52 research outputs found
Where are the missing members of the baryon antidecuplet?
We analyze what consequences has the observation of exotic pentaquark baryons
on the location of the non-exotic baryons belonging to the antidecuplet. We
suggest that there must be a new nucleon state at 1650-1690 MeV and a new Sigma
baryon at 1760-1810 MeV.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. Missing reference adde
The Evidence for a Pentaquark Signal and Kinematic Reflections
Several recent experiments have reported evidence for a narrow baryon
resonance with positive strangeness () at a mass of 1.54 GeV/.
Baryons with cannot be conventional states and the reports have
thus generated much theoretical speculation about the nature of possible
baryons, including a 5-quark, or pentaquark, interpretation. We show that
narrow enhancements in the effective mass spectrum can be generated as
kinematic reflections resulting from the decay of mesons, such as the
, the and the .Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Aspects of radiative K^+_e3 decays
We re-investigate the radiative charged kaon decay K+- --> pi0 e+- nu_e gamma
in chiral perturbation theory, merging the chiral expansion with Low's theorem.
We thoroughly analyze the precision of the predicted branching ratio relative
to the non-radiative decay channel. Structure dependent terms and their impact
on differential decay distributions are investigated in detail, and the
possibility to see effects of the chiral anomaly in this decay channel is
emphasized.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Exotic baryon multiplets at large number of colours
We generalize the usual octet, decuplet and exotic antidecuplet and higher
baryon multiplets to any number of colours Nc. We show that the multiplets fall
into a sequence of bands with O(1/Nc) splittings inside the band and
O(1)splittings between the bands characterized by "exoticness", that is the
number of extra quark-antiquark pairs needed to compose the multiplet. Each
time one adds a pair the baryon mass is increased by the same constant which
can be interpreted as a mass of a quark-antiquark pair. At the same time, we
prove that masses of exotic rotational multiplets are reliably determined at
large Nc from collective quantization of chiral solitons.Comment: 13 p., 5 figs. New section and references adde
The Chiral Soliton Model for Arbitrary Colors and Flavors
The quantum numbers of the chiral soliton are derived for an arbitrary number
of colors and flavors
Spectrum of the Y=2 Pentaquarks
By assuming a mass formula for the spectrum of the Y=2 pentaquarks, where the
chromo-magnetic interaction plays a main role, and identifying the lightest
state with the Theta^+(1540), we predict a spectrum in good agreement with the
few I=0 and I=1 candidates proposed in the past.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, LaTe
Some (further) Comments on the Theta(1540) Pentaquark
Additional broader I=0 states in the KN channel near (1540) are
expected in many models, making the absence of any signature in the
K-deuteron scattering data even more puzzling.
In an ideal "three-body" picture the is viewed as two compact
ud(1)ud(2) color diquarks and an quark. A "QCD-type"
inequality involving , the mass of the L=1 excitation and that of a new I=0 tetraquark vector meson then follows.
The inequality suggests a very light new vector meson, and is violated.
We note that "associated production" of the pentaquark with another
quadriquark or anti-pentaquark may be favored. This along with some estimates
of the actual production cross sections suggest that the can be found
in BaBar or Belle e-e colliders.Comment: 6 page
Pion-Muon Asymmetry Revisited
Long ago an unexpected and unexplainable phenomena was observed. The
distribution of muons from positive pion decay at rest was anisotropic with an
excess in the backward direction relative to the direction of the proton beam
from which the pions were created. Although this effect was observed by several
different groups with pions produced by different means, the result was not
accepted by the physics community, because it is in direct conflict with a
large set of other experiments indicating that the pion is a pseudoscalar
particle. It is possible to satisfy both sets of experiments if helicity-zero
vector particles exist and the pion is such a particle. Helicity-zero vector
particles have direction but no net spin. For the neutral pion to be a vector
particle requires an additional modification to conventional theory as
discussed herein. An experiment is proposed which can prove that the asymmetry
in the distribution of muons from pion decay is a genuine physical effect
because the asymmetry can be modified in a controllable manner. A positive
result will also prove that the pion is NOT a pseudoscalar particle.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Pentaquark as Kaon-Nucleon Resonance
Several recent experiments have reported evidence for a narrow feature in the
K(+)-neutron system, an apparent resonant state ~ 100 MeV above threshold and
with a width < 25 MeV. This state has been labelled as Theta(+) (previously as
Z(*)), and because of the implied inclusion of a anti-strange quark, is
referred to as a pentaquark, that is, five quarks within a single bag. We
present an alternative explanation for such a structure, as a higher angular
momentum resonance in the isospin zero K(+) -N system. One might call this an
exit channel or a molecular resonance. In a non-relativistic potential model we
find a possible candidate for the kaon-nucleon system with relative angular
momentum L=3, while L=1 and 2 states possess centrifugal barriers too low to
confine the kaon and nucleon in a narrow state at an energy so high above
threshold. A rather strong state-dependence in the potential is essential,
however, for eliminating an observable L=2 resonance at lower energies.Comment: 4 page
Today's View on Strangeness
There are several different experimental indications, such as the
pion-nucleon sigma term and polarized deep-inelastic scattering, which suggest
that the nucleon wave function contains a hidden s bar s component. This is
expected in chiral soliton models, which also predicted the existence of new
exotic baryons that may recently have been observed. Another hint of hidden
strangeness in the nucleon is provided by copious phi production in various N
bar N annihilation channels, which may be due to evasions of the
Okubo-Zweig-Iizuka rule. One way to probe the possible polarization of hidden s
bar s pairs in the nucleon may be via Lambda polarization in deep-inelastic
scattering.Comment: 8 pages LaTeX, 10 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of the
International Conference on Parity Violation and Hadronic Structure,
Grenoble, June 200
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