wyllie 40, Y Xie 65, M Xu 65, Q Xu 63, Z Xu 3, Z Xu 4, Z Yang 3, Z Yang 60, Y Yao 61, H Yin 65, J Yu 65, X Yuan 61, O Yushchenko 37, K A Zarebski 47, M Zavertyaev 11, L Zhang 3, Y Zhang 7, A Zhelezov 12, Y Zheng 63, X Zhu 3, V Zhukov 9,33, J B Zonneveld 52, S Zucchelli 15; LHCb Collaboration73
PMCID: PMC6417441  PMID: 30956546

Abstract

Amplitude models are constructed to describe the resonance structure of D0K-π+π+π- and D0K+π-π-π+ decays using pp collision data collected at centre-of-mass energies of 7 and 8 TeV with the LHCb experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 3.0 fb-1. The largest contributions to both decay amplitudes are found to come from axial resonances, with decay modes D0a1(1260)+K- and D0K1(1270/1400)+π- being prominent in D0K-π+π+π- and D0K+π-π-π+, respectively. Precise measurements of the lineshape parameters and couplings of the a1(1260)+, K1(1270)- and K(1460)- resonances are made, and a quasi model-independent study of the K(1460)- resonance is performed. The coherence factor of the decays is calculated from the amplitude models to be RK3π=0.459±0.010(stat)±0.012(syst)±0.020(model), which is consistent with direct measurements. These models will be useful in future measurements of the unitary-triangle angle γ and studies of charm mixing and CP violation.

Introduction

The decays1 D0K-π+π+π- and D0K+π-π+π- have an important role to play in improving knowledge of the Cabibbo–Kobayashi–Maskawa (CKM) unitarity-triangle angle γarg(-VudVub/VcdVcb). Sensitivity to this parameter can be obtained by measuring CP-violating and associated observables in the decay B-DK-, where D indicates a neutral charm meson reconstructed in final states common to both D0 and D¯0, of which Kπ±π±π are significant examples [1, 2]. A straightforward approach to such an analysis is to reconstruct the four-body D-meson decays inclusively, which was performed by the LHCb collaboration in a recent measurement [3]. Alternatively, additional sensitivity can be sought by studying the variation of the observables across the phase space of the D decays, a strategy that requires knowledge of the variation of the decay amplitudes of the charm mesons.

Studies of charm mixing and searches for CP violation in the D0D¯0 system, which for these final states have only been performed inclusively [4], will also benefit from an understanding of the variation of the decay amplitudes across their phase space. These decay modes are also a rich laboratory for examining the behaviour of the strong interaction at low energy, through studies of the intermediate resonances that contribute to the final states. All these considerations motivate an amplitude analysis of the two decays.

The decay D0K-π+π+π- has a branching ratio of (8.29±0.20)% [5], which is the highest of all D0 decay modes involving only charged particles, and is predominantly mediated by Cabibbo-favoured (CF) transitions. The decay D0K+π-π-π+ is dominated by doubly Cabibbo-suppressed (DCS) amplitudes, with small contributions from mixing-related effects, and occurs at a rate that is suppressed by a factor of (3.22±0.05)×10-3 [4] compared to that of the favoured mode. The favoured and suppressed modes are here termed the ‘right-sign’ (RS) and ‘wrong-sign’ (WS) decay, respectively, on account of the charge correlation between the kaon and the particle used to tag the flavour of the parent meson.

In this paper, time-integrated amplitude models of both decay modes are constructed using pp collision data collected at centre-of-mass energies of 7 and 8 TeV with the LHCb experiment, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 3.0 fb-1. The RS sample size is around 700 times larger than the data set used by the Mark III collaboration to develop the first amplitude model of this decay [6]. An amplitude analysis has also been performed on the RS decay by the BES III collaboration [7] with around 1.6% of the sample size used in this analysis. This paper reports the first amplitude analysis of the WS decay.

The paper is organised as follows. In Sect. 2 the detector, data and simulation samples are described, and in Sect. 3 the signal selection is discussed. The amplitude-model formalism is presented in Sect. 4, and the fit method and model-building procedure in Sect. 5. Section 6 contains the fit results and conclusions are drawn in Sect. 7.

Detector and simulation

The LHCb detector [8] is a single-arm forward spectrometer covering the pseudorapidity range 2<η<5, designed for the study of particles containing b or c quarks. The detector includes a high-precision tracking system consisting of a silicon-strip vertex detector surrounding the pp interaction region, a large-area silicon-strip detector located upstream of a dipole magnet with a bending power of about 4Tm, and three stations of silicon-strip detectors and straw drift tubes placed downstream of the magnet. The tracking system provides a measurement of momentum, p, of charged particles with a relative uncertainty that varies from 0.5% at low momentum to 1.0% at 200GeV/c. The minimum distance of a track to a primary vertex (PV), the impact parameter, is measured with a resolution of (15+29/pT)μm, where pT is the component of the momentum transverse to the beam, in GeV/c. Different types of charged hadrons are distinguished using information from two ring-imaging Cherenkov (RICH) detectors. Photons, electrons and hadrons are identified by a calorimeter system consisting of scintillating-pad and preshower detectors, an electromagnetic calorimeter and a hadronic calorimeter. Muons are identified by a system composed of alternating layers of iron and multiwire proportional chambers.

The trigger [9] consists of a hardware stage, based on information from the calorimeter and muon systems, followed by a software stage, in which all charged particles with pT>500(300)MeV/c are reconstructed for 2011 (2012) data. At the hardware trigger stage, events are required to have a muon with high pT or a hadron, photon or electron with high transverse energy in the calorimeters. The software trigger requires a two-, three- or four-track secondary vertex with a significant displacement from the primary pp interaction vertices. At least one charged particle must have a transverse momentum pT>1.7(1.6)GeV/c and be inconsistent with originating from a PV. A multivariate algorithm [10] is used for the identification of secondary vertices consistent with the decay of a b hadron.

In the simulation, pp collisions are generated using Pythia  [11] with a specific LHCb configuration [12]. Particle decays are described by EvtGen  [13]. The interaction of the generated particles with the detector, and its response, are implemented using the Geant4 toolkit [14, 15] as described in Ref. [16].

Signal selection and backgrounds

The decay chain B¯D(2010)+μ-X with D(2010)+D0πslow+ is reconstructed as a clean source of D0 mesons for analysis. The D0 mesons are reconstructed in the Kπ±π±π final states. The charged pion, πslow+, originating from the D(2010)+ is referred to as ‘slow’ due to the small Q-value of the decay. The charge of the muon and slow pion are used to infer the flavour of the neutral D meson. Candidates are only accepted if these charges lead to a consistent hypothesis for the flavour of the neutral D meson. All other aspects of the reconstruction and selection criteria are identical between the RS and WS samples.

The two-dimensional plane mKπππ vs. Δm, where mKπππ is the invariant mass of the D0 meson candidate, and Δm=mKππππslow-mKπππ is mass difference between the D(2010)+ and D0 meson candidates, is used to define signal and sideband regions with which to perform the amplitude analysis and study sources of background contamination. The signal region is defined as ±0.75MeV/c2(±18MeV/c2) of the signal peak in Δm(mKπππ), which corresponds to about three times the width of the peak.

It is required that the hardware trigger decision is either due to the muon candidate or is independent of the particles constituting the reconstructed decay products of the B candidate. For example, a high-pT particle from the other B meson decay in the event firing the hadron trigger. The software trigger decision is required to either be due to the muon candidate or a two- three- or four-track secondary secondary vertex.

The WS sample is contaminated by a category of RS decays in which the kaon is mis-identified as a pion, and a pion as a kaon. To suppress this background, it is required that the kaon is well identified by the RICH detectors. The residual contamination from this background is removed by recalculating the mass of the D0 candidate with the mass hypotheses of a kaon and each oppositely charged pion swapped, then vetoing candidates that fall within 12MeV/c2 of the nominal mass of the D0 meson. As the majority of particles from the PV are pions, the particle identification requirements on the kaon also reduces the background from random combinations of particles.

Remaining background from random combinations of particles can be divided into two categories. Candidates where the D0 is reconstructed from a random combination of tracks are referred to as combinatorial background. Candidates where the D0 is correctly reconstructed but paired with an unrelated πslow+ are referred to as mistag background. This latter source of background is dominated by RS decays. Both of these backgrounds are suppressed using a multivariate classifier based on a Boosted Decision Tree (BDT) [1719] algorithm. The BDT is trained on RS data candidates from the signal region and the sidebands of the WS data, and uses 15 variables related to the quality of the reconstruction of the PV, B and D0 decay vertices, and the consistency of tracks in the signal candidate incoming from these vertices. Variables pertaining to the D0 kinematics and its decay products are avoided to minimise any bias of the phase-space acceptance.

The signal and background yields in the signal region for each sample is determined by simultaneously fitting the two-dimensional Δm vs. mKπππ distribution for both samples. The D0, muon and slow pion candidates are constrained to originate from a common vertex in calculating the D0 and D+ masses. This requirement improves the resolution of the Δm distribution by approximately a factor of two. The signal is modelled with a product of two Cruijff [20] functions. The Cruijff shape parameters are shared between both samples. The combinatorial background is modelled by a first-order polynomial in mKπππ, and by a threshold function in Δm,

P(Q)(1+pQ)1+Q+pQ2a, 1

where Q=Δm-mπ and the parameters pa are determined by the fit. The background shape parameters, including those for the polynomial in mKπππ, are allowed to differ between WS and RS samples. The mistag background component is a product of the signal shape in mKπππ and the combinatorial background shape in Δm. The optimal requirement on the output of the BDT classifier is selected by repeating the fit varying this requirement, and maximising the expected significance of the WS signal, which is defined as

S=N^sigN^sig+Nbkg, 2

where Nbkg is the background yield in the signal region. The expected number of WS candidates, N^sig, is estimated by scaling the number of RS signal candidates in the signal region by the ratio of branching fractions. The yields of the various contributions for both samples are listed in Table 1, and the mKπππ and Δm distributions, with the fit projections superimposed, are shown in Fig. 1. The purities of the RS and WS samples after selection are found to be 99.6 and 82.4%, respectively, with 4% of WS candidates arising from mistagged decays. Studies of simulated data indicate that the selected sample has a relatively uniform acceptance across the phase space, with approximately 30% reductions in acceptance near the edges of the kinematically allowed region. The samples also have a relatively uniform selection efficiency in decay time, being constant within ±10% for lifetimes greater than one average lifetime of the D meson.

Table 1.

Signal and background yields for both samples in the signal region, presented separately for each year of data taking

Yield
Signal Combinatorial background Mistag background
D0K-π+π+π-
   2011 266368±490 977±10
   2012 624332±765 2475±19
   Total 890701±927 3452±24
D0K+π-π-π+
   2011 875±32 151±3 47±6
   2012 2154±51 340±5 108±9
   Total 3028±61 491±7 155±11

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Invariant mass and mass difference distributions for RS (top) and WS (bottom) samples, shown with fit projections. The signal region is indicated by the filled grey area, and for each plot the mass window in the orthogonal projection is applied

For the amplitude analysis, a kinematic fit is performed constraining the D0 mass to its known value [21], which improves the resolution in the D0 phase space. This also forces all candidates to lie inside the kinematically allowed region. Candidates are only accepted if this kinematic fit converges.

