Abstract
Electromagnetic form factors serve to explore the intrinsic structure of nucleons and their strangeness partners. With electron scattering at low energies the electromagnetic moments and radii of nucleons can be deduced. The corresponding experiments for hyperons are limited because of the unstable nature of the hyperons. Only for one process this turns to an advantage: the decay of the neutral Sigma hyperon to a Lambda hyperon and a real or virtual photon. Due to limited phase space the effects caused by the Sigma-to-Lambda transition form factors compete with the QED radiative corrections for the decay \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\). These QED corrections are addressed in the present work, evaluated beyond the soft-photon approximation, i.e., over the whole range of the Dalitz plot and with no restrictions on the energy of the radiative photon.
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1 Introduction
Within the Standard Model of Particle Physics the elementary building blocks of matter have been identified as leptons and quarks. Yet, it is still a challenge of contemporary subatomic physics to understand even the first level of compositeness, the structure of the nucleons as built from quarks. Historically, strangeness and electromagnetic probes provided first clues about the intrinsic structure of nucleons and hadrons in general. From SU(2) symmetry, i.e. isospin, alone it would have been hardly possible to isolate quarks as members of the fundamental multiplet. Only by including strangeness and the approximate SU(3) flavor symmetry the emerging multiplet structure of observed hadrons allowed to propose the existence of the elementary quark triplet [1]. Even earlier, the substantial deviation of the magnetic g-factor of the proton from the value of 2, as proposed by Dirac’s theory, provided another hint that the proton cannot be as elementary as the electron [2]. Subsequently, the corresponding analysis was extended to the scattering of electrons on nucleons to reveal more of the intrinsic structure of the nucleon [3, 4]. The nucleon spin crisis [5] and the puzzle about the charge radius of the proton [6] demonstrate that our understanding of the structure of the proton and the neutron is still very limited.
In this situation a close collaboration between theory and experiment is instrumental in making significant progress. Concerning the electromagnetic form factors of the nucleon we refer to the reviews [7, 8] and references therein. A general attitude, when it comes to the study of a complex system, is to ask the question, what happens to the system if parts of their components are slightly modified. For electromagnetic form factors the natural modifications are a spin-flip and/or a flavor change. This extends the form factor business from nucleons to hyperons [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16] and to transition form factors between spin 1/2 and 3/2 states [17].
The present work should be seen as part of an endeavor to motivate and assist experimental activities aiming at the extraction of electromagnetic hyperon (transition) form factors. As already pointed out, we expect that the study of hyperons will provide an additional angle to look at the structure of nucleons, complementary to the elastic nucleon form factors and the nucleon-to-Delta transition form factors. Hyperons come with additional challenges, but also opportunities: Since hyperons are unstable, the experimental opportunities to collide hyperons with electrons are technically very limited. This moves the focus from the space-like to the time-like region concerning the virtuality of the photon. For elastic form factors (in a generalized sense invoking crossing symmetry) the experimentally accessible region of photon virtuality starts at twice the hyperon mass, i.e. one has to study the reactions \(e^+e^-\) to a hyperon–antihyperon pair. For transition form factors, however, there is a low-energy window that allows for access to the electromagnetic radii, i.e. to the slopes of the form factors at vanishing photon virtuality. Such quantities enter the Dalitz decays of a hyperon into another hyperon plus an electron–positron pair.
Transitions from the spin 3/2 decuplet states to the spin 1/2 octet members are addressed elsewhere [18]. In the present work we will focus on the one possible electromagnetic transition within the ground-state octet, namely the Dalitz decay \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\). Of course, the electric and magnetic transition form factors enter the decay rate. However, the phase space for the lepton pair is rather limited, \(M_{\varSigma ^0}-M_\varLambda \approx 77\,\hbox {MeV}\) [19]. Consequently, even the differential decay rate is dominated by the transition magnetic moment, which can and has been determined from the simpler two-body decay \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma \) [19]. As can be expected and as we will see below, the numerical impact of the form factors themselves, i.e. essentially from the electric and magnetic transition radii, is rather limited. As it turns out, the impact from the hadronic structure competes with the radiative corrections imposed by Quantum Electrodynamics (QED). The transition form factors themselves are addressed in a complementary work [20] while the present work is devoted to these QED corrections.
From the experimental point of view the transition of the \(\varSigma ^0\) to a \(\varLambda \) and a real photon has been measured [19]. The Dalitz decay \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) has not been observed yet. The value for its branching ratio quoted in Ref. [19] is purely based on a theoretical calculation [21] that neglects hadronic structure effects and QED corrections. Nonetheless, it can be expected that this value for the branching ratio will be fairly accurate. To reveal deviations from leading-order QED and from a point-like hadron structure requires differential data for this Dalitz decay, i.e. data with high statistics and high precision. On the other hand, hyperons move more and more in the focus of experimental activities. High-energy time-like form factors of hyperons have recently been addressed by BaBar [10], CLEO-c [11] and BES-III [9]. With the advent of the planned Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR) [22] a hyperon factory will start to operate. Both in the proton-antiproton collisions studied by PANDA [23] and in the proton-proton collisions studied by HADES [24] hyperons will be copiously produced and there are detectors dedicated to studying the hyperons and their properties [23, 25]. Thus it can be expected that it will be possible in the future to collect enough data for an experimental determination of not only the branching ratio but also the differential Dalitz decay width of \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\). The present work will serve to disentangle the QED-correction effects from the effects caused by the intrinsic structure of the hyperons. In turn, information about the intrinsic structure of the hyperons will provide a new angle on the structure of the nucleon.
Radiative corrections to the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) process were already studied by Sidhu and Smith [26]. In that work, the corrections to the decay rate as well as to the differential decay width were calculated. In the latter case, the soft-photon approximation was used. Moreover, the one-photon-irreducible (\(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\)) contribution was not calculated, based – apart from its apparent difficulty – on the assumption that it was negligible. Similarly, it was argued that the correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex did not affect the measurement of the slope of the form factor and thus was irrelevant for the scope of Ref. [26] and further left out from the discussion.
In the present paper we decided to reinvestigate these claims and calculate the contribution of (nearly) all the QED diagrams at next-to-leading order (NLO) explicitly. Most importantly, we present the bremsstrahlung contribution (regarding the lepton legs) beyond the soft-photon approximation, i.e. including the hard-photon corrections. Our result represents the complete inclusive QED radiative correction at NLO, leaving out only the bremsstrahlung correction related to the hyperon legs. Here, we agree with Ref. [26] that it is safe to neglect this contribution: Firstly, because of the significantly higher rest mass of the hyperons compared to the mass of the electron (related to which the bremsstrahlung indeed represents a significant contribution). Secondly, since \(\varSigma ^0\) and \(\varLambda \) are neutral, the magnetic moment dominates the photon emission, which leads to an additional suppression. In particular, no infrared (IR) divergent terms are present to enhance the effect of this contribution.
Our motivation to calculate the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution explicitly (and for completeness also the correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex) is based on the fact that it already happened in the literature that the assumption that a particular contribution was negligible turned out to be incorrect. For instance, the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution to the radiative corrections for the neutral-pion Dalitz decay \(\pi ^0\rightarrow e^+e^-\gamma \) was, due to inappropriate assumptions and arguments based on Low’s theorem [27,28,29], considered negligible and left out from the classical work [30]; see also Ref. [31]. The exact calculation, in contrary, shows its significance [32,33,34,35]. The impact on the form factor slope is considerable, especially in view of a precision measurement or calculation [36]. Similarly, it can happen that an approximate formula is derived which, however, differs significantly from the exact calculation when carried out: Accidental cancellations or loop enhancements might take place. As an example, let us mention the approximate calculation of the two-loop virtual radiative corrections to the neutral-pion rare decay \(\pi ^0\rightarrow e^+e^-\) [37, 38] and their significant difference to the exact calculation [39], which seems to be one of the main sources of the theory–experiment discrepancy [40,41,42].
