
Prior analysis of vector meson decay widths revealed systematic suppression patterns ($\Gamma/m \propto m^{-3.7}$) suggesting that quark compactness creates effective decay impedance. Extending this phenomenology to the baryon sector, we predicted that beauty baryons—possessing the heaviest stable quarks with Compton wavelengths $\sim 0.05$ fm—should exhibit CP asymmetries at the 2-3% level, significantly larger than charm systems. The recent LHCb observation of $A_{CP} = (2.45 \pm 0.46 \pm 0.10)\%$ in $\Lambda_b^0$ decays provides striking confirmation of this mass-hierarchy prediction. We present specific falsifiable predictions for $\Xi_b$ and $\Omega_b$ systems and predict significantly smaller asymmetries ($\sim 0.1-0.2\%$) in charm baryons based on the same power-law scaling. These predictions are distinguishable from standard CKM phenomenology and testable with current LHCb Run 3 and Belle II data. While Standard Model mechanisms can accommodate individual results, the geometric perspective offers complementary insight into why CP asymmetries follow a mass-dependent hierarchy.
LHCb, CP violation, geometric impedance, baryon asymmetry, phenomenology, particle physics, modified gravity, beauty baryons, vacuum chirality
LHCb, CP violation, geometric impedance, baryon asymmetry, phenomenology, particle physics, modified gravity, beauty baryons, vacuum chirality
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