Formalism of amplitude model

The amplitudes contributing to the decays D0Kπ±π±π are described in terms of a sequence of two-body states. It is assumed that once these two-body states are produced, rescattering against other particles can be neglected. Two-body processes are often referred to as isobars and this approximation as the isobar model. Isobars can be described in terms of resonances, typically using the relativistic Breit-Wigner amplitude for narrow vector and tensor states. For scalar states, there typically are multiple broad overlapping resonances, in addition to significant nonresonant scattering amplitudes between the constituent particles of the state. Such states cannot be described in terms of Breit-Wigner amplitudes and instead the K-matrix formalism [22, 23] is adopted, and will be denoted by π+π-L=0 and Kπ±L=0 throughout for π+π- and Kπ± S-waves, respectively.

The following decay chains are considered:

  • Cascade decays have the topology D0XYP1P2P3P4 – the D0 meson decays into a stable pseudoscalar state P4 and an unstable state X. The unstable state then decays to three pseudoscalars P1,2,3 via another intermediate unstable state (Y). There are three distinct possibilities for cascade decays. The resonance X can either have isospin I=1/2, and will therefore decay into the Kπ±π final state, or have isospin I=1 and therefore will decay into the π+π-π± final state. In the Kπ±π case, the next state in the cascade Y can either be in Kπ± or π+π-, referred to as cases (1) and (2), respectively. In the π+π-π± case, there is only the π+π- state, referred to as case (3).
    1. Kπ±π Example: D0K1(1270)-K¯(892)0K-π+π-π+.
    2. Kπ+π- Example: D0K1(1270)-[ρ(770)0π-π+K-]π+.
    3. π+π-π± Example: D0a1(1260)+ρ(770)0π-π+π+K-.
    Two complex parameters can be used to describe cascade decays: the coupling between the D0 meson and the first isobar, and then the coupling between the first isobar and the second intermediate state. One of the couplings between isobars can be fixed by convention, typically the dominant channel. For example, for the a1(1260)+ resonance, the couplings for subdominant decay chains such as a1(1260)+π+π-L=0π+ are defined with respect to the dominant a1(1260)+ρ(770)0π+ decay.
  • Quasi two-body decays have the topology D0XP1P2YP3P4 – the D0 meson decays into a pair of unstable states, which in turn each decay to a pair of stable pseudoscalar mesons. The only possibility where XY form resonances of conventional quark content is XK-π+Yπ+π-, with an example of a typical process being D0K¯(892)0[K-π+]ρ(770)0π+π-. The parameters to be determined describe the coupling between the D0 initial state and the quasi two-body state. In the above example, there are three different possible orbital configurations of the vector–vector system, and hence this component has three complex parameters.

Decay chains are described using a product of dynamical functions for each isobar and a spin factor. The amplitude for each decay chain is explicitly made to respect Bose symmetry by summing over both possible permutations of same-sign pions. The total amplitude is then modelled as a coherent sum of these processes. Spin factors are modelled using the Rarita–Schwinger formalism following the prescription in Ref. [24]; the details of this formulation are included in Appendix A.

Resonances are modelled with the relativistic Breit-Wigner function unless otherwise stated, which as a function of the invariant-mass squared, s, takes the form

T(s)=kBL(q,0)m02-s-im0Γ(s), 3

where the mass of the resonance is m0 and Γ(s) is the energy-dependent width. The form factor for a decay in which the two decay products have relative orbital angular momentum L is given by the normalised Blatt–Weisskopf function [25] BL(q,0), where q is the three-momentum of either decay product in the rest frame of the resonance, and is normalised to unity at zero momentum transfer. The factor k normalises the lineshape integrated over all values of s if the Blatt–Weisskopf form-factor and energy dependence of the width are neglected, and is included to reduce correlations between the coupling to the channel and the mass and width of the resonance.

For a resonance that decays via a single channel to two stable particles, such as ρ(770)0π+π-, the width is given by

Γ(s)=Γ0qm0q0sqq02LBL(q,q0)2, 4

where Γ0 is the width at the resonance mass, and q0 is the linear momentum of either decay product evaluated at the rest mass of the resonance. The energy-dependent width of a resonance that decays to a three-body final-state must account for the dynamics of the intermediate decay process, and follows that developed for the decay τ+a1(1260)+ν¯τ by the CLEO Collaboration in Ref. [26]. The width of a resonance R decaying into three bodies abc can be expressed in terms of the spin-averaged matrix element of the decay MRabc integrated over the phase space of the three-particle final state,

Γ(s)1sdsabdsbcMRabc2, 5

where the matrix element consists of a coherent sum over the intermediate states in the three-body system, described using the isobar model and using the fitted couplings between the resonance and the intermediate isobars. In the example of the decay of the a1(1260)+ resonance, these are predominately the couplings to the ρ(770)0π+ and π+π-L=0π+ intermediate states. The width is normalised such that Γ(m02)=Γ0. In the three-body case, exponential form-factors are used rather than normalised Blatt–Weisskopf functions,

F(q)=e-r2q2/2, 6

where r characterises the radius of the decaying resonance.

The K-matrix formalism [22] provides a convenient description of a two-particle scattering amplitude, which is particularly useful in parameterising S-wave systems. This formulation can then be used in the description of multibody decays on the assumption that rescattering against the other particles in the decay can be neglected. The K-matrix formalism is used in this analysis to describe the π+π- and Kπ± S-waves due to its relative success in parameterising the scalar contributions to three-body decays [27, 28] of the D meson.

The π+π- S-wave (isoscalar) amplitude is modelled using the K matrix from Ref. [27, 29], which describes the amplitude in the mass range 280MeV/c2<s<1900MeV/c2, considering the effects of five coupled channels, ππ, KK, ππππ, ηη, ηη, and five poles with masses which generate the resonances. The K matrix also includes polynomial terms that describe nonresonant scattering between hadrons. The coupling to each of these poles and the direct coupling to each of the five channels depend on the production mode, which is modelled using the production vector or P-vector approach, in which the amplitude is

A(s)=I-iρ^K^-1P^, 7

where ρ^ is the two-body phase-space matrix. The complex-valued vector function, P^, has one component for each of the coupled channels, and describes the coupling between the initial state and either one of the poles or a direct coupling to one of these channels. The generic P-vector for the isoscalar K-matrix therefore has 10 complex parameters. An additional complexity in the four-body case is that there are several initial states that couple to the π+π- S-wave, each of which has its own P vector. Several simplifying assumptions are therefore made to the P vector to avoid introducing an unreasonable number of degrees of freedom. The only direct production terms included in the P vector are to the ππ and KK states, as the production of the π+π- final state via a direct coupling to another channel all have similar structure below their corresponding production thresholds. The couplings to poles 3, 4 and 5 (where the numbering of the poles is defined in Ref. [29]) are also fixed to zero, as production of these poles only has a small effect within the phase space. This choice reduces the number of free parameters per S-wave production mechanism to four complex numbers. The couplings to the poles are described by β0 and β1, while the direct couplings to each channel by fππ and fKK. The production vectors used here should therefore be considered as a minimal simplified model. For production of π+π- S-wave states via resonances, such as the decay chain a1(1260)+[π+π-]L=0π+, improved sensitivity to the structure of the π+π- state can be achieved by studying a decay mode that produces the a1(1260)+ with a larger phase space. In several cases, one or more of these couplings are found to be negligible for a given production mode, and therefore are fixed to zero.

The Kπ± S-wave is modelled using the K matrices from the analysis of D+K-π+π+ by the FOCUS collaboration [28]. The I=1/2 K matrix considers two channels, Kπ and Kη, and a single pole which is responsible for generating the K(1430)0 resonance. Additionally, the K matrix includes polynomial terms that describe nonresonant scattering between the hadrons. The Kπ± S-wave also contains a I=3/2 component. No poles or inelasticity are expected with this isospin, and therefore the associated amplitude can be modelled using a K matrix consisting of a single scalar term.

The I=1/2 amplitudes are constructed in the Q-vector [23] approximation. The P vector has the same pole structure as the K matrix, and therefore the approximation

K^P^α^(s) 8

can be made, where α^(s) is a slowly varying complex vector. This is sometimes referred to as the Q-vector [23] approximation, and allows the insertion of K^-1K^ into Eq. (7), and the rephrasing of the I=1/2 decay amplitude, A1/2, in terms of the T-matrix elements from scattering:

A1/2=αKπT^11+αKηT^12, 9

where

T^=1-iρ^K^-1K^, 10

which is the transition matrix associated with the I=1/2 scattering process. Given the relatively small energy range available to the Kπ± system, it is reasonable to approximate α^(s) as a constant. Inclusion of polynomial terms in α^(s) is found not to improve the fit quality significantly. The coupling to the Kη channel, αKη, is defined with respect to the coupling to the Kπ channel, αKπ in all production modes. If the phase of αKη is zero, the phase shift of the I=1/2 component matches that found in scattering experiments, which is the expected result if Watson’s theorem [30] holds for these decays. Similar to the π+π- S-wave, the components of α^ and the coupling to the I=3/2 channel are allowed to differ between production modes.

Fit formalism and model construction

Independent fits are performed on the D0K-π+π+π- and D0K+π-π-π+ data sets, using an unbinned maximum likelihood procedure to determine the amplitude parameters. The formalism of the fit is described in Sects. 5.15.3, and the method for systematically selecting plausible models is discussed in Sect. 5.4.

Likelihood

The probability density functions (PDFs) are functions of position in D0 decay phase-space, x, and are composed of the signal amplitude model and the two sources of background described in Sect. 3:

P(x)=ε(x)ϕ(x)YsNsM(x)2+YcNcPc(x)+YmNm|M¯(x)|2. 11

The signal PDF is described by the function M(x)2, where M(x) is the total matrix element for the process, weighted by the four-body phase-space density ϕ(x), and the phase-space acceptance, ε(x). The mistag component involving M¯(x), is only present in the WS sample, and is modelled using the RS signal PDF. The combinatorial background is modelled by Pc(x), and is present in both samples. The normalisation of each component is given by the integral of the PDF over the phase space, Ni, where i=(c,s,m), weighted by the fractional yield, Yi, determined in Sect. 3.

The PDF that describes the combinatorial background in the WS sample is fixed to the results of a fit to the two sidebands of the mKπππ distribution, below 1844.5MeV/c2 and above 1888.5MeV/c2. The components in this model are selected using the same algorithm to determine the resonant content of the signal modes, which is discussed in Sect. 5.4. In this case, the PDF incoherently sums the different contributions and assumes no angular correlations between tracks. The contamination from combinatorial background in the RS sample is very low, and hence this contribution can safely be assumed to be distributed according to phase space, that is Pc(x)=1.