The rest of the paper is structured in the following way. In Sect. 2 we fix our notation and conventions and present the leading-order (LO) results. In the subsequent sections we then discuss individual radiative corrections. In Sect. 3 we present the results for the virtual corrections related to photon and lepton legs. We discuss the corresponding bremsstrahlung correction in Sect. 4 and show a compact approximate (although numerically satisfactory) result there. Additional related expressions are provided in “Appendix A”. The \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) correction is treated in Sect. 5, which is further complemented by additional four appendices. In Sect. 6 we discuss the (virtual) QED correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex. We conclude with results and discussion in Sect. 7.
2 Definitions and the leading order
In what follows we briefly introduce the notation. We denote the four-momenta of the neutral Sigma baryon (of mass \(M_\varSigma \)), Lambda hyperon (of mass \(M_\varLambda \)), electron (of mass m) and positron by \(p_1\), \(p_2\), \(q_1\) and \(q_2\), respectively. Thus it holds \(p_1=p_2+q_1+q_2\), provided bremsstrahlung is not included.
As for the Lorentz structure of the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex we write [20, 43]
with
where we defined (for the outgoing four-momentum q) the Dirac and Pauli transition form factors as \(G_1\) and \(G_2\), respectively. Above, we used \(\sigma ^{\mu \nu }\equiv \frac{i}{2}[\gamma ^\mu ,\gamma ^\nu ]\), \({\hat{M}}\equiv (M_\varSigma +M_\varLambda )/2\) and \(\varDelta _M\equiv (M_\varSigma -M_\varLambda )\). For real photons (\(q^2=0\)), the transition form factors become \(G_1(0)=0\) and \(G_2(0)=\kappa \). Here \(\kappa \approx 1.98\) is related to the transition magnetic moment [19] \(\mu = \kappa e/(2 {\hat{M}})\).
In an equivalent way we introduce in the case of the \(e^+e^-\gamma \) vertex (again, q is outgoing)Footnote 1
which comes into play when virtual radiative corrections are also considered.
The matrix element of the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) process (for the one-photon-exchange topology) is then written in a simple form
where \(\tilde{\varPi }(q^2)\) includes vacuum-polarization effects that we will eventually include. Putting \(\tilde{\varPi }(q^2)=-1\) corresponds to the photon propagator with no insertion. Note that due to the conservation of the electromagnetic current, the part of Eq. (2) proportional to \(\varDelta _MG_1(q^2)\) vanishes after the contraction with the leptonic part in Eq. (4).
It becomes convenient to introduce a dimensionless variable
which stands for the normalized square of the total energy of the electron–positron pair in its center-of-mass system (CMS) (or simply of the electron–positron pair invariant mass). We also define the following small parameter:Footnote 2
Numerically, \(\rho \approx 1.1\times 10^{-3}\ll 1\). The second independent variable to describe the kinematics of the 3-body decay is chosen as
which has the meaning of a rescaled cosine of the angle between the directions of the incoming (decaying) hyperon and the (outgoing) positron in the electron–positron CMS. The Källén triangle function, generally defined as
reduces in the case used in Eq. (7) to
Finally, we introduce \(\nu \equiv 2m/\varDelta _M\) and
so the limits on kinematic variables x and y are simply given by
Note that \(\nu \approx 1.3\times 10^{-2}\ll 1\) is beside \(\rho \) another small parameter.
Next, we define the electric (\(G_{\mathrm{E}}\)) and magnetic (\(G_{\mathrm{M}}\)) form factors in the following manner:
which in turn means
The modulus square of the matrix element, summed over the spins of \(\varLambda \), electron and positron, and averaged over the spins of \(\varSigma ^0\) is given by
The advantage in the use of the electric and magnetic over the Dirac and Pauli transition form factors lies in the fact that the quantity (14) contains no interference terms of \(G_{\mathrm{E}}\) and \(G_{\mathrm{M}}\). Therefore also the two-fold differential decay width
can be expressed in a form orthogonal in \(G_{\mathrm{E}}(q^2)\) and \(G_{\mathrm{M}}(q^2)\). Indeed, squaring the hadronic part (corresponding to the term in the second square brackets) of the matrix element (4) reveals
where the dots stand for similar terms proportional to \((p_1-p_2)^\alpha \). These terms are also purely quadratic in the form factors and vanish upon contraction with the leptonic part.
For the LO contribution for the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) process – which means putting simply \(F_1(\varDelta _M^2x)=1\), \(F_2(\varDelta _M^2x)=0\) and \(\tilde{\varPi }(\varDelta _M^2x)=-1\) in Eq. (4) – the matrix element can be written as
see Fig. 1 for the associated Feynman diagram. Thus we obtain
At this point we are ready to define our approximation scheme. The dominant contribution to the Dalitz distribution (15) is obtained from the LO QED process and neglecting the intrinsic structure of the hyperons. Technically this is achieved by neglecting the \(q^2=\varDelta _M^2x\) dependence of the transition form factors, i.e. \(G_{\mathrm{E}}(q^2)\rightarrow 0\) and \(G_{\mathrm{M}}(q^2)\rightarrow \kappa \). In this work we consider NLO QED corrections proportional to the fine-structure constant \(\alpha \) and corrections to the hadronic form factors that are linear in the ratio \(\rho \), defined in Eq. (6). All this is relative to the dominant contribution. We can write
where we introduced the transition radii via
Note that the magnetic part is multiplied by a factor of \(\rho \) in Eq. (18). Thus the dominant contribution there is linear in \(\rho \) and the considered corrections are \(\sim \rho ^2\). What is neglected are the \(\rho ^3\) contributions in Eq. (18).
To justify our approximation scheme further, we note that hadronic radii are at most of order 1 fm. Thus \(\langle r^2\rangle \le (1\,\text {fm})^2\approx 25\,\hbox {GeV}^{-2}\). As a consequence of this estimate, the combination \(\frac{2}{3}\rho {\hat{M}}^2\langle r^2\rangle \) in Eq. (19) is smaller than 0.03. Thus it makes sense to keep in Eq. (19) the corrections suppressed by \(\rho \), which are numerically comparable to the considered QED corrections. The corrections suppressed by \(\rho ^2\), on the other hand, can be safely ignored.
Finally we add a theoretical estimate [20, 43]. The electric radius is much smaller than the magnetic one, \(\vert \langle r^2_{\mathrm{E}} \rangle \vert \ll \langle r^2_{\mathrm{M}} \rangle \). As a consequence of these considerations, we could completely ignore the electric transition form factor but we should keep the magnetic one and the linearized version of its \(q^2\) dependence. In most of our calculations we stick to Eq. (19). Whenever we neglect in addition \(\langle r^2_{\mathrm{E}} \rangle \), we will spell it out explicitly.
We can thus simply rewrite Eq. (17) substituting \(G_1(q^2)\rightarrow G_{\mathrm{M}}(q^2)-G_2(q^2)\) (from Eq. (12)) and taking only \(G_2(\varDelta _M^2x)\simeq G_{\mathrm{M}}(\varDelta _M^2x)/(1-\rho x)\) (from Eq. (13)). Using in addition \(\rho x\ll 1\) (which consequently translates into \(G_1(\varDelta _M^2x)\simeq 0\)) and the Dirac equation, we obtain
Hence we arrive at
for the LO matrix element squared. The two-fold differential decay rate at LO reads (inserting Eq. (22) into Eq. (15))
Integrating Eq. (23) over y, we find the one-fold differential decay width
Going beyond LO, it is convenient to introduce the NLO correction \(\delta \) to the LO differential decay width, which allows us to write schematically \({\mathrm{d}}\varGamma =(1+\delta +\dots )\,{\mathrm{d}}\varGamma ^{\mathrm{LO}}\). In particular, we define
Related to the work documented in Refs. [32, 44], such a correction can be divided into the following parts emphasizing the respective origin:
Here, the superscript “virt” stands for the virtual radiative corrections, \(\delta ^{\mathrm{BS}}\) for the bremsstrahlung and \(\delta ^{1\gamma \text {IR}}\) for the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution. In our approach, the latter is treated separately from \(\delta ^{\mathrm{virt}}\) for reasons of historical development, complexity and topology. The part of the virtual correction associated to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex, \(\delta _{\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma }^{\mathrm{virt}}\), is treated separately from the corrections \(\delta ^{\mathrm{virt}}\) related to photon and lepton legs. The associated bremsstrahlung from the baryon legs is entirely neglected throughout this work.
