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This thesis presents a search for violation in the Cabibbo-suppressed decay mode using an amplitude analysis. New sources of violation have to be discovered in order to explain the matter-antimatter imbalance observed in the universe today. violation has not been observed in charm decays up to now, where it is predicted by the Standard Model to be very small. This provides a clean environment to look for physics beyond the Standard Model, which could enhance violation in charm decays with, for example, the contribution of new particles entering through loop diagrams.
This analysis is performed with a sample of proton-proton collisions recorded by LHCb during 2011 and 2012 at centre-of-mass energies of 7 and 8 TeV, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 3.0 fb. LHCb is one of the four main experiments at CERN's Large Hadron Collider in Geneva in Switzerland. It is specialised in the study of violation in - and -hadron decays.
The candidates are selected from semileptonic -hadron decays into final states. More than 160000 signal decays are studied, resulting in the most precise amplitude model of this decay to date. This amplitude model, built assuming conservation, is used to perform a search for violation. The result is compatible with no violation, with a sensitivity ranging from 1% to 15% on each amplitude. This result is compatible with the Standard Model predictions and is ruling out any large contribution from New Physics processes in the decay mode.
The violation measurements presented here are statistically limited and will benefit from the addition of the Run 2 sample collected between 2015 and 2018 at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV, which is expected to correspond to an integrated luminosity of fb. Beyond the additional luminosity, the increase in energy as well as various tracking and trigger improvements make this dataset much more powerful than the Run 1 sample. This thesis also presents one of the improvements made for Run 2, which is a more accurate description of the magnetic field of the dipole magnet through the development of a new field map.