The function to minimise is

L=-2idatalog(P(xi)). 12

As the efficiency variation across the phase space factorises in the PDF, these variations result in a constant shift in the likelihood everywhere except the normalisation integrals, and hence can be neglected in the minimisation procedure. Efficiency variations can then be included in the fit by performing all integrals using simulated events that have been propagated through the full LHCb detector simulation and selection. These events are referred to as the integration sample. The values of the normalisation integrals are independent of the generator distribution of the integration sample, however the uncertainties on the integrals are minimised when integration events approximate the function being integrated, which is known as importance sampling. Therefore, integration samples are generated using preliminary models that do not include efficiency effects.

Goodness of fit

The quality of fits is quantified by computing a χ2 metric. Candidates are binned using an adaptive binning scheme. Five coordinates are selected, and the phase space is repeatedly divided in these coordinates such that each bin contains the same number of candidates, following the procedure described in Ref. [4]. The division is halted when each bin contains between 10 and 20 entries. This procedure results in 32,768 approximately equally populated bins for the RS sample, and 256 for the WS sample. Five two- and three-body invariant mass-squared combinations are used as coordinates for the binning procedure, sπ+π-π+,sK-π+,sK-π-,sπ+π- and sK-π+π-. The χ2 is defined as

χ2=ibinsNi-Ni2Ni+σ¯i2, 13

where Ni is the observed number of candidates in bin i and Ni, the expected number of entries determined by reweighting the integration sample with the fitted PDF. The statistical uncertainty from the limited size of the integration sample, σ¯i, is included in the definition of the χ2, and is estimated as

σ¯i2=jbin(i)ωj2, 14

where ωj is the weight of integration event j. The χ2 per degree of freedom is used as the metric to optimise the decay chains included in a model, using the model-building procedure described in Sect. 5.4.

Fit fractions

The values of coupling parameters depend strongly on various choices of convention in the formalism. Therefore, it is common to define the fractions in the data sample associated with each component of the amplitudes (fit fractions). In the limit of narrow resonances, the fit fractions are analogous to relative branching fractions. The fit fraction for component i is

Fi=dxMi(x)2dxjMj(x)2. 15

For cascade processes, the different secondary isobars contribute coherently to the fit fractions. The partial fit fractions for each sub-process are then defined as the fit fraction with only the contributions from the parent isobar included in the denominator.

Model construction

The number of possible models that could be used to fit the amplitudes is extremely large due to the large number of possible decay chains (100). A full list of the components considered is included in Appendix B.

A model of “reasonable” complexity typically contains O(10) different decay chains. Therefore, the number of possible models is extremely large, and only an infinitesimal fraction of these models can be tested. An algorithmic approach to model building is adopted, which begins with an initial model and attempts to iteratively improve the description by adding decay chains. For D0K-π+π+π- the initial model is that constructed by the Mark III collaboration [6], augmented by knowledge from other analyses, such as the additional decay channels of the a1(1260)+ found in the amplitude analysis of the decay D0π+π-π+π- performed by the FOCUS collaboration [31]. The two-body nonresonant terms in the Mark III model are replaced with the relevant K matrices, and the four-body nonresonant term replaced with a quasi two-body scalar–scalar term [K-π+]L=0[π+π-]L=0, modelled using a product of K matrix amplitudes.

For D0K+π-π-π+, where no previous study exists, the initial model is obtained by inspection of the invariant-mass distributions. There are clear contributions from the K(892)0 and ρ(770)0 resonances, and therefore combined with the expectation that the vector–vector contributions should be similar between WS and RS, the quasi two-body mode D0K(892)0ρ(770)0 is included in all three allowed orbital states L=(0,1,2). The scalar–scalar contribution should also be comparable between WS and RS decay modes, and hence the quasi two-body term D0[K+π-]L=0[π+π-]L=0 is also included.

The steps of the model-building procedure are

  1. Take a model and a set of possible additional decay chains, initially the complete set discussed in Appendix. B. Perform a fit to the data using this model adding one of these decay chains.

  2. If adding this decay chain improves the χ2 per degree of freedom by at least 0.02, then retain the model for further consideration.

  3. On the first iteration, restrict the pool of decay chains that are added to the model to those 40 contributions that give the largest improvements to the fit.

  4. Reiterate the model-building procedure, using the 15 models with the best fit quality from step 2 as starting points. Finish the procedure if no model has improved significantly.

The model-building procedure therefore results in an ensemble of parametrisations of comparable fit quality.

Fit results

This section presents fit results and systematic uncertainties, with the latter discussed first in Sect. 6.1. The model-building procedure outlined in Sect. 5.4 results in ensembles of parameterisations of comparable fit quality. The models discussed in this section, which are referred to as the baseline models, and are built to include all decay chains that are common to the majority of models that have a χ2 per degree of freedom differing from the best-fitting models by less than 0.1. The results for these baseline models are shown and their features discussed in Sects. 6.2 and 6.3 for the RS decay and the WS decay, respectively. The general features of models in the ensembles are discussed in Sect. 6.4. In Sect. 6.5 the models are used to calculate the coherence factor of the decays, and an assessment is made of the stability of the predicted coherence factors, strong-phase differences and amplitude ratios with respect to the choice of WS model in regions of phase space.

Systematic uncertainties

Several sources of systematic uncertainty are considered. Experimental issues are discussed first, followed by uncertainties related to the model and the formalism.

All parameters in the fit have a systematic uncertainty originating from the limited size of the integration sample used in the likelihood minimisation. This effect is reduced by importance sampling. The remaining uncertainty is estimated using a resampling technique. Half of the integration sample is randomly selected, and the fit performed using only this subsample. This procedure is repeated many times, and the systematic uncertainty from the finite integration statistics is taken to be 1/2 of the spread in fit parameters.

There is an additional systematic uncertainty due to the imperfect simulation, which affects the efficiency corrections. The RS data are divided into bins in the D0 transverse momentum, in which the efficiency corrections may be expected to vary, and the fit is performed independently in each bin. The results of these fits are combined in an uncertainty-weighted average, including the correlations between the different parameters, and the absolute difference between the parameters measured by this procedure and the usual fitting procedure is assigned as the systematic uncertainty. Additionally, the data is divided by data-taking year and software trigger category and independent fits performed using these subsamples. The fit results are found to be compatible within the assigned uncertainties between these samples, hence no additional systematic uncertainty is assigned.

The uncertainty associated with the determination of the signal fraction and mistag fraction in each sample is measured by varying these fractions within the uncertainties found in the fit to the mKπππ vs. Δm plane.

Parameters that are fixed in the fit, such as the ρ(770)0 mass and width, are randomly varied according to the uncertainties given in Ref. [21], and the corresponding spreads in fit results are assigned as the uncertainties. It is assumed that input correlations between these parameters are negligible. When performing fits to the WS sample, several parameters, such as the mass, width and couplings of the K1(1270)± resonance, are fixed to the values found in the RS fit. The uncertainty on these parameters is propagated to the WS fit by randomly varying these parameters by their uncertainties. The radii of several particles used in the Blatt–Weisskopf form factor are varied using the same procedure. The D0 radial parameter is varied by ±0.5GeV-1c.

The uncertainty due to the background model in the WS fit is estimated using pseudo-experiments. A combination of simulated signal events generated with the final model and candidates from outside of the D0 signal region is used to approximate the real data. The composite dataset is then fitted using the signal model, and differences between the true and fitted values are taken as the systematic uncertainties on the background parametrisation.

The choice of model is an additional source of systematic uncertainty. It is not meaningful to compare the coupling parameters between different parametrisations, as these are by definition the parameters of a given model. It is however useful to consider the impact the choice of parametrisation has on fit fractions and the fitted masses and widths. Therefore, the model choice is not included in the total systematic uncertainty, but considered separately in Sect. 6.4 and 6.5.

The total systematic uncertainty is obtained by summing the components in quadrature. The total systematic uncertainty is significantly larger than the statistical uncertainty on the RS fit, with the largest contributions coming from the form factors that account for the finite size of the decaying mesons. For the WS fit, the total systematic uncertainty is comparable to the statistical uncertainty, with the largest contribution coming from the parametrisation of the combinatorial background. A full breakdown of the different sources of systematic uncertainty for all parameters is given in Appendix C.

Results for the RS decay

Invariant mass-squared projections for D0K-π+π+π- are shown in Fig. 2 together with the expected distributions from the baseline model. The coupling parameters, fit fractions and other quantities for this model are shown in Table 2. The χ2 per degree of freedom for this model is calculated to be 40483/32701=1.238, which indicates that although this is formally a poor fit, the model is providing a reasonable description of the data given the very large sample size. Three cascade contributions, from a1(1260)+, K1(1270)- and K(1460)- resonances, are modelled using the three-body running-width treatment described in Sect. 4. The masses and widths of these states are allowed to vary in the fit. The mass, width and coupling parameters for these resonances are presented in Tables 34 and 5. The values of these parameters are model dependent, in particular on the parametrisation of the running width described by Eq. (5) and of the form factors described by Eq. (6), and thus there is not a straightforward comparison with the values obtained by other experiments.

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Distributions for six invariant-mass observables in the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. Bands indicate the expectation from the model, with the width of the band indicating the total systematic uncertainty. The total background contribution, which is very low, is shown as a filled area. In figures that involve a single positively-charged pion, one of the two identical pions is selected randomly

Table 2.

Fit fractions and coupling parameters for the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. For each parameter, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic. Couplings g are defined with respect to the coupling to the channel D0[K¯(892)0ρ(770)0]L=2. Also given are the χ2 and the number of degrees of freedom (ν) from the fit and their ratio

Fit fraction [%] g arg(g)[]
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=0 7.34±0.08±0.47 0.196±0.001±0.015 -22.4±0.4±1.6
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=1 6.03±0.05±0.25 0.362±0.002±0.010 -102.9±0.4±1.7
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 8.47±0.09±0.67
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=0 0.61±0.04±0.17 0.162±0.005±0.025 -86.1±1.9±4.3
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=1 1.98±0.03±0.33 0.643±0.006±0.058 97.3±0.5±2.8
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=2 0.46±0.03±0.15 0.649±0.021±0.105 -15.6±2.0±4.1
ρ(770)0K-π+L=0 0.93±0.03±0.05 0.338±0.006±0.011 73.0±0.8±4.0
α3/2 1.073±0.008±0.021 -130.9±0.5±1.8
K¯(892)0π+π-L=0 2.35±0.09±0.33
fππ 0.261±0.005±0.024 -149.0±0.9±2.7
β1 0.305±0.011±0.046 65.6±1.5±4.0
a1(1260)+K- 38.07±0.24±1.38 0.813±0.006±0.025 -149.2±0.5±3.1
K1(1270)-π+ 4.66±0.05±0.39 0.362±0.004±0.015 114.2±0.8±3.6
K1(1400)-K¯(892)0π-π+ 1.15±0.04±0.20 0.127±0.002±0.011 -169.8±1.1±5.9
K2(1430)-K¯(892)0π-π+ 0.46±0.01±0.03 0.302±0.004±0.011 -77.7±0.7±2.1
K(1460)-π+ 3.75±0.10±0.37 0.122±0.002±0.012 172.7±2.2±8.2
K-π+L=0π+π-L=0 22.04±0.28±2.09
α3/2 0.870±0.010±0.030 -149.2±0.7±3.5
αKη 2.614±0.141±0.281 -19.1±2.4±12.0
β1 0.554±0.009±0.053 35.3±0.7±1.6
fππ 0.082±0.001±0.008 -147.0±0.7±2.2
Sum of fit fractions 98.29±0.37±0.84
χ2/ν 40483/32701=1.238

Table 3.