As a trivial consequence of previous equations, having knowledge of \(\delta (x,y)\) allows for obtaining \(\delta (x)\) using the following prescription:
This immediately translates into
where we defined
After neglecting the electric form factor relative to the magnetic one, we obtain
In the following sections we discuss the individual contributions.
3 Virtual radiative corrections
We get the virtual radiative corrections, \(\delta ^{\mathrm{virt}}\), from the interference terms of the LO diagram shown in Fig. 1 and the NLO one-loop diagrams of Fig. 2a, b. We recall that the LO expression is given in Eq. (17) and the general prescription is provided in Eq. (4). The result for this interference can be written as
If we take into account again that the electric form factor is suppressed, we arrive at the expression
which is exactly the form one finds in the case of the Dalitz decay of the neutral pion [30, 32] and which is numerically more than a satisfactory approximation. This finding is further supported by the fact that compared to the size of the effects stemming from \(\tilde{\varPi }(q^2)\) and \(F_1(q^2)\), the quantity \(F_2(q^2)\) is numerically negligible in the whole kinematically allowed region of \(q^2\). Moreover, if we recall the form of \(\overline{|{\mathscr {M}}_G^{\mathrm{LO}}(x)|^2}\) from Eq. (29), it is straightforward to see that the contribution to the correction to the one-fold differential decay width takes – of course, in both cases of Eqs. (31) and (32) – the form independent of the electric and magnetic form factors:
We should now evaluate these terms at NLO.
Considering the correction stemming from the diagram in Fig. 2a, we find for the (on-shell renormalized) vacuum-polarization insertion induced by a single leptonic loop (flavor \(\ell \))
with \(\beta _\ell \equiv \beta _\ell (x)\equiv \sqrt{1-\nu _\ell ^2/x}\), \(\nu _\ell \equiv 2m_\ell /\varDelta _M\) and
In what follows, it is enough to take into account only the electron- and muon-loop contributions,
the latter mentioned having only a cosmetic effect on the presented numerical results. This is due to the fact that the exchanged invariant mass \(\sqrt{q^2}\) does not exceed \(\varDelta _M\approx 77\) MeV and is thus way below the two-muon threshold. Let us remark that independently of the considered processes, the contribution with the lightest fermion is numerically of the largest importance. After summing the whole geometric series of one-loop insertions (\(-\tilde{\varPi }(q^2)=1/[1+\overline{\varPi }(q^2)]\)), squaring the amplitude and subtracting the LO part, we get for the correction connected to the vacuum polarization
This term can then be used (and we do so) instead of the one-loop interference term \(-2{\text {Re}}\tilde{\varPi }(\varDelta _M^2x)\) in Eq. (31) and further on.
For the electromagnetic form factors \(F_1(q^2)\) and \(F_2(q^2)\) stemming from the QED vertex correction in Fig. 2b we have at NLO (on-shell renormalized)
and
In the above formulae, \(\text {Li}_2\) stands for the dilogarithm and \(\varLambda \) is the infrared cut-off. Note that we quote here the full expression valid in all kinematic regimes. In order to extract the real parts from Eqs. (38) and (39), in the kinematically allowed region where \(\varDelta _M^2x\ge 4m^2\) we use \(\log (-\gamma +i\epsilon )=\log (\gamma )+i\pi \), since \(0\le \gamma \le 1\). It is then straightforward to see that the real part of \(\overline{F_1^{\mathrm{NLO}}}\) indeed includes the Coulomb term proportional to \(-\pi ^2/2\).
For completeness, our final expressions for the virtual radiative corrections take the form
and, using Eq. (30) or based on Eq. (33),
4 Bremsstrahlung
Concerning the notation, we stick to the one provided previously in Refs. [30, 32, 44]. The two diagrams which contribute to the bremsstrahlung of the process \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) are shown in Fig. 2c, d. Besides other effects, their presence is essential to cancel the IR divergence stemming from the virtual corrections depicted in Fig. 2b. The corresponding invariant matrix element can be written in the form
where
Here, we use k for the four-momentum of the bremsstrahlung photon. Inasmuch as an additional particle comes into play, it is convenient to introduce a new kinematic variable which stands for the invariant mass squared of the pair formed by the photon and the \(\varLambda \) hyperon:
It is a counterpart to \(s\equiv (q_1+q_2)^2=\varDelta _M^2x\).
The form factors \(G_1\) and \(G_2\) are translated into \(G_{\mathrm{M}}\) and \(G_{\mathrm{E}}\) via Eq. (13). They are further approximated using the linear expansion shown in Eq. (19). This yields
In what follows we consider the above form of the form factors to be used in the evaluation of the bremsstrahlung correction.
The contribution of the bremsstrahlung to the NLO two-fold differential decay width can be written as
The above used operator J is defined for an arbitrary invariant \(f(k,p_2)\) of the momenta k and \(p_2\) as follows:
Being on the mass shell (\(k^2=0,\,p_2^2=M_\varLambda ^2\)) and in the reference system where \(\mathbf {p}_1-\mathbf {q}_1-\mathbf {q}_2=0(=\mathbf {p}_2+\mathbf {k}\equiv \mathbf {r})\), we find
where \(\omega \equiv \sqrt{s_\gamma }\) and \({\tilde{\omega }}\equiv (s_\gamma -M_\varLambda ^2)/\sqrt{s_\gamma }\). We used \(\tilde{k}(M_\varLambda ^2)\) to mark the four-momentum of the particle with the mass \(M_\varLambda \) and with the momentum \(-\mathbf {k}\), i.e. when \(k=(k_0,\mathbf {k})\), then for the four-vector \(\tilde{k}(M_\varLambda ^2)\) we write
We can come back to the invariant form through
or for example due to
Together with x and y (kinematic variables at LO with the same meaning also at NLO) and \(s_\gamma \), two more independent kinematic variables are necessary. We define
where e.g. E can be expressed in terms of A and B as \(E=\varDelta _M^2x+2A+2B\). Finally, the bremsstrahlung correction reads
The full result for the matrix element squared of the bremsstrahlung correction \(\overline{|{\mathscr {M}}_{\mathrm{BS}}|^2}\) is rather lengthy and it makes not much sense to present it here. Nevertheless, all the terms necessary to numerically evaluate \(\delta ^{\mathrm{BS}}(x,y)\) are presented in Appendix A and numerical results given later in Table 4 of Sect. 7 correspond to using the expansions (45) and (46). In what follows we present a very simple – however numerically satisfactory – form of \(\overline{|{\mathscr {M}}_{\mathrm{BS}}|^2}\). Assuming that \(G_{\mathrm{E}}(s)\simeq 0\), \(G_{\mathrm{M}}((k+q_1+q_2)^2)\simeq G_{\mathrm{M}}(s)\), \(\rho \ll 1\) and neglecting sub-leading terms in \(\nu ^2\), the (IR-)convergent part (to be integrated numerically over \(s_\gamma \)) of the bremsstrahlung matrix element squared can be written as follows:
Above, we used \(\varDelta _m^2\equiv -2p_1\cdot (q_1-q_2)\). Note that the dimensionless variables x and y are related to s and \(\varDelta _m^2\) in the following manner: \(s=\varDelta _M^2x\) and \(\varDelta _m^2\equiv y\lambda ^{\frac{1}{2}}(x)\); see Eq. (9) for the definition of \(\lambda (x)\). The second half of the expression – denoted as \((q_1\leftrightarrow q_2)\) – is related to the sign change of y (or \(\varDelta _m^2\)) and to the change \((A\leftrightarrow B\)) performed on the first half of Eq. (55). For instance, it can be obtained when the first part is inserted into the operator J, the expressions from Appendix A are substituted and afterwards one uses \((\varDelta _m^2\leftrightarrow -\varDelta _m^2)\). The simplified result (55) does not require the knowledge of all the basic integrals listed in “Appendix A”: Indeed, some of them are only necessary when the exact \(\overline{|{\mathscr {M}}_{\mathrm{BS}}|^2}\big |_{\mathrm{C}}\) at NLO is evaluated as was done to generate Table 4. The full form of the (IR-)divergent part (to be integrated analytically) then reads:
After substituting Eqs. (A.28) and (A.29) into Eq. (56) and further into Eq. (54), the terms proportional to \(\ln (m/\varLambda )\) cancel with those in Eq. (38), i.e. \(2{\text {Re}}\overline{F_1^{\mathrm{NLO}}}(\varDelta _M^2x)+\delta ^{\mathrm{BS}}(x,y)\big |_{\mathrm{D}}\) is IR-finite, using \((1-\frac{\nu ^2}{2x})=\beta \frac{1+\beta ^2}{2\beta }\). In order to get an approximate result of the bremsstrahlung correction, one should simply substitute for \(\frac{1}{2e^6}\overline{|{\mathscr {M}}_{\mathrm{BS}}|^2}\) the sum of terms (55) and (56).
