Higher-order weak interaction decays

MaximumTaco
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Considering the decay of certain exotic mesons, such as the following:

B^{+} --> D^{0} \pi^{+}

Apparently the decay proceeds via a weak interaction where multiple W boson exchanges occur.

I was trying to nut out how this actually occurs, and draw up a sensible Feynman diagram representation of the process, but i can't quite nut it out.

Recall that the B+ meson is comprised of a u and anti-b quark, and the D0 is a c and anti-up, and the Pi+ is an up and anti-down, FYR.

Could someone offer me any pointers as to how such decay process usually work? First-order weak process such as beta decay are pretty straightforward, but this idea seems a bit more tricky.
 
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bbar-->cbar + W^+.
W^+--> u + dbar.
That u + cbar--> D^0.
The incoming u + dbar--> pi^+.
 
But doesn't the D^0 meson contain a c, not a cbar ?
 
Yes. You fooled me with your first equation. It should be
B^+--D^0bar+pi^+.
If you really meant D^0, then the diagram would be a mess and the decay never seen unless you have some completely new theory.
 
Could you tell me how the decay could proceed anyway, even though it might never occur in practice?
 
The final state you want, D_0 + pi^+ has the quarks [c ubar] and
[u dbar]. You could get that from [u bbar] by the steps:
1. bbar -->W^+ + cbar.
2. W^+ -->[c] + [dbar].
3. cbar --> W^- + dbar.
4. W^- + u --> d.
5. dbar +d --> [ubar] + (via strong intgeraction).
This leaves you with the right quarks for D_0 + pi^+.
The decay is doubly weak, so I cannot see how it could be observed.
 
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