Table of fit fractions and coupling parameters for the component involving the a1(1260)+ meson, from the fit performed on the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. The coupling parameters are defined with respect to the a1(1260)+ρ(770)0π+ coupling. For each parameter, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic

a1(1260)+   m0=1195.05±1.05±6.33MeV/c2; Γ0=422.01±2.10±12.72MeV/c2
Partial fractions [%] g arg(g)[]
ρ(770)0π+ 89.75±0.45±1.00
π+π-L=0π+ 2.42±0.06±0.12
β1 0.991±0.018±0.037 -22.2±1.0±1.2
β0 0.291±0.007±0.017 165.8±1.3±3.1
fππ 0.117±0.002±0.007 170.5±1.2±2.2
ρ(770)0π+L=2 0.85±0.03±0.06 0.582±0.011±0.027 -152.8±1.2±2.5

Table 4.

Table of fit fractions and coupling parameters for the component involving the K1(1270)- meson, from the fit performed on the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. The coupling parameters are defined with respect to the K1(1270)-ρ(770)0K- coupling. For each parameter, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic

K1(1270)-   m0=1289.81±0.56±1.66MeV/c2; Γ0=116.11±1.65±2.96MeV/c2
Partial factions [%] g arg(g)[]
ρ(770)0K- 96.30±1.64±6.61
ρ(1450)0K- 49.09±1.58±11.54 2.016±0.026±0.211 -119.5±0.9±2.3
K¯(892)0π- 27.08±0.64±2.82 0.388±0.007±0.033 -172.6±1.1±6.0
K-π+L=0π- 22.90±0.72±1.89 0.554±0.010±0.037 53.2±1.1±1.9
K¯(892)0π-L=2 3.47±0.17±0.31 0.769±0.021±0.048 -19.3±1.6±6.7
ω(782)π+π-K- 1.65±0.11±0.16 0.146±0.005±0.009 9.0±2.1±5.7

Table 5.

Table of fit fractions and coupling parameters for the component involving the K(1460)- meson, from the fit performed on the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. The coupling parameters are defined with respect to the K(1460)-K¯(892)0π- coupling. For each parameter, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic

K(1460)-   m0=1482.40±3.58±15.22MeV/c2 ; Γ0=335.60±6.20±8.65MeV/c2
Partial fractions [%] g arg(g)[]
K¯(892)0π- 51.39±1.00±1.71
π+π-L=0K- 31.23±0.83±1.78
fKK 1.819±0.059±0.189 -80.8±2.2±6.6
β1 0.813±0.032±0.136 112.9±2.6±9.5
β0 0.315±0.010±0.022 46.7±1.9±3.0

The largest contribution is found to come from the axial vector a1(1260)+, which is a result that was also obtained in the Mark III analysis [6]. This decay proceeds via the colour-favoured external W-emission diagram that is expected to dominate this final state.

There are also large contributions from the different orbital angular momentum configurations of the quasi two-body processes D0K¯(892)0ρ(770)0, with a total contribution of around 20%. The polarisation structure of this component is not consistent with naive expectations, with the D wave being the dominant contribution and the overall hierarchy being D>S>P. This result may be compared with that obtained for the study D0ρ(770)0ρ(770)0 in Ref. [32], where the D-wave polarisation of the amplitude was also found to be dominant.

A significant contribution is found from the pseudoscalar state K(1460)-. This resonance is a 21S0 excitation of the kaon [33]. Evidence for this state has been reported in partial-wave analyses of the process K±pK±π+π-p [34, 35], manifesting itself as a 0- state with mass 1400MeV/c2 and width 250MeV/c2, coupling to the K¯(892)0π- and [π-π+]L=0K- channels. The intermediate decays of the K(1460)- meson are found to be roughly consistent with previous studies, with approximately equal partial widths to K¯(892)0π- and [π+π-]L=0K-. The resonant nature of this state is confirmed using a model-independent partial-wave analysis (MIPWA), following the method first used by the E791 collaboration [36, 37]. The relativistic Breit-Wigner lineshape is replaced by a parametrisation that treats the real and imaginary parts of the amplitude at 15 discrete positions in sK-π+π- as independent pairs of free parameters to be determined by the fit. The amplitude is then modelled elsewhere by interpolating between these values using cubic splines [38]. The Argand diagram for this amplitude is shown in Fig. 3, with points indicating the values determined by the fit, and demonstrates the phase motion expected from a resonance.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Argand diagram for the model-independent partial-wave analysis (MIPWA) for the K(1460) resonance. Points show the values of the amplitude that are determined by the fit, with only statistical uncertainties shown

Four-body weak decays contain amplitudes that are both even, such as D[VV]L=0,2, where V and V are vector resonances, and odd, such as D[VV]L=1, under parity transformations. Interference between these amplitudes can give rise to parity asymmetries which are different in D0 and D¯0 decays. These asymmetries are the result of strong-phase differences, but can be mistaken for CP asymmetries [39]. Both sources of asymmetry can be studied by examining the distribution of the angle between the decay planes of the two quasi two-body systems, ϕ, which can be constructed from the three-momenta p of the decay products in the rest frame of the D0 meson as

cos(ϕ)=n^K-π+·n^π-π+sin(ϕ)=pπ+·n^K-π+pπ+×p^K-π+, 16

where n^ab is the direction normal to the decay plane of a two-particle system ab,

n^ab=pa×pbpa×pb, 17

and p^K-π+ is the direction of the combined momentum of the K-π+ system.

The interference between P-even and P-odd amplitudes averages to zero when integrated over the entire phase space. Therefore, the angle ϕ is studied in regions of phase space. The region of the K¯(892)0 and ρ(770)0 resonances is studied as the largest P-odd amplitude is the decay D0[K¯(892)0ρ(770)0]L=1. Selecting this region allows the identical pions to be distinguished, by one being part of the K¯(892)0-like system and the other in the ρ(770)0-like system. The data in this region are shown in Fig. 4, divided into quadrants of helicity angles, θA and θB, defined as the angle between the K-/π- and the D0 in the rest frame of the K-π+/π-π+ system. The distributions show clear asymmetries under reflection about 180, indicating parity nonconservation. However, equal and opposite asymmetries are observed in the CP-conjugate mode D¯0K+π-π-π+, indicating that these asymmetries originate from strong phases, rather than from CP-violating effects. Bands show the expected asymmetries based on the amplitude model, which has been constructed according to the CP-conserving hypothesis, and show reasonable agreement with the data.

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

Parity violating distributions for the RS decay in the K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 region defined by ±35MeV(±100MeV) mass windows about the nominal K¯(892)0 (ρ(770)0) masses. Bands show the predictions of the fitted model including systematic uncertainties

Results for the WS decay

Invariant mass-squared distributions for D0K+π-π-π+ are shown in Fig. 5. Large contributions are clearly seen in sK+π- from the K(892)0 resonance. The fit fractions and amplitudes of the baseline model are given in Table 6. The χ2 per degree of freedom for the fit to the WS data is 350/243=1.463. If the true WS amplitude has a comparable structure to the RS amplitude, it contains several decay chains at the O(1%) level that cannot be satisfactorily resolved given the small sample size, and hence the quality of the WS fit is degraded by the absence of these subdominant contributions.

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

Distributions for six invariant-mass observables in the WS decay D0K+π-π-π+. Bands indicate the expectation from the model, with the width of the band indicating the total systematic uncertainty. The total background contribution is shown as a filled area, with the lower region indicating the expected contribution from mistagged D¯0K+π-π-π+ decays. In figures that involve a single negatively-charged pion, one of the two identical pions is selected randomly

Table 6.

Fit fractions and coupling parameters for the WS decay D0K+π-π-π+. For each parameter, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic. Couplings g are defined with respect to the coupling to the decay D0[K(892)0ρ(770)0]L=2. Also given are the χ2 and the number of degrees of freedom (ν) from the fit and their ratio

Fit fraction [%] g arg(g)[]
K(892)0ρ(770)0L=0 9.62±1.58±1.03 0.205±0.019±0.010 -8.5±4.7±4.4
K(892)0ρ(770)0L=1 8.42±0.83±0.57 0.390±0.029±0.006 -91.4±4.7±4.1
K(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 10.19±1.03±0.79
ρ(1450)0K(892)0L=0 8.16±1.24±1.69 0.541±0.042±0.055 -21.8±6.5±5.5
K1(1270)+π- 18.15±1.11±2.30 0.653±0.040±0.058 -110.7±5.1±4.9
K1(1400)+K(892)0π+π- 26.55±1.97±2.13 0.560±0.037±0.031 29.8±4.2±4.6
K+π-L=0π+π-L=0 20.90±1.30±1.50
α3/2 0.686±0.043±0.022 -149.4±4.3±2.9
β1 0.438±0.044±0.030 -132.4±6.5±3.0
fππ 0.050±0.006±0.005 74.8±7.5±5.3
Sum of fit fractions 101.99±2.90±2.85
χ2/ν 350/239=1.463

Dominant contributions are found from the axial kaons, K1(1270)+ and K1(1400)+, which are related to the same colour-favoured W-emission diagram that dominates the RS decay, where it manifests itself in the a1(1260)+K- component. The contribution from the K1(1400)+ resonance is larger than that from the K1(1270)+ resonance. It is instructive to consider this behaviour in terms of the quark states, 1P1 and 3P1, which mix almost equally to produce the mass eigenstates,

|K1(1400)=cos(θK)|3P1-sin(θK)|1P1|K1(1270)=sin(θK)|3P1+cos(θK)|1P1, 18

where θK is a mixing angle. The mixing is somewhat less than maximal, with Ref. [40] reporting a preferred value of θK=(33-2+6). In the WS decay, the axial kaons are produced via a weak current, which is decoupled from the 1P1 state in the SU(3) flavour-symmetry limit. If the mixing were maximal, the mass eigenstates would be produced equally, but a smaller mixing angle results in a preference for the K1(1400), which is qualitatively consistent with the pattern seen in data. In the RS decay, the axial kaons are not produced by the external weak current, and hence there is no reason to expect either quark state to be preferred. The relatively small contribution from the K1(1400) is then understood as a consequence of approximately equal production of the quark states.

The coupling and shape parameters of the K1(1270)+ resonance are fixed to the values measured in the RS nominal fit. A fit is also performed with these coupling parameters free to vary, and the parameters are found to be consistent with those measured in the RS decay.

A large contribution is found from D0ρ(1450)0K(892)0 decays in all models that describe the data well. This contribution resembles a quasi nonresonant component due to the large width of the ρ(1450)0 resonance, and is likely to be an effective representation of several smaller decay chains involving the K(892)0 resonance that cannot be resolved with the current sample size.