5 One-photon-irreducible virtual radiative corrections
The diagrams of Figs. 1 and 2a–d contain only the hadronic form factors for the transition from the Sigma to the Lambda hyperon. In contrast to this, the remaining diagrams of Fig. 2e–g contain also other hadronic form factors. Strictly speaking, what is denoted by “\(\varSigma ^0\)/\(\varLambda \)” in Fig. 2 could even be other intermediate baryonic states with strangeness. Yet, we will show in the following that the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contributions are negligible. For this purpose, it is not required to account in a detailed and utterly correct way for all possible hadronic effects. A sample calculation should be sufficient. Therefore, we restrict ourselves indeed to the diagrams shown in Fig. 2e–g and use form factors that are sufficiently realistic. To strengthen our statement we will explore a variety of form factors.
For the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution (Fig. 2e, f), we need to calculate four box diagrams. The matrix element can be separated into a baryonic (\(B_{\mu \nu }\)) and leptonic (\(L_{\alpha \beta }\)) part
where the photon propagators are shown explicitly (for brevity we drop the ‘\(+i\epsilon \)’ parts).
The leptonic part can be written as follows:
The cross term is substantial to attain gauge invariance, which manifests itself as
This can be seen when we artificially rewrite Eq. (58) with the Dirac equation at hand,
the form of which is suited to show the first equality in Eq. (59), or, using the energy-momentum-conservation relation \(p_1=p_2+q_1+q_2\),
to obtain the second equality.
Regarding the baryonic part, for the purpose of treating the one-loop diagrams we should consider to generalize some of the previous definitions. Instead of Eq. (2) we will now use
where \(X,Y\in \{\varLambda ,\varSigma ^0\}\), and
We can see that this definition of baryonic electromagnetic form factors is manifestly gauge invariant, which now holds also off-shell. On-shell it reduces to Eq. (2). In other words
The baryonic part can then be understood as a sum of two contributions
where we introduced
Looking at previous equations one can easily check that the baryonic part is gauge invariant
which already holds for the separate contributions in Eq. (65).
Having the conservation of the electromagnetic current (59) in mind, we can somewhat simplify the baryonic part \(B_{\mu \nu }\) of the matrix element. Exploiting the operator identity \(2AB=[A,B]+\{A,B\}\) we can write
and
Above, we used the Dirac equation and the fact that the anticommutator part \(\{A,B\}\) disappears due to Eq. (59). Effectively, we can thus take only
instead of the full form (63) inside of Eq. (66), or even more explicitly and using Eqs. (68)–(69), we write
We see, that the off-shell redefinition (63) of Eq. (2) does not affect, at the end of the day, the result (71) due to the conservation laws specified above.
The LO amplitude of the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) decay (17) can be written in the following way:
Its interference with the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) amplitude represented by the box diagrams can be obtained by separately treating the leptonic and baryonic parts. For the leptonic part we can write (summing over the final-state degrees of freedom)
where
Above we used \(\tilde{L}_{\alpha \beta }(q_1,q_2)\) for the first term of \(L_{\alpha \beta }\) as seen in Eq. (58). The validity of Eq. (73) can be technically checked exploiting
For the treatment of the loop integral, it will be convenient to explicitly extract the loop momentum in the following way:
The traces in the numerators are then simply defined as
Similarly, one of the two contributions (in the sense of Eq. (65) and defined in Eq. (71)) to the baryonic part can be written in the following form:
with the coefficients \(\beta _i^X\) and matrices \(T_{\mu \nu }^i\) listed in Appendix B. It is also convenient to define the trace
where we used the short-hand notation for a product of \(\gamma \)-matrices:
A contribution of the box diagrams to the NLO matrix element squared of the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) decay can then be expressed as the interference
It is apparent that the contribution of the four terms arising in the numerator of the integrand above can be reconstructed from a single common term
Here it is important to stress that the baryonic part is invariant under the \(q_1\leftrightarrow q_2\) exchange. The whole contribution then reads
The correction is then simply given as
If the form factors \(G_1^{XY}(q^2)\) and \(G_2^{XY}(q^2)\) appearing in the loop were considered to be independent of the transferred momentum, it might have been sufficient to take into account the expansion in the sense of “Appendix B”. However, it is convenient here to involve in the calculation the more sophisticated form factors discussed in “Appendix C”, which requires a different redistribution of the terms based on the different behavior of \(G_1^{XY}(q^2)\) and \(G_2^{XY}(q^2)\). The result for a particular model is then obtained by means of inserting the model-dependent linear combination
into the prescription (84). The building block \(\text {Tr}_{\sigma \tau }^{\text {BL}(ij),X}(M_{i,k}^2,M_{j,l}^2;q_1,q_2)\) is calculated in Appendix D. The pairs of coefficients \(\alpha _{i,k}\equiv \alpha _{i,k}(\delta m^2)\) and \(M_{i,k}\equiv M_{i,k}(\delta m^2)\) are, in the case of the model discussed in “Appendix C”, given by the following expansions:
and
The final result is then a lengthy linear combination of tensorial integrals defined in “Appendix E”. Note that for the constant form factors \(G_{\mathrm{E}}\) and \(G_{\mathrm{M}}\) we would put simply \(N_1=1\), \(\alpha _{1,1}=1\), \(M_{1,1}=M_V\) and \(N_2=2\), \(\alpha _{2,1}=1\), \(\alpha _{2,2}=-1\), \(M_{2,1}=M_V\), \(M_{2,2}=0\).
6 Correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex
In this section we would like to see if there are any significant electromagnetic corrections to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex. Due to its Lorentz structure we can write (cf. Eq. (1))
where \(\varGamma _\mu \) now incorporates all the contributions in the QED expansion with the LO contribution fixed as
At NLO, the correction is represented by four diagrams shown in Fig. 2g:
The building blocks \(\varGamma _\mu ^{XY}\) (with \(X,Y\in \{\varLambda ,\varSigma ^0\}\)) can then be written as (for brevity we drop the ‘\(+i\epsilon \)’ parts of the propagators)
where
The off-shell form factors \(G_\mu ^{XY}\) are defined in Eq. (63).