Alternative parametrisations

The model-finding procedure outlined in Sect. 5.4 results in ensembles of parametrisations of comparable quality and complexity. The decay chains included in the models discussed above are included in the majority of models of acceptable quality, with further variations made by addition of further small components. The fraction of models in this ensemble containing a given decay mode are shown in Table 7 for the RS decay mode with the average fit fraction associated with each decay chain also tabulated. The ensemble of RS models consists of about 200 models with χ2 per degree of freedom varying between 1.21 and 1.26. Many of the decay chains in the ensemble include resonances, such as the K1(1270)-, decaying via radially excited vector mesons, such as the ρ(1450)0 and K(1410)0 mesons. In particular, the decay K1(1270)-ρ(1450)0K- is included in the models discussed in Sects. 6.2 and 6.3 and is found in the majority of the models in the ensemble. This decay channel of the K1(1270)- meson has a strong impact at low dipion masses due to the very large width of the ρ(1450)0 resonance, of about 400MeV/c2. Models excluding this component are presented as alternative parametrisations in Appendix E as this decay mode has not been studied extensively in other production mechanisms of the K1(1270)- resonance, and the ensemble contains models without this decay chain of similar fit quality to the baseline model. The situation can be clarified with independent measurements of the properties of these resonances. The a1(1640)+ resonance is also found in many models in the ensemble, and is likely to be present at some level despite only the low-mass tail of this resonance impacting the phase space. This resonance strongly interferes with the dominant a1(1260)+ component and, as the parameters of this resonance are poorly known, improved external inputs will be required to correctly constrain this component.

Table 7.

Decay chains taken into account in alternative parametrisations of the RS decay mode D0K-π+π+π-. For each chain, the fraction of models in the ensemble that contain this decay, together with the associated average fit fraction, F, are shown. Components are not tabulated if they contribute to all models in the ensemble, or if they contribute to less than 5% of the models

Decay chain Fraction of models [%] F[%]
K1(1270)-ρ(1450)0K-π+ 68.9 1.61
K1(1400)-ρ(1450)0K-π+ 33.4 0.34
a1(1640)+π+π-L=0π+K- 23.1 2.47
K1(1270)-K¯(1680)0π-π+ 18.4 0.38
K1(1270)-K¯(1410)0π-π+ 12.0 0.29
K2(1430)-K¯(1410)0π-π+ 10.4 0.12
K(1680)-ρ(770)0K-π+ 10.4 0.07
K2(1430)-ρ(1450)0K-π+ 10.4 0.10
K2(1430)-K¯(1680)0π-π+ 10.4 0.13
K1(1400)-ρ(770)0K-π+ 10.4 0.44
K1(1400)-K¯(1410)0π-π+ 10.4 0.11
K(1460)-K¯2(1430)0π-π+ 10.0 0.06

The coupling parameters cannot strictly be compared between different models, as in many cases these coupling parameters have a different interpretation depending on the choice of the model. However, it is instructive to consider how the fit fractions vary depending on the choice of model, which is shown in Table 8. It is also useful to consider how the choice of model impacts upon the fitted masses and widths, which is shown in Table 9. The values for the model described in Sect. 6.2 are also shown, which has compatible values with the ensemble. The variation with respect to the choice of model is characterised by the RMS of the parameters in the ensemble, and is of a comparable size to the combined systematic uncertainty from other sources on these parameters.

Table 8.

Dependence of fit fractions (and partial fractions) on the choice of the RS model. This dependence is expressed as the mean value and the RMS of the values in the ensemble. Also shown is the fit fractions of the baseline model presented in Sect. 6.2

(Partial) fraction [%]
Baseline Ensemble
Mean±RMS
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=0 7.34±0.08±0.47 7.10±0.13
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=1 6.03±0.05±0.25 6.00±0.12
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 8.47±0.09±0.67 8.42±0.20
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=0 0.61±0.04±0.17 0.65±0.13
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=1 1.98±0.03±0.33 1.91±0.06
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=2 0.46±0.03±0.15 0.46±0.05
ρ(770)0K-π+L=0 0.93±0.03±0.05 1.08±0.12
K¯(892)0π+π-L=0 2.35±0.09±0.33 2.19±0.34
a1(1260)+K- 38.07±0.24±1.38 38.06±2.08
ρ(770)0π+ 89.75±0.45±1.00 86.66±4.52
π+π-L=0π+ 2.42±0.06±0.12 3.01±1.02
ρ(770)0π+L=2 0.85±0.03±0.06 0.80±0.10
K1(1270)-π+ 4.66±0.05±0.39 4.74±0.24
ρ(770)0K- 96.30±1.64±6.61 77.04±9.22
ρ(1450)0K- 49.09±1.58±11.54 34.13±8.19
ω(782)π+π-K- 1.65±0.11±0.16 1.70±0.15
K¯(892)0π- 27.08±0.64±2.82 26.95±2.52
K¯(892)0π-L=2 3.47±0.17±0.31 3.57±0.49
K-π+π- 22.90±0.72±1.89 20.39±2.89
K1(1400)-K¯(892)0π-π+ 1.15±0.04±0.20 1.23±0.10
K2(1430)-K¯(892)0π-π+ 0.46±0.01±0.03 0.44±0.04
K(1460)-π+ 3.75±0.10±0.37 3.63±0.27
K¯(892)0π- 51.39±1.00±1.71 53.18±1.52
π+π-L=0K- 31.23±0.83±1.78 30.46±1.19
K-π+L=0π+π-L=0 22.04±0.28±2.09 21.87±1.51

Table 9.

Dependence of the fitted masses and widths on the final choice of the RS model. This dependence is expressed as the mean value and the RMS of the values in the ensemble. The values found for the baseline model presented in Sect. 6.2 are reported for comparison

Baseline Ensemble
m(a1(1260)+)(MeV/c2) 1195.05±1.05±6.33 1196.85±6.21
Γ(a1(1260)+)(MeV/c2) 422.01±2.10±12.72 420.92±8.70
m(K1(1270)-)(MeV/c2) 1289.81±0.56±1.66 1287.77±3.97
Γ(K1(1270)-)(MeV/c2) 116.11±1.65±2.96 114.27±7.57
m(K(1460)-)(MeV/c2) 1482.40±3.58±15.22 1474.60±12.28
Γ(K(1460)-)(MeV/c2) 335.60±6.20±8.65 333.89±12.88

The D0K+π-π-π+ ensemble consists of 108 models, all of which have a χ2 per degree of freedom of less than 1.45, with the best models in the ensemble having a χ2 per degree of freedom of about 1.35. The fraction of models in this ensemble containing a given decay mode are shown in Table 10. In particular, there should be percent-level contributions from some of the decay chains present in the D0K-π+π+π- mode, such as D0a1(1260)-K+ and D0K(892)0π+π-L=0. In addition to the marginal decays of the K1(1270)+ present in the D0K+π-π-π+ ensemble, the models suggest contributions from the K(1680), which resembles a nonresonant component due to its large width and position on the edge of the phase space. As is the case for the large D0K(892)0ρ(1450) component, this contribution is likely to be mimicking several smaller decay channels that cannot be resolved with the current sample size.

Table 10.

Decay chains taken into account in alternative parametrisations of the WS decay mode D0K+π-π-π+. For each chain, the fraction of models in the ensemble that contain this decay, together with the associated average fit fraction, F, are shown. Components are not tabulated if they contribute to all models in the ensemble, or if they contribute to less than 5% of the models

Decay chain Fraction of models [%] F [%]
K1(1270)+ρ(770)0K+L=2π- 47.2 1.21
K(1680)+K(1680)0π+π- 38.0 2.89
K(1680)+ρ(770)0K+π- 33.3 2.58
a1(1640)-π+π-L=0π-K+ 27.8 3.24
K(1680)+ρ(1450)0K+π- 22.2 2.53
K1(1270)+K(1410)0π+L=2π- 22.2 0.60
K1(1270)+π+π-L=0K+π- 21.3 0.26
K(1680)+K(1410)0π+π- 17.6 1.98
ρ(770)0K+π-L=0 17.6 3.49
K(1680)+K2(1430)0π+π- 16.7 0.82
K1(1400)+π+π-L=0K+π- 13.0 0.29
K2(1430)0K+π-ρ(770)0 13.0 0.35
K(1410)0ρ(770)0 10.2 3.50

Coherence factor

The coherence factor RK3π and average strong-phase difference δK3π are measures of the phase-space-averaged interference properties between suppressed and favoured amplitudes, and are defined as [41]

RK3πe-iδK3π=dxAD0K+π-π-π+AD¯0K+π-π-π+dxAD0K+π-π-π+2dxAD¯0K+π-π-π+2, 19

where A(D0K+3π) is the amplitude of the suppressed decay and A(D¯0K+3π) is the favoured amplitude for D¯0 decays. Additionally, it is useful to define the average ratio of amplitudes as

rK3π=dxAD0K+π-π-π+2dxAD¯0K+π-π-π+2. 20

Knowledge of these parameters is necessary when making use of this decay in B-DK- transitions for measuring the CP-violating phase γ [41], and can also be exploited for charm mixing studies. Observables with direct sensitivity to the coherence factor and related parameters have been measured in e+e- collisions at the ψ(3770) resonance with CLEO-c data [42], and through charm mixing at LHCb [4]. A global analysis of these results [42] yields

RK3π=0.43-0.13+0.17δK3π=(128-17+28)rK3π=(5.49±0.06)×10-2.

The baseline models presented in Sect. 6 can be used to calculate the model-derived coherence factor

RK3πmod=0.458±0.010±0.012±0.020,

where the first uncertainty is statistical, the second systematic, and the third the uncertainty from the choice of WS model. This uncertainty is assigned by taking the spread in values from an ensemble of alternative models from the model-building algorithm, requiring that models have a χ2 per degree of freedom of less than 1.5, and that all unconstrained components in the fit have a significance of >2σ. This result is in good agreement with the direct measurement in Ref. [42]. This analysis has no sensitivity to δK3π and rK3π as each amplitude contains an arbitrary independent amplitude and phase.

The stability of the local phase description can also be verified by evaluating the model-derived coherence factor and associated parameters in different regions of phase space. This is equivalent to changing the definition of Eq. (19) such that integrals are performed over a limited region of phase space. In this case, it is also possible to determine the local values of δK3π and rK3π relative to the phase-space averaged values. Therefore, overall normalisation factors are fixed such that the central values of the direct measurement are correctly reproduced.

In order to define these regions, the phase space is divided into hypercubes using the algorithm described in Sect. 5.2. The division is done such that the hypercubes cannot be smaller in any dimension than 50MeV/c2. The hypercubes are grouped into bins of average phase difference between the two amplitudes in the bin, using the amplitude models described in Sect. 6. The range [-180,180] in phase difference between the two decay modes is split into eight bins. The division of this range is done such that each bin is expected to have an approximately equal population of WS events within the bin. The coherence factors, average strong phases and amplitude ratios and their RMS spread arising from the choice of WS model are summarised in Table 11. Good stability with respect to the choice of model is observed, which is a consequence of the dominant features of the amplitude being common for all models, and gives confidence to using the models presented in this paper to define regions of interest for future binned measurements of γ or studies of charm mixing. The relatively high coherence factor in some regions of phase-space demonstrates the potential improvements in sensitivity to measurements of CP-violating observables.