The magnetic-moment nature of the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) interaction (its structure together with the fact that \(G_1(l^2)\sim l^2\) when \(l^2\rightarrow 0\) and that \(G_2(l^2)\) comes with \(l^\rho \)) prevents the appearance of the IR divergence, which could arise for \(\{X,Y\}=\{\varSigma ^0,\varLambda \}\). On the other hand, due to the (loop-momenta-)power counting, \(\varGamma _\mu ^{\mathrm{NLO}}\) is divergent in the UV domain (for the contribution proportional to \(G_1^2(l^2)\)), if the constant form factors (see Eq. (C.54)) are used. That is why it is necessary to use a model with a stronger UV suppression, e.g. (C.55).
Considering the loop integral (92), within the above mentioned model (C.55), \(G_\alpha ^{Y\varLambda }(l)\) and \(G_\beta ^{\varSigma ^0X}(-l)\) combine together through their components \(G_i^{XY}((\pm l)^2)\) into the sixth power of the vector-meson propagator, which can be written as a fifth derivative with respect to the vector-meson mass:
This is particularly useful when one tries to obtain an analytic result. For the purely numerical purpose, the approach described at the end of Sect. 5 is more suitable.
Numerically, the correction arising from the diagrams from Fig. 2g is, as expected, negligible, and we show the results only for completeness. It is probably interesting to see how this correction directly affects the form factor parameters and how stable are these in view of extraction from the experiment with respect to the QED corrections to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex. We present the complete numerical results and also the analytic ones for the NLO corrections to \(G_2(q^2)\) as well as to \(G_1(q^2)\) in the limit \(M_\varSigma ={\hat{M}}=M_\varLambda \) (i.e. \(\rho =0\)) and for small \(q^2\) (it is sufficient to work with a linear expansion in \(q^2\)). Using the ratio
we find for the Pauli form factor
where the functions \({\hat{Q}}_{XY}^{(ij)}(\sigma ,\rho )\) can be decomposed in their real and imaginary parts separating the \(\sigma \) and \(\rho \) dependence in the following way:
The real parts can be further decomposed as
Note that for simplicity the terms vanishing after the derivatives are performed are not shown and that in our notation \(G_{\mathrm{M}}=G_{\mathrm{M}}^{\mathrm{LO}}=G_{\mathrm{M}}^{\varSigma ^0\varLambda }=G_{\mathrm{M}}^{\varLambda \varSigma ^0}\). For the polynomials \(P_k^{(ij)}(\sigma )=P_k^{(ji)}(\sigma )\) it holds:
In Eq. (96) we also neglected the contribution of the electric form factor \(G_{\mathrm{E}}(q^2)\) and terms like \(G_{\mathrm{M}}(0)\,q^2/{{\hat{M}}^2}\). The contributions to the imaginary part of \(G_2^{\mathrm{NLO}}(0)\) arise only for the combinations \(\{X,Y\}=\{\varLambda ,Y\}\) and, of course, need to be evaluated outside the \(\rho \rightarrow 0\) limit where they are non-vanishing. Since the expressions are particularly simple, we show them here:
Numerically, \(Q_{\varLambda \varLambda }^{(22)}(\rho )=-2.255\times 10^{-3}\) and \(Q_{\varLambda \varSigma ^0}^{(22)}(\rho )=-1.055\times 10^{-3}\). Other numerical results are compared in Table 2. We see how the numbers for respective contributions \({\hat{Q}}_{XY}^{(ij)}(\sigma ,\rho )\) oscillate around the common approximate analytic result \(Q^{(ij)}(\sigma )\).
The full result based on Eq. (96) and values from Table 1 numerically reads \({\text {Re}}{G_2^{\mathrm{NLO}}(q^2)}=\frac{\alpha }{\pi }(-0.36(16)-0.95(44)\frac{q^2}{\text {GeV}^2})\). This is negligible in the global context, but is of the same order as Schwinger’s correction to the magnetic moment of the electron [45].
Considering the numerical values, \(\kappa _\varLambda \approx -\kappa _{\varSigma ^0}\) and \(\langle r_{\mathrm{M}}^2\rangle _{\varSigma ^0}\approx \langle r_{\mathrm{M}}^2\rangle _\varLambda \); cf. Table 1. Consequently, in the model (C.55), \(c_2^{\varSigma ^0\varSigma ^0}\approx -c_2^{\varLambda \varLambda }\) and \(c_1^{\varLambda \varLambda }\approx -c_1^{\varSigma ^0\varSigma ^0}\). Also, more generally and less precisely, \(c_1\approx -c_2\). These considerations lead to the fact that Eq. (96) can be put into a form in which the form-factor parameters decouple:
Note that since \(|Q^{(ij)}(\sigma )|\ll |Q^{(ii)}(\sigma )|,\,i\ne j\) (see Table 2) the second sum in Eq. (104) reduces simply to \(Q^{(11)}(\sigma )+Q^{(22)}(\sigma )\). Finally, note that \(Q^{(11)}(\sigma )\) has a nonzero limit as \(\sigma \rightarrow 0\) (coming from the coefficient of the linear term of \(P_2^{11}(\sigma )\) times \((-3!)/5!\)): \(Q^{(11)}(0)=-3/80=-0.0375\). From this fact one could infer that the contribution from \(Q^{(11)}(\sigma )\) will be the most important one, as one can see indeed in Table 2.
Along similar lines, one can calculate the corrections to the Dirac form factor. In this case, the electric form factor should not be neglected from the beginning, since the contribution proportional to it is possibly of a similar size as the one stemming from the magnetic form factor. We find
with \(I\in \{\text {E},\text {M}\}\),
and, analogically to Eq. (97),
The real parts \(Q_I^{(ij)}(\sigma )\) can be decomposed in terms of polynomials \(P_{I,k}^{(ij)}(\sigma )=P_{I,k}^{(ji)}(\sigma )\) in the same way as it is shown in Eq. (98), with (for brevity we drop denoting explicitly the \(\sigma \) dependence of the polynomials)
Once more, for completeness, we also show the analytic forms of the contributions to the imaginary part of \(G_1^{\mathrm{NLO}}(q^2)\):
Numerically, \(Q_{\mathrm{E},\varLambda \varLambda }^{(22)}(\rho )=6.548\times 10^{-3}\), \(Q_{\mathrm{M},\varLambda \varLambda }^{(22)}(\rho )=2.325\times 10^{-3}\), \(Q_{\mathrm{E},\varLambda \varSigma ^0}^{(22)}(\rho )=3.161\times 10^{-3}\) and \(Q_{\mathrm{M},\varLambda \varSigma ^0}^{(22)}(\rho )=0.8489\times 10^{-3}\). Other numerical results are compared in Table 3. For the full correction based on Eq. (105) and values from Table 1 we find \({\text {Re}}G_1^{\mathrm{NLO}}(q^2)=\frac{\alpha }{\pi }0.040(38)\frac{q^2}{\text {GeV}^2}\).
Similarly as we derived Eq. (104), we can find an approximate formula for \({\text {Re}}G_1^{\mathrm{NLO}}(q^2)\), which is obtained from Eq. (104) using the substitution \(Q^{(ij)}(\sigma )\rightarrow Q_{\mathrm{M}}^{(ij)}(\sigma )\,q^2/(4{\hat{M}}^2)\).