Table 11.

Coherence factor and average strong-phase differences in regions of phase space. The spread of coherence factors, average strong-phase difference and ratio of amplitudes from choice of WS model characterised with the RMS of the distribution

Bin RK3π δK3π[] rK3π×10-2
1 0.701±0.017 169±3 5.287±0.034
2 0.691±0.016 151±1 5.679±0.032
3 0.726±0.010 133±1 6.051±0.032
4 0.742±0.008 117±1 6.083±0.030
5 0.783±0.005 102±2 5.886±0.031
6 0.764±0.007 84±3 5.727±0.033
7 0.424±0.013 26±3 5.390±0.061
8 0.473±0.030 -149±7 4.467±0.065

Conclusions

The four-body decay modes D0Kπ±π±π have been studied using high-purity time-integrated samples obtained from doubly tagged B¯D+(2010)[D0π+]μX decays. For the RS decay mode D0K-π+π+π-, the analysis is performed with a sample around sixty times larger than that exploited in any previous analysis of this decay. For the WS mode D0K+π-π-π+, the resonance substructure is studied for the first time with 3000 signal candidates.

Both amplitude models are found to have large contributions from axial resonances, the decays D0a1(1260)+K- and D0K1(1270/1400)+π- for D0K-π+π+π- and D0K+π-π-π+, respectively. This is consistent with the general picture that W-emission topologies are crucial in describing these decays. Interference between the parity-even and parity-odd amplitudes causes large local parity violations, which are shown to be reasonably well modelled in the RS decay. A significant contribution from the pseudoscalar resonance K(1460)- is identified, which is validated using the model-independent partial waves method.

The coherence factor is calculated using the models, and is found to be consistent with direct measurements. It is found that the calculated value is relatively stable with respect to the parametrisation of subdominant amplitudes in the WS model. These models therefore provide a valuable input to future binned measurements of the CP-violating parameter γ and charm-mixing studies.

Acknowledgements

We express our gratitude to our colleagues in the CERN accelerator departments for the excellent performance of the LHC. We thank the technical and administrative staff at the LHCb institutes. We acknowledge support from CERN and from the national agencies: CAPES, CNPq, FAPERJ and FINEP (Brazil); MOST and NSFC (China); CNRS/IN2P3 (France); BMBF, DFG and MPG (Germany); INFN (Italy); NWO (The Netherlands); MNiSW and NCN (Poland); MEN/IFA (Romania); MinES and FASO (Russia); MinECo (Spain); SNSF and SER (Switzerland); NASU (Ukraine); STFC (United Kingdom); NSF (USA). We acknowledge the computing resources that are provided by CERN, IN2P3 (France), KIT and DESY (Germany), INFN (Italy), SURF (The Netherlands), PIC (Spain), GridPP (United Kingdom), RRCKI and Yandex LLC (Russia), CSCS (Switzerland), IFIN-HH (Romania), CBPF (Brazil), PL-GRID (Poland) and OSC (USA). We are indebted to the communities behind the multiple open-source software packages on which we depend. Individual groups or members have received support from AvH Foundation (Germany), EPLANET, Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions and ERC (European Union), ANR, Labex P2IO and OCEVU, and Région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (France), RFBR, RSF and Yandex LLC (Russia), GVA, XuntaGal and GENCAT (Spain), Herchel Smith Fund, the Royal Society, the English-Speaking Union and the Leverhulme Trust (United Kingdom).

Appendices

A Spin formalism

The effects of spin and orbital angular momentum are calculated using the Rarita–Schwinger formalism, following a similar prescription to that described in Ref. [24]. Spin-matrix elements for quasi two-body processes are constructed in terms of a series of polarisation and pure orbital angular momentum tensors. Consider the decay of particle a that has integer spin J, into particles b and c, which have integer spin sb, sc, respectively. All three particles have an associated polarisation tensor, ϵ(a,b,c), which is of rank equal to the spin of the particle. The decay products bc will also in general have a relative orbital angular momentum l, which is expressed in terms of the pure orbital angular momentum tensor, Lμν, which is of rank l. The matrix element for the decay is

Mabc=ϵμaνa(a)ϵμbνb(b)ϵμcνc(c)Lμlνl(l)Gμaνaμbνbμcνcμlνl, 21

where the tensor G combines the polarisation and pure orbital angular momentum tensor to produce a scalar object. This tensor is constructed from combinations of the metric tensor gμν and the Levi-Civita tensor contracted with the four-momenta of the decaying particle, εμναβPμ. The second of these tensors is used only if J-(l-sb-sc) is odd, and ensures that matrix elements have the correct properties under parity transformations. The matrix element can also be written by defining the current, J, of the decaying particle:

Mabc=ϵμ_(a)J(a)μ_, 22

where the μ_ represents a set of Lorentz indices μν, a shorthand which will be used throughout this section. The isobar model factorises an N-body decay into a sequence of two-body processes. Each of these quasi two-body decays can be described with a single spin matrix element, and hence the total matrix element is the product of N-1 matrix elements:

M=i=0N-1Maibici. 23

For example, consider the quasi two-body decay PX[ab]Y[cd]. The matrix element for this decay is

M=ijMPXiYjMXiabMYjcd, 24

where the sums are over the possible polarisations of the intermediate states.

It is preferable to build a generic formulation of the total matrix element for arbitrary topologies, spins and angular momenta, rather than performing an explicit computation for each possible process. A generic approach to computing matrix elements is to introduce a generalised “current” associated with a decaying particle that has absorbed the matrix elements of its decay products. This current can be written in terms of the currents of its decay products as

Jμ_=Lβ_(l)Gμναβ_×Sνγ_1J1γ_×Sαη_2J2η_, 25

where Sμ_1,2 is the spin-projection operator of decay products (1,2), which has been used to sum intermediate polarisation tensors, using the definition

iϵia_ϵib_=Sab_. 26

The first few projection operations, which are sufficient for describing charm decays, are

Sμν(P)=-gμν+PμPνP2Sμναβ(P)=12SμαSνβ+SμβSνα-13SμνSαβ. 27

This operator projects out the component of a tensor that is orthogonal to the four-momentum of a particle, and has rank 2J for a particle of spin J. The orbital angular momentum tensors are also constructed from the spin projection operators and the relative momentum of the decay products, Qa [24], and are written as

Lμ=-Sμν(Pa)QaνLμν=Sμναβ(Pa)QaαQaβ. 28

The matrix element for a generic cascade of particle decays can then be calculated recursively. In the case of the decay of a spinless particle, the matrix element for the total decay process is identical to the current of the decaying particle. The generalised current is therefore merely a convenient device for organising the computation of spin matrix elements, but is not in general associated with the propagation of angular momentum. It is also useful to define the spin-projected currents, Sμν_Jν_, which will be written as S,Vμ,Tμν for (pseudo)scalar, (pseudo)vector and (pseudo)tensor states, respectively.

The rules for how the different spin-projected currents are written in terms of each other is given in Table 12, where these relations are derived by considering the symmetries of Lorentz indices and the parity properties of the matrix element. All of the coupling structures necessary to describe P4P are uniquely determined by these constraints, although this property does not hold in general. This allows complicated spin configurations to be calculated in terms of a simple and consistent set of rules. The rules are written with consistent dependencies to clarify their derivations, and in some cases simplified forms are also given. These simplifications typically rely on the symmetry properties of the Levi-Civita tensor and the relationship Sab_Sbc_=Sc_a_, which is the defining characteristic of a projection operator.

Table 12.

Rules for calculating the current associated with a given decay chain in terms of the currents of the decay products. Where relevant, the spin projection operator S and the orbital angular momentum operators L are those for the decaying particle

Topology Current Simplified current
S[S1S2] S1S2
S[VS1]L=1 LμVμS1
S[V1V2]L=0 gμνV1μV2ν
S[V1V2]L=1 εμναβPSμLνV1αV2β εμναβPSμQSνV1αV2β
S[V1V2]L=2 LμνV1μV2ν
S[TS1]L=2 LμνTμνS1
S[TV]L=1 LμTμνVν
S[TV]L=2 LμνεναβγPSαTμβVγ εναβγPSαQSνLμTβμVγ
S[T1T2]L=0 T1μνT2μν
Vμ[S1S2]L=1 SμνLνS1S2 LμS1S2
Vμ[V1S]L=0 SμνV1νS
Vμ[V1S]L=1 SμνεναβγPVαLβV1γS -εμαβγPVαQVβV1γS
Vμ[V1S]L=2 SμνLναV1αS LμαV1αS
Vμ[TS]L=1 SμνLαTνα
Vμ[TS]L=2 SμνεναβγPVαLβηTγηS -εμαβγPVαQVβTγηLη
Vμ[TV1]L=0 SμνTναV1α
Tμν[S1S2]L=2 SμναβLαβS1S2 LμνS1S2
Tμν[VS]L=1 SμναβL1αVβS 12LμSνβ+SμβLν-13SμνLβVβ
Tμν[VS]L=2 SμναβεαγηλPTγL2ηβVλS -12εμγηλLν+ενγηλLμPTγQTηVλ
Tμν[T1S] SμναβT1αβ

B List of decay chains

The list of possible decay chains is built from what is allowed by the relevant conservation laws. Approximately one hundred different decay chains modes are included as possible contributions to the model. Certain cascade decays already have well known sub-branching ratios. For example, although the K1(1400) decays almost exclusively via the K(892), the various decays of the K1(1400) are treated separately without assumption about their branching ratios. The different components can be split into the same groups as in Sect. 4:

  • D0YππππYKπKπ, where Yππ is one of the following states: ρ(770)0, ρ(1450)0, f2(1270) or [π+π-]L=0, and YKπ is one of the following: K(892)0, K(1410)0, K(1680)0, K2(1430)0 or [Kπ±]L=0.

    The [π+π-]L=0 and [Kπ±]L=0 contributions are modelled using K matrices. In cases with a scalar contribution and a radial recurrence of a vector state, such as ρ(1450)0[Kπ±]L=0, the K matrix is fixed to be the same as the first vector, i.e. the K-matrix parameters of ρ(770)0[Kπ±]L=0. For vector–vector and vector–tensor contributions, the different possible polarisation states are included together in the model building. The contributions from the radial excitations of the kaon are only included as a possibility when included with the π+π- S-wave, as the other decay chains involving this resonance, for example the decay K(1410)0ρ(770)0, tend to have large interference terms, which requires fine tuning with other amplitudes and hence are considered to be unphysical.

  • D0XπππYπππππK, where Xπππ is one of the following states: a1(1260)±, a1(1640)±, π(1300)± or a2(1320)± .