Let us now see how the corrections to the Dirac and Pauli form factors translate into the NLO corrections \(\varDelta X\equiv X^{\mathrm{NLO}}\) to the parameters \(X^{\mathrm{LO}}\) of the electric and magnetic form factors in the linear expansions of Eq. (19). We find
with \(G_{\mathrm{M}}^{\mathrm{NLO}}(q^2)=G_1^{\mathrm{NLO}}(q^2)+G_2^{\mathrm{NLO}}(q^2)\). Note that strictly speaking, in our notation, all the parameters here could wear the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \) superscripts. Numerically, the relative corrections \(\delta _X\equiv {\text {Re}}\varDelta X/X\) are negligible: based on values from Table 1, \(\delta _{\kappa }=-0.042(19)\,\%\), \(\delta _{\langle r_{\mathrm{E}}^2\rangle }=-(0.050_{-27}^{+61})\,\%\) and \(\delta _{\langle r_{\mathrm{M}}^2\rangle }=0.0071_{-26}^{+40}\,\%\); the numerical cancellations among the terms in Eq. (121) are responsible for the smallness of the last correction. Finally, the correction to the differential decay width takes the form
Above, \(\overline{|{\mathscr {M}}_G^{\mathrm{LO}}(x,y)|^2}\) was defined in Eq. (18) and \(\overline{|{\mathscr {M}}_G^{\mathrm{LO}+\mathrm{NLO}}(x,y)|^2}\) is its equivalent with form factors taken up to NLO in the view of this section (with the parameters corrected according to Eqs. (119)–(121)). Up to the linear order in x, there is no y-dependence. On top of that, the x-dependence is very weak due to the numerical insignificance of the linear term (\(\frac{2}{6}\varDelta _M^2{\text {Re}}\varDelta \langle r_{\mathrm{M}}^2\rangle \sim 10^{-6}\)) within the kinematically allowed region. Consequently, \(\delta _{\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma }^{\mathrm{virt}}(x,y)\simeq \delta _{\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma }^{\mathrm{virt}}\simeq 2\delta _\kappa =-0.084(38)\,\%\). The total correction due to the QED NLO effects on the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex thus does not effect the measurement of the slope parameters (the electric and magnetic radii) and has only a tiny effect on the magnetic moment \(\kappa \) and thereupon on the decay rate.
7 Results and discussion
With all the calculations at hand, we can now answer the following questions:
- 1.
Suppose one measures the differential decay width for \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow (\varLambda e^+e^- +\,\)arbitrary many photons). How large are the radiative corrections which relate this measurement to the QED leading-order calculation for \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\)? In particular, which aspects of the hadronic transition form factors can be extracted from such measurements and how can they be extracted?
- 2.
Can one safely neglect those radiative corrections that involve other hadronic form factors, i.e. the diagrams depicted in Fig. 2e–g?
- 3.
What are the differences between the calculations presented here and the ones in Ref. [26]?
We first provide a quick overview of the first two questions and then discuss the results in detail. Finally we will come back to the third question.
The short answer to the second question is yes. To answer the first question comprehensively, we distinguish the twofold differential, one-fold differential and integrated decay rate. Following the definitions of Eq. (25) we provide the relative changes for the differential distributions. The corresponding results are shown in Table 4 and Fig. 3, respectively.
Concerning the integrated width for the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) decay, it can be meaningful to normalize to the LO integrated decay width or to the rate of the real-photon decay of \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma \). In the latter case one can simplify and systemize the result by neglecting the electric transition form factor and linearizing the magnetic one according to the discussion around Eq. (19). Then the ratio
is independent of \(G_{\mathrm{M}}(0)\) and depends only on one hadronic quantity, the magnetic transition radius. Consequently, one can write
with
Results are provided in Table 5. After this brief summary we turn to the details.
In the previous sections, we discussed the main parts of the radiative corrections as we referred to them in Eq. (26), i.e. the virtual corrections in Sect. 3 together with the related correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex in Sect. 6, the bremsstrahlung from the lepton legs evaluated beyond the soft-photon approximation in Sect. 4 and the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) correction in Sect. 5. In order to get the final correction, one then simply sums over the partial results found to be non-negligible: Eqs. (40) and (54). Let us now comment on these contributions in detail.
Considering the virtual corrections related to the photon and lepton lines and discussed in Sect. 3, the correction to the one-fold differential decay width \(\delta ^{\mathrm{virt}}(x)\) from Eq. (41) is model-independent. To a very large extent this is also true for the correction to the twofold differential decay width \(\delta ^{\mathrm{virt}}(x,y)\) from Eq. (40): Firstly, the electric form factor can be safely neglected here, which makes the magnetic part cancel out. Secondly, the numerical contribution of the \(F_2^{\mathrm{NLO}}(q^2)\) part (also containing the model dependence) is negligible compared to the rest of the expression. The form factor \(\overline{F_1^{\mathrm{NLO}}}(\varDelta _M^2x)\) then contains the IR-divergent piece which cancels with the corresponding term stemming from the bremsstrahlung contribution, as shown at the end of Sect. 4.
Similarly, the bremsstrahlung contribution (54) discussed in Sect. 4 can be considered to be model-independent. Firstly, it is evident that the divergent part of the bremsstrahlung matrix element squared (56) leads to the model-independent correction; besides, this is governed by gauge invariance. Secondly, after the electric form factor is neglected, the expansion (45) allows for the cancellation of the magnetic form factor with the one appearing in the LO expression, leaving only terms dependent on its slope value in the final result for \(\delta ^{\mathrm{BS}}(x,y)\). All the necessary definitions are then listed in “Appendix A”.
Finally, for the model-dependent \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution (85), as presented in Sect. 5, we used the model discussed in “Appendix C”. Let us again stress at this point that we used a rather general approach applicable to a wide family of rational models. The final result within a particular model can then be related to an appropriate linear combination (86) of the building blocks (D.72) defined in “Appendix D”. We observe, which is soothing, that different models would lead to compatible values in the numerical results: We explicitly checked this using the two models (C.54) and (C.55) discussed in “Appendix C”. The numerical results for the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) correction \(\delta ^{1\gamma \text {IR}}(x,y)\) within the model (C.55) and using the values from Table 1 are shown in Table 6. We can see that this correction is negligible and would only make cosmetic changes if included in Table 4; note the overall relative factor of 0.01 between the values presented in Tables 4 and 6. Moreover, what is important is the antisymmetric nature of this correction with respect to the electron–positron exchange, i.e. with respect to the sign change of the kinematic variable y. This means that the correction \(\delta ^{1\gamma \text {IR}}(x)\) is necessarily vanishing and has thus no effect on the measurement of the form-factor slope or the total decay rate. Note that this is also consistent with the fact that the interference of the \(\delta ^{1\gamma \text {IR}}(x)\) diagrams (Fig. 2e, f) with the LO diagram from Fig. 1 gives a contribution to the imaginary part of a two-loop diagram vanishing due to Furry’s theorem; see also Ref. [46]. Therefore, after the phase-space integral is performed, this interference should indeed vanish accordingly.
For sample values of x and y, the total radiative correction \(\delta (x,y)\) is evaluated in Table 4. The numbers here stem from the virtual and bremsstrahlung correction discussed in Sects. 3 and 4, respectively. Note that the correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex \(\delta _{\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma }^{\mathrm{virt}}(x,y)\) is not included here and will be discussed further. The total radiative correction to the one-fold differential decay width \(\delta (x)\) is shown in Fig. 3. While the contribution of the virtual corrections is negative nearly throughout the whole region of electron–positron invariant mass, the bremsstrahlung is mainly positive (up to the region \(x\gtrsim 0.75\)). The overall correction is then above zero only for \(x\lesssim 0.25\), which is enough to make the correction to the decay rate positive: \(\delta =0.896\); see also Table 5. This is caused by the fact that the biggest contribution to the rate \(\varGamma (\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-)\) comes from the small-x region of \({\mathrm{d}}\varGamma (x)/{\mathrm{d}}x\).
Integrating the differential decay width over the whole Dalitz plot and normalizing to the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma \) decay rate, we can obtain the ratio (123). Neglecting the effects of the electric form factor, we can write the result in terms of the linear expansion (124). At LO, taking into account the smallness of parameters \(\rho \) and \(\nu ^2\), one can obtain simple analytic expressions which read
Note that the terms linear in \(\rho \) and \(\nu ^2\) are numerically insignificant given the precision we use in Table 5. Hence we can simply write
Numerically, at NLO and taking into account \(\delta ^{\mathrm{virt}}\) and \(\delta ^{\mathrm{BS}}\) (i.e. consistently with corrections from Table 4 or Fig. 3) reveals \(R =5.544(2)\times 10^{-3}\). Neglecting the effects of the electric form factor, we can again express the result in terms of the linear expansion in a. This is consistent with Ref. [26] and allows us to isolate the form-factor effects:
This should be – and perfectly is – consistent with the NLO result for the rate given in Ref. [26], which was obtained using a different method:
We recall that a is related to the slope of the magnetic form factor as \(G_{\mathrm{M}}(\varDelta _M^2x)=G_{\mathrm{M}}(0)(1+ax)\) or in other words, we have the relation (125). On top of that, it is interesting to see how the respective corrections at NLO contribute to this result for R. This is shown in Table 5. Note that numerically \(a=0.0183(26)\).
The situation changes only slightly if we take into account the QED corrections to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex. As discussed at the end of Sect. 6, its most significant contribution is related to the correction to the magnetic moment: \(\delta _{\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma }^{\mathrm{virt}}\simeq 2\delta _\kappa =-0.084(38)\,\%\). This might be of a small effect when calculating the decay widths of the Dalitz decay \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) or of the radiative decay \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma \). In this case, the previously specified correction can be used together with a theoretical prediction for the purely hadronic form-factor parameters. Building the ratio R or, equivalently, extracting the “measured” magnetic moment from the measurement of \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma \) and using it in \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\) requires no need for this correction. This is only necessary if one would like to disentangle the hadronic from the QED effects based on a future high-precision measurement. For the measurement of the magnetic-form-factor slope, on the other hand, it is important to know how much the corrections to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex affect the magnetic radius. We find \(\delta _{\langle r_{\mathrm{M}}^2\rangle }=0.0071_{-26}^{+40}\,\%\), and thus they are very tiny. Note that due to \(\delta _{\langle r_{\mathrm{M}}^2\rangle }\) the value for the ratio R is modified only negligibly via its linear dependence on the corrected slope a.
Now, we also should take into account that we decided to completely neglect the contribution of the bremsstrahlung related to the baryon legs. Moreover, we can also consider the unknown next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) QED correction as a source of additional uncertainty to our calculation. After inspecting Table 5, we see that even though the overall NLO correction \(\delta \) is below \(1\,\%\), the contribution of \(\text {BS}|_{\mathrm{D}}\) itself is significantly bigger. Suppose we assume that the NNLO correction could be of the same size with respect to NLO as \(\delta ^{\text {BS}|_{\mathrm{D}}}\) is as compared to LO. This means \(\approx 2.5\,\%\), and \(\approx 5\,\%\) for the slope. We take the squares of these relative uncertainties to conservatively estimate an upper bound for the uncertainty of our final result:
Here, the uncertainty based on neglecting the higher-order calculations is bigger than the correction to the slope stemming from the QED corrections to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex.
From the requirement that the branching ratios should sum up to 1,
our knowledge of R can be translated to the respective branching ratios. We follow Ref. [47] and assume \({\mathscr {B}}(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma \gamma )\approx 10^{-7}\). Then this part is irrelevant. In view of our estimate on the uncertainty of R, we have
This becomes \({\mathscr {B}}(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma ){=}[99.4498(3)-0.0621(2)a]\%\), \({\mathscr {B}}(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-)=[0.5502(3)+0.0621(2)a]\%\). Taking into account the value for the magnetic radius from Table 1, \({\mathscr {B}}(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma )=99.4486(5)\%\), \({\mathscr {B}}(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-)=0.5514(5)\%\). Being even more conservative, let us assume 100% uncertainty on the theoretical prediction of the magnetic radius of the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma \) transition and consequently \(a=0.02(2)\). We find \({\mathscr {B}}(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma )=99.449(2)\%\), \({\mathscr {B}}(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-)=0.551(2)\%\). These results are very reliable: They are dominated by the QED calculation, assuming little about the size of the magnetic-form-factor slope, and can be further improved by future experimental knowledge of this parameter.
We now find ourselves in a position to summarize the content of this paper, emphasizing the differences with respect to Ref. [26]. That work was devoted to calculating both the corrections to the Dalitz plot and the virtual-photon spectrum, i.e. to the twofold and onefold differential decay widths, respectively, as well as to the decay rate.
In the former case, the soft-photon approximation was used together with an energy cut-off, which then comes in as a parameter when integrating over the degrees of freedom of the bremsstrahlung photon. The presented expression is valid only for \(x\gg \nu ^2\). It covers neither the hard-photon corrections nor the low-x soft-photon corrections. As pointed out by the authors of Ref. [26], due to this fact the resulting corrections were negative all over the Dalitz plot, in contrast to the fact that the total correction to the decay rate was found to be positive. Indeed, the low-x region is most important to correctly obtain the correction to the decay rate after the integral is performed. In contrast, our calculation is valid over the whole Dalitz plot and includes the hard-photon corrections, simply because we performed the exact calculation without putting any extra limits on the photon energies. Such inclusive radiative corrections are to be used in experiments when photons in the final state are ignored completely.
On the other hand, the correction to the decay rate obtained in Ref. [26] contains the hard-photon corrections and that is why, when the corrections found in our work are integrated over the Dalitz plot, our result (129) is consistent with Eq. (130). This suits us as a neat cross-check of our calculation; the slight difference is caused by distinct inputs for masses and fine-structure constant. Note that we also use muon loops as part of the virtual corrections and sum the whole geometric series of the vacuum-polarization insertions, though these effects tend to cancel each other to a very large extent.
To summarize, the (numerically) most significant difference between the previous work [26] and our present calculation is stemming from the way how the bremsstrahlung correction is treated in the case of the corrections to the differential decay width. Yet, a second difference is that we also decided to explicitly calculate the contributions of additional loop diagrams which were omitted in Ref. [26]: the two-photon-exchange (\(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\)) contribution and the correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex. What we found by our explicit calculations can be split up into general findings and numerical results. In Ref. [26] it was claimed that the radiative correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex does not influence, by its nature, a determination of the slope of the form factor. In contrast, we find that, in principle, both the normalization of the decay and the form factor slope (i.e. the radius) are influenced. Numerically, however, as one can only see after the calculation is performed, all the effects are found to be very small. Both the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \)-vertex correction and the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution can thus be neglected in the evaluation of the NLO radiative corrections.
Finally, from Fig. 3 we can estimate the size of the correction to the (magnetic) form-factor slope. By taking half of the slope of the curve in the low-x region, however farther from the threshold:
with \(\nu ^2\ll x_0\ll 1\). Since \(\frac{1}{2}\frac{{\mathrm{d}}\delta (x)}{{\mathrm{d}}x}\big |_{x=x_0}\approx -3.5\,\%\), this correction is bigger than the estimate on a itself (\(a\approx 1.8(3)\,\%\)). What would this imply if one tried to extract a magnetic radius from experiment without considering the radiative corrections explicitly? One would obtain a measured value of \(a_{(+\mathrm{QED})}\) that implicitly contains the QED radiative corrections. Thus one should then subtract from the measured value \(a_{(+\mathrm{QED})}\) the correction \(\varDelta a\) in order to get an estimate on the hadronic parameter a, i.e. on the magnetic radius on account of Eq. (125). With the above assumed values, one would thus expect the “measured” radius to be negative, in case the radiative corrections would not be used explicitly in the analysis: \(\langle r_{\mathrm{M}}^2\rangle _{(+\mathrm{QED})}=\langle r_{\mathrm{M}}^2\rangle +\frac{6}{\varDelta _M^2}\varDelta a\), with \(\frac{6}{\varDelta _M^2}\varDelta a\approx -35\,\text {Ge V}^{-2}\).
Data Availability Statement
This manuscript has no associated data or the data will not be deposited. [Authors’ comment: There are no other data associated with the manuscript.]