  • D0XKππYKπKπππ, D0XKππYππππKπ, where XKππ is one of the following states: K1(1270)±, K1(1400)±, K(1410)±, K(1680)±, K2(1430)± or K(1460)±.

All of these states are considered under all possible orbital configurations that obey the respective conservation laws.

C Systematic uncertainties

The various contributions assigned for different systematic uncertainties are summarised in this appendix by a series of tables. The legend for these is given in Table 13, including which sources of uncertainty are considered on each decay mode. The breakdown of systematic uncertainties for the RS decay D0K-π+π+π- for coupling parameters, fit fractions and other parameters are given in Tables 14 and 15 for the quasi two-body decay chains and cascade decay chains, respectively. The systematic uncertainties for the WS mode D0K+π-π-π+ are given in Table 16 for both coupling parameters and the fit fractions.

Table 13.

Legend for systematic uncertainties, including whether this sources of uncertainty is considered on the RS/WS decay mode

Description RS WS
I Efficiency variations
II Simulation statistics
III Masses and widths
IV Form factor radii
V Background fraction
VI Background parameterisation
VII RS parameters

Table 14.

Systematic uncertainties on the RS decay coupling parameters and fit fractions for quasi two-body decay chains

I II III IV V
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 F 7.340±0.084±0.637 0.426 0.050 0.063 0.466 0.025
g 0.196±0.001±0.015 0.000 0.001 0.001 0.015 0.000
arg(g)[] -22.363±0.361±1.644 1.309 0.239 0.119 0.955 0.075
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=1 F 6.031±0.049±0.436 0.358 0.029 0.061 0.239 0.006
g 0.362±0.002±0.010 0.002 0.001 0.002 0.009 0.000
arg(g)[] -102.907±0.380±1.667 1.431 0.224 0.321 0.760 0.025
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 F 8.475±0.086±0.826 0.492 0.051 0.059 0.659 0.023
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0 F 0.608±0.040±0.165 0.061 0.032 0.134 0.065 0.019
g 0.162±0.005±0.025 0.007 0.004 0.018 0.015 0.003
arg(g)[] -86.122±1.852±4.345 1.933 1.570 2.485 2.152 1.368
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=1 F 1.975±0.029±0.351 0.115 0.017 0.315 0.103 0.003
g 0.643±0.006±0.058 0.001 0.003 0.050 0.029 0.001
arg(g)[] 97.304±0.516±2.770 2.249 0.288 1.341 0.854 0.031
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=2 F 0.455±0.028±0.163 0.078 0.016 0.090 0.110 0.004
g 0.649±0.021±0.105 0.052 0.011 0.063 0.065 0.003
arg(g)[] -15.564±1.960±4.109 1.208 1.323 2.631 2.484 0.762
ρ(770)0K-π+L=0 F 0.926±0.032±0.083 0.069 0.019 0.016 0.039 0.006
g 0.338±0.006±0.011 0.000 0.004 0.002 0.010 0.002
arg(g)[] 73.048±0.795±3.951 3.567 0.469 0.481 1.549 0.185
α3/2 g 1.073±0.008±0.021 0.018 0.005 0.005 0.009 0.003
arg(g)[] -130.856±0.457±1.786 1.679 0.282 0.274 0.435 0.155
K¯(892)0π+π-L=0 F 2.347±0.089±0.557 0.483 0.079 0.148 0.206 0.076
fππ g 0.261±0.005±0.024 0.022 0.004 0.006 0.007 0.003
arg(g)[] -149.023±0.943±2.696 2.275 0.540 1.176 0.617 0.196
β1 g 0.305±0.011±0.046 0.040 0.010 0.013 0.013 0.007
arg(g)[] 65.554±1.534±4.004 3.017 0.857 2.322 0.771 0.455
K-π+L=0π+π-L=0 F 22.044±0.282±4.137 3.631 0.268 0.213 1.945 0.188
α3/2 g 0.870±0.010±0.030 0.029 0.005 0.003 0.004 0.002
arg(g)[] -149.187±0.712±3.503 3.467 0.350 0.250 0.194 0.157
αKη g 2.614±0.141±0.281 0.263 0.063 0.041 0.062 0.018
arg(g)[] -19.073±2.414±11.979 11.775 1.507 1.151 0.816 0.755
β1 g 0.554±0.009±0.053 0.019 0.005 0.004 0.050 0.002
arg(g)[] 35.310±0.662±1.627 0.969 0.439 0.588 1.069 0.168
fππ g 0.082±0.001±0.008 0.004 0.001 0.001 0.007 0.000
arg(g)[] -146.991±0.718±2.248 1.849 0.463 0.593 1.003 0.252

Table 15.

Systematic uncertainties on the RS decay coupling parameters, fit fractions and masses and widths of resonances for cascade topology decay chains

I II III IV V
a1(1260)+K- F 38.073±0.245±2.594 2.198 0.155 0.171 1.356 0.053
g 0.813±0.006±0.025 0.002 0.003 0.004 0.024 0.001
arg(g)[] -149.155±0.453±3.132 2.628 0.321 0.531 1.579 0.162
ρ(770)0π+ F 89.745±0.452±1.498 1.116 0.298 0.596 0.720 0.192
π+π-L=0π+ F 2.420±0.060±0.202 0.165 0.043 0.037 0.102 0.010
β1 g 0.991±0.018±0.037 0.005 0.015 0.012 0.031 0.006
arg(g)[] -22.185±1.044±1.195 0.769 0.597 0.393 0.545 0.169
β0 g 0.291±0.007±0.017 0.012 0.006 0.003 0.010 0.001
arg(g)[] 165.819±1.325±3.076 2.155 0.802 0.819 1.845 0.318
fππ g 0.117±0.002±0.007 0.001 0.002 0.002 0.007 0.001
arg(g)[] 170.501±1.235±2.243 0.151 0.765 0.960 1.722 0.731
ρ(770)0π+L=2 F 0.850±0.032±0.077 0.058 0.021 0.023 0.040 0.007
g 0.582±0.011±0.027 0.020 0.007 0.008 0.015 0.002
arg(g)[] -152.829±1.195±2.512 1.691 0.710 0.755 1.520 0.258
a1(1260)+ m0MeV/c2 1195.050±1.045±6.333 3.187 0.784 0.497 5.371 0.493
Γ0MeV/c2 422.013±2.096±12.723 2.638 1.335 0.723 12.341 0.549
K1(1270)-π+ F 4.664±0.053±0.624 0.485 0.037 0.285 0.268 0.012
g 0.362±0.004±0.015 0.013 0.002 0.002 0.008 0.001
arg(g)[] 114.207±0.760±3.612 3.320 0.526 0.441 1.227 0.219
ρ(770)0K- F 96.301±1.644±8.237 5.523 1.082 5.624 2.110 0.286
ρ(1450)0K- F 49.089±1.580±13.727 7.467 1.062 11.159 2.611 0.452
g 2.016±0.026±0.211 0.108 0.017 0.172 0.053 0.007
arg(g)[] -119.504±0.856±2.333 1.597 0.489 1.102 1.190 0.146
K¯(892)0π- F 27.082±0.639±4.039 2.943 0.410 2.525 1.046 0.097
g 0.388±0.007±0.033 0.025 0.004 0.017 0.011 0.001
arg(g)[] -172.577±1.087±5.957 5.653 0.712 1.482 0.876 0.255
[K-π+]L=0π- F 22.899±0.722±3.091 2.483 0.457 1.490 0.973 0.119
g 0.554±0.010±0.037 0.033 0.007 0.005 0.015 0.001
arg(g)[] 53.170±1.068±1.920 1.564 0.659 0.401 0.735 0.323
K¯(892)0π-L=2 F 3.465±0.168±0.469 0.362 0.117 0.204 0.176 0.043
g 0.769±0.021±0.048 0.035 0.014 0.011 0.027 0.004
arg(g)[] -19.286±1.616±6.657 6.463 1.013 0.914 0.800 0.207
ω(782)π+π-K- F 1.649±0.109±0.228 0.161 0.083 0.120 0.069 0.007
g 0.146±0.005±0.009 0.006 0.004 0.002 0.004 0.000
arg(g)[] 9.041±2.114±5.673 5.401 1.402 0.587 0.826 0.126
K1(1270)- m0MeV/c2 1289.810±0.558±1.656 1.197 0.436 0.244 1.010 0.198
Γ0MeV/c2 116.114±1.649±2.963 1.289 1.221 0.981 2.090 0.545
K1(1400)-K¯(892)0π-π+ F 1.147±0.038±0.205 0.079 0.022 0.181 0.049 0.003
g 0.127±0.002±0.011 0.002 0.001 0.010 0.005 0.000
arg(g)[] -169.822±1.102±5.879 2.052 0.687 5.343 1.124 0.270
K2(1430)-K¯(892)0π-π+ F 0.458±0.011±0.041 0.031 0.007 0.010 0.024 0.001
g 0.302±0.004±0.011 0.005 0.002 0.003 0.009 0.000
arg(g)[] -77.690±0.732±2.051 0.898 0.409 1.174 1.360 0.051
K(1460)-π+ F 3.749±0.095±0.803 0.717 0.066 0.076 0.341 0.064
g 0.122±0.002±0.012 0.002 0.001 0.002 0.012 0.001
arg(g)[] 172.675±2.227±8.208 6.826 2.235 2.413 2.619 1.761
K¯(892)0π- F 51.387±0.996±9.581 9.490 0.529 0.629 0.974 0.333
π+π-L=0K- F 31.228±0.833±11.085 11.021 0.454 0.414 0.989 0.247
fKK g 1.819±0.059±0.189 0.180 0.027 0.030 0.036 0.025
arg(g)[] -80.790±2.225±6.563 5.820 1.617 1.740 1.361 1.305
β1 g 0.813±0.032±0.136 0.132 0.016 0.018 0.018 0.015
arg(g)[] 112.871±2.555±9.487 8.636 2.025 2.241 1.817 1.730
β0 g 0.315±0.010±0.022 0.019 0.005 0.005 0.009 0.002
arg(g)[] 46.734±1.946±2.952 1.110 1.576 1.416 1.121 1.318
K(1460)- m0MeV/c2 1482.400±3.576±15.216 13.873 3.466 3.216 3.611 1.916
Γ0MeV/c2 335.595±6.196±8.651 1.524 4.234 2.017 5.901 3.962

Table 16.

Systematic uncertainties on the WS decay coupling parameters and fit fractions

II III IV V VI VII
K(892)0ρ(770)0 g 0.205±0.019±0.010 0.002 0.006 0.003 0.001 0.005 0.006
arg(g)[] -8.502±4.662±4.439 0.433 1.272 0.112 0.148 4.150 0.799
F 9.617±1.584±1.028 0.134 0.436 0.344 0.069 0.567 0.637
K(892)0ρ(770)0L=1 g 0.390±0.029±0.006 0.002 0.003 0.000 0.001 0.004 0.003
arg(g)[] -91.359±4.728±4.132 0.406 0.827 0.128 0.101 3.951 0.766
F 8.424±0.827±0.573 0.069 0.091 0.210 0.020 0.458 0.249
K(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 F 10.191±1.028±0.789 0.089 0.130 0.255 0.018 0.658 0.314
ρ(1450)0K(892)0 g 0.541±0.042±0.055 0.004 0.043 0.018 0.001 0.024 0.016
arg(g)[] -21.798±6.536±5.483 0.573 4.532 0.547 0.254 0.254 2.960
F 8.162±1.242±1.686 0.107 1.381 0.474 0.031 0.718 0.428
K1(1270)+π- g 0.653±0.040±0.058 0.004 0.017 0.009 0.001 0.049 0.024
arg(g)[] -110.715±5.054±4.854 0.481 1.484 0.219 0.056 4.236 1.770
F 18.147±1.114±2.301 0.104 0.800 0.423 0.021 1.788 1.125
K1(1400)+K(892)0π+π- g 0.560±0.037±0.031 0.003 0.020 0.011 0.001 0.018 0.010
arg(g)[] 29.769±4.220±4.565 0.396 4.055 0.211 0.060 1.638 1.227
F 26.549±1.973±2.128 0.190 1.715 0.469 0.046 0.940 0.667
K+π-L=0π+π-L=0 F 20.901±1.295±1.500 0.129 0.328 0.565 0.134 1.246 0.486
α3/2 g 0.686±0.043±0.022 0.004 0.007 0.002 0.002 0.019 0.007
arg(g)[] -149.399±4.260±2.946 0.502 0.277 0.181 0.082 2.809 0.651
β1 g 0.438±0.044±0.030 0.004 0.006 0.010 0.001 0.026 0.010
arg(g)[] -132.424±6.507±2.972 0.618 1.109 0.357 0.200 2.382 1.174
fππ g 0.050±0.006±0.005 0.001 0.001 0.001 0.000 0.004 0.002
arg(g)[] 74.821±7.528±5.282 0.695 0.745 0.149 0.472 5.050 1.058

D Interference fractions

The interference fraction between decay chains a and b is

I(a,b)=RedxMa(x)Mb(x)dxjMj(x)2, 29

where the sum over j is over all of the decay chains. For cascade processes, the different secondary isobars contribute coherently to the interference fractions. The interference fractions are presented in Tables 17 and 18 for RS and WS decay modes, respectively. For each decay mode, the largest interference fractions are between the axial vector decay chain, and the lowest orbital angular momentum vector–vector decay chain.

Table 17.

Interference fractions for the RS mode D0K-π+π+π-, only shown for fractions >0.5%. For each fraction, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic

Decay chain a Decay chain b Interference fraction [%]
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 a1(1260)+K- 5.74±0.03±0.1
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 -2.59±0.02±0.07
K+π-L=0π+π-L=0 a1(1260)+K- 2.4±0.03±0.14
a1(1260)+K- ρ(770)0K-π+L=0 2.14±0.07±0.26
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 a1(1260)+K- 1.76±0.01±0.08
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=1 ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=1 1.55±0.02±0.18
K1(1270)-π+ K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 -1.05±0.02±0.14
K1(1400)-K¯(892)0π-π+ K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 0.96±0.02±0.1
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0 -0.83±0.05±0.11
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=2 0.81±0.04±0.13
K(1460)-π+ K¯(892)0π+π-L=0 0.78±0.03±0.1
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 K-π+L=0π+π-L=0 0.73±0.01±0.03
K¯(892)0π+π-L=0 a1(1260)+K- -0.68±0.01±0.07
K1(1270)-π+ K1(1400)-K¯(892)0π-π+ -0.67±0.02±0.12
K(1460)-π+ K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 -0.66±0.02±0.05
a1(1260)+K- ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0 -0.63±0.02±0.08
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 K(1460)-π+ -0.6±0.02±0.07
K(1460)-π+ ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0 0.51±0.01±0.06

Table 18.

Interference fractions for the WS mode D0K+π-π-π+, only shown for fractions >0.5%. For each fraction, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic

Decay chain a Decay chain b Interference fraction [%]
K1(1400)+K(892)0π+π- K(892)0ρ(770)0 5.09±0.49±0.56
K(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 K(892)0ρ(770)0 -3.48±0.36±0.26
K1(1270)+π- ρ(1450)0K(892)0 -2.17±0.24±0.37
K1(1400)+K(892)0π+π- ρ(1450)0K(892)0 -1.78±0.88±0.63
ρ(1450)0K(892)0 K(892)0ρ(770)0 1.59±0.69±0.77
K(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 ρ(1450)0K(892)0 -1.49±0.29±0.30
K(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 K1(1400)+K(892)0π+π- -1.36±0.13±0.12
K(892)0ρ(770)0 K+π-L=0π+π-L=0 1.14±0.13±0.11
K1(1400)+K(892)0π+π- K+π-L=0π+π-L=0 1.03±0.10±0.10
K1(1270)+π- K1(1400)+K(892)0π+π- 0.82±0.51±0.79
ρ(1450)0K(892)0 K+π-L=0π+π-L=0 -0.65±0.11±0.09
K1(1270)+π- K(892)0ρ(770)0 0.65±0.29±0.33

E Models excluding K1(1270)-ρ(1450)0K-

The results for the RS decay D0K-π+π+π- are shown in this appendix for a model that excludes the amplitude K1(1270)-ρ(1450)0K-. The fit projections are shown in Fig. 6. The χ2 per degree of freedom of this fit is 1.28. The fit fractions and parameters are shown in Table 19, and the partial fractions and parameters for the components associated with the resonances a1(1260)+, K1(1270)- and K(1460)- in Tables 202122, respectively. This model would be preferred to that presented in Sect. 6 if the K1(1270)ρ(1450)0K- decay chain is excluded by investigations of the K1(1270) resonance in other production modes.

Fig. 6.

Fig. 6

Distributions for six invariant-mass observables in the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. Bands indicate the expectation from a model which excludes the decay chain K1(1270)-ρ(1450)0K-, with the width of the band indicating the total systematic uncertainty. The total background contribution, which is very low, is shown in green

Table 19.

Table of fit fractions and coupling parameters and other quantities for the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-, for a model excluding the decay chain K1(1270)-ρ(1450)0K-. Also given is the χ2 per degree of freedom (ν) for the fit. The first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic. Couplings are defined with respect to the coupling to the channel D0[K¯(892)0ρ(770)0]L=2

Fit fraction [%] g arg(g)[]
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0 7.45±0.09±0.47 0.200±0.001±0.014 -26.4±0.4±1.4
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=1 6.03±0.05±0.25 0.366±0.002±0.020 -103.1±0.4±1.7
K¯(892)0ρ(770)0L=2 8.30±0.09±0.71
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0 0.11±0.02±0.06 0.068±0.006±0.013 -133.9±5.7±16.2
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=1 1.99±0.03±0.33 0.652±0.006±0.064 97.3±0.5±3.8
ρ(1450)0K¯(892)0L=2 0.36±0.03±0.11 0.581±0.022±0.088 8.2±2.2±16.5
ρ(770)0K-π+L=0 1.29±0.04±0.09 0.318±0.007±0.012 69.8±0.9±6.0
α3/2 1.227±0.011±0.015 -129.4±0.5±1.4
K¯(892)0π+π-L=0 4.57±0.17±0.75
fππ 0.352±0.006±0.034 -148.5±0.8±1.7
β1 0.507±0.012±0.045 69.7±1.1±3.0
a1(1260)+K- 33.56±0.22±1.58 0.771±0.006±0.043 -151.6±0.5±3.6
K1(1270)-π+ 4.67±0.05±0.26 0.260±0.003±0.007 90.5±0.9±1.9
K1(1400)-K¯(892)0π-π+ 0.87±0.03±0.14 0.112±0.002±0.011 -156.6±1.2±8.5
K2(1430)-K¯(892)0π-π+ 0.47±0.01±0.03 0.309±0.004±0.014 -79.0±0.7±2.6
K(1460)-π+ 5.07±0.18±0.51 0.134±0.003±0.013 220.4±2.6±16.0
K-π+L=0π+π-L=0 30.20±0.45±3.20
α3/2 0.897±0.009±0.020 -147.2±0.5±1.3
αKη 2.316±0.101±0.308 -2.6±2.1±6.1
β1 0.656±0.008±0.067 33.0±0.6±2.3
fππ 0.093±0.001±0.009 -149.6±0.7±2.7
Sum of fit fractions 104.94±0.75±2.72
χ2/ν 41896/32702=1.281

Table 20.

Table of fit fractions and coupling parameters for the component involving the a1(1260)+ meson, from the fit performed on the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. The coupling parameters are defined with respect to the a1(1260)+ρ(770)0π+ coupling. For each parameter, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic

a1(1260)+   m0=1183.73±1.08±7.96MeV/c2; Γ0=423.36±2.20±12.89MeV/c2
Partial fractions [%] g arg(g)[]
ρ(770)0π+ 90.05±0.47±1.26
π+π-L=0π+ 3.08±0.07±0.21
β1 1.135±0.019±0.060 -17.7±1.0±1.0
β0 0.312±0.007±0.016 157.3±1.4±2.9
fππ 0.159±0.003±0.011 176.8±1.0±2.3
ρ(770)0π+L=2 0.84±0.04±0.07 0.584±0.012±0.024 -146.1±1.3±3.3

Table 21.

Table of fit fractions and coupling parameters for the component involving the K1(1270)- meson, from the fit performed on the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. The coupling parameters are defined with respect to the K1(1270)-ρ(770)0K- coupling. For each parameter, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic

K1(1270)-   m0=1285.03±0.47±1.06MeV/c2; Γ0=90.79±1.12±2.54MeV/c2
Partial fractions [%] g arg(g)[]
ρ(770)0K- 50.66±0.84±2.21
K¯(892)0π- 25.25±0.56±1.80 0.520±0.008±0.024 -133.2±0.9±2.2
K-π+L=0π- 5.97±0.29±0.37 0.390±0.010±0.018 95.2±1.4±3.7
K¯(892)0π-L=2 2.73±0.14±0.24 0.946±0.028±0.147 8.8±1.7±2.4
ω(782)π+π-K- 1.73±0.11±0.16 0.208±0.008±0.011 33.0±2.1±12.5

Table 22.

Table of fit fractions and coupling parameters for the component involving the K(1460)- meson, from the fit performed on the RS decay D0K-π+π+π-. The coupling parameters are defined with respect to the K(1460)-K¯(892)0π- coupling. For each parameter, the first uncertainty is statistical and the second systematic

K(1460)-   m0=1571.22±4.90±33.76MeV/c2; Γ0=376.64±7.43±25.30MeV/c2
Partial fractions [%] g arg(g)[]
K¯(892)0π- 45.73±1.09±1.95
π+π-L=0K- 37.71±1.06±1.98
fKK 1.573±0.059±0.066 -102.6±2.7±10.0
β1 0.875±0.032±0.042 85.3±2.6±8.3
β0 0.323±0.010±0.023 25.6±2.1±8.4

Footnotes

1

The inclusion of charge-conjugate processes is implied throughout.

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