Notes
Using \(q=q_1+q_2\), this notation is consistent with
$$\begin{aligned} F^\mu (q_1,q_2)\equiv \gamma ^\mu \big [F_1\big (q^2\big )+F_2\big (q^2\big )\big ] -\frac{1}{2m}(q_1-q_2)^\mu F_2\big (q^2\big ). \end{aligned}$$Note that this definition of \(\rho \) is different from the one used in Ref. [26].
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Acknowledgements
We want to thank P. Sánchez Puertas for bringing Ref. [46] to our attention. This work has been supported in part by Grants nos. FPA2017-84445-P and SEV-2014-0398 (AEI/ERDF, EU) and by PROMETEO/2017/053 (GV).
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Appendices
Appendix A: Bremsstrahlung: basic integrals
For the purpose of this appendix, it is useful to define the following function:
It is also convenient to write explicitly the energies of the leptons in the Lambda–\(\gamma \) CMS in the invariant form,
see the text after Eq. (55) for the relation between the dimensionless variables x and y and the variables s and \(\varDelta _m^2\). The first set of basic integrals can be written as
For the other set, it is useful to introduce additional variables,
and their following combinations:
The remaining basic integrals are then given as
and
with \(X\in \{1,A,A^2\}\). In the previous expressions, whenever \(\tilde{s}\) is not substituted, in the end we put \(\tilde{s}\rightarrow s\). In the limit \(M_\varLambda \rightarrow 0\) (and consequently \({\tilde{\omega }}\rightarrow \omega \)) and \(M_\varSigma \rightarrow M_{\pi ^0}\), the results from Ref. [32] are recovered. Note that \(J\big [\frac{1}{A^2E}\big ]\), \(J\big [\frac{1}{A^2(E-4{\hat{M}}^2)}\big ]\) and \(J\big [\frac{1}{A^2E^2}\big ]\) contain divergent parts \(\frac{1}{s}J\big [\frac{1}{A^2}\big ]\), \(\frac{1}{s-4{\hat{M}}^2}J\big [\frac{1}{A^2}\big ]\) and \(\frac{1}{s^2}J\big [\frac{1}{A^2}\big ]\), respectively: For instance, in Eq. (A.25), \(\frac{\tilde{\omega }}{\omega }\frac{4}{w_0}=J\big [\frac{1}{A^2}\big ]\) and \(\left( \frac{2\tau _2}{\varsigma }-\frac{1}{s}\right) J\big [\frac{1}{A^2}\big ]\) then leads to a convergent integral. Needless to mention, the divergences have to be subtracted before the numerical integration is performed and treated separately: The corresponding divergent integrals have to be integrated over \(s_\gamma \) analytically. The results can be written in a simple form:
where
and with
To list the last missing basic integrals, we define the following variables:
and functions:
where \(Q_m(\xi )\) are the Legendre functions of second kind, with \(Q_0(\xi )\) redefined for \(\xi >1\):
The integrals then read
Appendix B: \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution: the baryonic part
For further convenience, let us define the product of two form factors appearing in the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) amplitude (see Eq. (71)):
then the coefficients and matrices in Eq. (79) take the form
where we used for simplicity the short-hand notation (81) for a product of \(\gamma \)-matrices. We also extracted the loop momenta out of the expressions. Now, due to the conservation law of the electromagnetic current (59), the loop momenta with the Lorentz indices \(\mu \) and \(\nu \) can be substituted in the following manner:
Loop momenta carrying index \(\rho \) then enter the tensorial one-loop integrals defined in “Appendix E”.
Appendix C: A model for the \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda \gamma \) transition form factor
Having a particular model for the form factors is essential in the case of the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution and the correction to the \(\varSigma ^0\varLambda \gamma \) vertex. There the form factors enter loop integrals and therefore a low-energy expansion like in Eq. (19) is insufficient.
In the context of the whole box diagram in the case of the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution, the terms proportional to \(G_2(q^2)\) are potentially responsible for the UV-divergent behavior due to the loop-momenta-power counting; cf. Eq. (71). Following Eq. (12) we get
and we see that for \(q^2\rightarrow \infty \) and constant \(G_{\mathrm{E}}^{XY}(q^2)\) and \(G_{\mathrm{M}}^{XY}(q^2)\), \(G_1^{XY}(q^2)\simeq G_{\mathrm{M}}^{XY}(q^2)\) and \(|G_2^{XY}(q^2)|\sim 1/q^2\). Hence, regarding the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution, the UV convergence is achieved even in this simplest case when constant form factors are assumed. Taking \(G_{\mathrm{E}}^{XY}(q^2)=G_{\mathrm{E}}^{XY}(0)=0\) and \(G_{\mathrm{M}}^{XY}(q^2)=G_{\mathrm{M}}^{XY}(0)=\kappa ^{XY}\), one arrives at
It could be then sufficient to show that if one uses this simple prescription, then the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution is negligible. Such a conclusion should then carry over to the cases of more sophisticated models.
To explore also a second possibility, we use an ansatz exhibiting a stronger suppression in the UV region of the form
which satisfies the Brodsky–Lepage scaling rules [48, 49] and – for nontrivial \(c_1^{XY}\) and \(c_2^{XY}\) – the conditions \(G_{\mathrm{E}}^{XY}(0)=0\) and \(G_{\mathrm{M}}^{XY}(0)=\kappa ^{XY}\). After inserting these expressions in Eq. (12) we find \(c_2^{XY}=-\kappa ^{XY}\) and
depending on if we match the linear expansions in \(q^2\) to \(G_{\mathrm{E}}^{XY}(q^2)\) or \(G_{\mathrm{M}}^{XY}(q^2)\); see Eq. (19). In the present work we take \(c_1^{XY}\equiv c_{1,\text {M}}^{XY}\).
Appendix D: Loop structure in the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution
In this appendix we write the contribution of the box diagram to the matrix element squared at NLO in terms of tensorial one-loop integrals, taking into account the model introduced in “Appendix C”. The terms having a nontrivial loop-momentum dependence, listed by the source, are the leptonic part contributing with
the baryonic part giving
photon propagators
and form factors
Note that terms in curly brackets appear only in part of the terms. This means we have tensorial integrals of the triangle (C) and box (D) type. The rank of these tensors ranges up to 2.
In what follows, we want to regroup the terms listed in Appendix B based on \(g_{ij}^X\) and associate them with the tensorial integrals of a given type. It is convenient to introduce the loop-momenta-independent traces
which then combine (so far with general masses \(M_1\) and \(M_2\)) with the box integrals as
Similarly, let us define
to gain the triangle-type contributions arising due to the cancellation of one of the denominators, as shown in (D.59). The overall generic sum of the products of the tensorial loop integrals and traces of the baryonic part is then
A subsequent contraction with the leptonic part (in terms of Eq. (76)) then yields
which serves as the desired building block.
Appendix E: Tensorial one-loop integrals
We use the tensorial one-loop integrals as defined below. In what follows we use for Feynman denominators \(D_0\equiv [l^2-m_0^2+i\epsilon ]\) and \(D_i\equiv D(p_i,m_i^2)\equiv [(l-p_i)^2-m_i^2+i\epsilon ]\) for \(i\ge 1\).
During the calculation of the \(1\gamma \hbox {IR}\) contribution stemming from the box diagrams, it is only necessary to take into account the integrals \(C_{\kappa ..\rho }(M_{(X\varLambda )}^2,M_{(\varSigma ^0X)}^2)\) and \(D_{\kappa ..\rho }^X(M_{(X\varLambda )}^2,M_{(\varSigma ^0X)}^2)\) defined as
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Husek, T., Leupold, S. Radiative corrections for the decay \(\varSigma ^0\rightarrow \varLambda e^+e^-\). Eur. Phys. J. C 80, 218 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-7710-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1140/epjc/s10052-020-7710-7