5,045 research outputs found

    Electroweak production of hybrid mesons in a Flux-Tube simulation of Lattice QCD

    Full text link
    We make the first calculation of the electroweak couplings of hybrid mesons to conventional mesons appropriate to photoproduction and to the decays of BB or DD mesons. E1E1 amplitudes are found to be large and may contribute in charge exchange γp→nH+\gamma p \to n H^+ allowing production of (amongst others) the charged 1−+1^{-+} exotic hybrid off a2a_2 exchange. Axial hybrid meson photoproduction is predicted to be large courtesy of π\pi exchange, and its strange hybrid counterpart is predicted in B→ψKH(1+)B \to \psi K_H(1^+) with b.r.∼10−4b.r. \sim 10^{-4}. Higher multipoles, and some implications for hybrid charmonium are briefly discussed.Comment: 4 page

    Hybrid meson production by electromagnetic and weak interactions in a flux-tube simulation of lattice QCD

    Full text link
    We calculate rates for hybrid meson production by electromagnetic and weak interactions in the flux-tube model. Applications include photo and electroproduction at Jefferson Laboratory and HERA, and the production of light strange and charmed hybrids in the weak decays of heavy flavours. Photoproduction of some light hybrids is predicted to be prominent in charge exchange reactions, γp→nH\gamma p \to n \cal{H} and accessible in γp→pH\gamma p \to p \cal{H}. Production of light or charmed hybrids in BB and DD decays may be feasible with high statistics. Photoproduction of the axial hybrid meson is predicted to be large courtesy of π\pi exchange, and its strange counterpart is predicted in B→ψKH(1+)B \to \psi K_H(1^+) with b.r.∼10−4b.r. \sim 10^{-4}. Production rates for exotic hybrid candidates 1−+;(0,2)+−1^{-+};(0,2)^{+-} are given special attention. Selection rules that can help to distinguish between hybrid and conventional states with the same JPCJ^{PC} are noted.Comment: uses psfrag; One reference correcte

    Pentaquark Symmetries, Selection Rules and another potentially Narrow State

    Get PDF
    We identify essential differences between the pentaquark and chiral soliton models of \10bar5_5 and {\bf 8}5_5 pentaquarks and conventional {\bf 8}3_3 states, which are experimentally measurable. We show how the decays of Ξ5\Xi_5 states in particular can test models of the pentaquarks, recommend study of the relative branching ratios of e.g. Ξ5−→Ξ−π0:Ξ0π−\Xi^{-}_5 \to \Xi^-\pi^0:\Xi^0\pi^-, and predict that the decay amplitude Ξ5→Ξ∗π\Xi_5 \to \Xi^*\pi is zero at leading order in pentaquark models for any mixture of \10bar and the associated {\bf 8}5_5. We also include a pedagogic discussion of wavefunctions in the pentaquark picture and show that pentaquark models have this {\bf 8}5_5 with F/D=1/3F/D=1/3, in leading order forbidding Ξ5→ΛK\Xi_5 \to \Lambda K. The role of Fermi-Dirac symmetry in the qqqqqqqq wavefunction and its implications for the width of pentaquarks are briefly discussed. The relative couplings g2(ΘQNKQ∗)/g2(ΘQNKQ)=3g^2(\Theta_Q N K_Q^*)/g^2(\Theta_Q N K_Q) = 3 for Q≡s,c,bQ \equiv s,c,b. A further potentially narrow state Λ\Lambda in {\bf 8}5_5 with JP=3/2+J^P = 3/2^+ is predicted around 1650 MeV.Comment: Revised version, corrects PDF margin problems, minor changes to tex

    Hadron Spectroscopy (theory): Diquarks, Tetraquarks, Pentaquarks and no quarks

    Full text link
    States beyond those expected in the simple constituent quark model are now emerging. I focus on the scalar glueball and its mixing with states in the qqˉq\bar{q} nonet, and also on correlations in Strong QCD that may form diquarks and seed qqqˉqˉqq\bar{q}\bar{q} states. Some models of the pentaquark candidate Θ(1540)\Theta(1540) are critically discussed.Comment: Plenary talk at ICHEP0

    Production of f0(1710)f_0(1710), f0(1500)f_0(1500), and f0(1370)f_0(1370) in J/ψJ/\psi hadronic decays

    Full text link
    A coherent study of the production of f0if_0^i (i=1i=1, 2, 3 corresponding to f0(1710)f_0(1710), f0(1500)f_0(1500), and f0(1370)f_0(1370)) in J/ψ→Vf0→VPPJ/\psi\to V f_0 \to V PP is reported based on a previously proposed glueball and QQˉQ\bar{Q} nonet mixing scheme, and a factorization for the decay of J/ψ→Vf0iJ/\psi\to V f_0^i, where VV denotes the isoscalar vector mesons ϕ\phi and ω\omega, and PP denotes pseudoscalar mesons. The results show that the J/ψJ/\psi decays are very sensitive to the structure of those scalar mesons, and suggest a glueball in the 1.5−1.71.5-1.7 GeV region, in line with Lattice QCD. The presence of significant glueball mixings in the scalar wavefunctions produces peculiar patterns in the branching ratios for J/ψ→Vf0i→VPPJ/\psi\to V f_0^i\to VPP, which are in good agreement with the recently published experimental data from the BES collaboration.Comment: Version accepted by PRD; Numerical results in Tab IV and VI changed due to correction of an error in quoting an experimental datum; Conclusion is not change

    Charmonium in lattice QCD and the non-relativistic quark-model

    Full text link
    We compare the results of a numerical lattice QCD calculation of the charmonium spectrum with the structure of a general non-relativistic potential model. To achieve this we form the non-relativistic reduction of derivative-based fermion bilinear interpolating fields used in lattice QCD calculations and compute their overlap with c-cbar meson states at rest constructed in the non-relativistic quark model, providing a bound-state model interpretation for the lattice data. Essential gluonic components in the bound-states, usually called hybrids, are identified by considering interpolating fields that involve the gluonic field-strength tensor and which have zero overlap onto simple c-cbar model states

    Implications of a DK Molecule at 2.32 GeV

    Full text link
    We discuss the implications of a possible quasinuclear DK bound state at 2.32 GeV. Evidence for such a state was recently reported in D_s^+pi^o by the BaBar Collaboration. We first note that a conventional quark model c-sbar assignment is implausible, and then consider other options involving multiquark systems. An I=0 c sbar n nbar baryonium assignment is one possibility. We instead favor a DK meson molecule assignment, which can account for the mass and quantum numbers of this state. The higher-mass scalar c-sbar state expected at 2.48 GeV is predicted to have a very large DK coupling, which would encourage formation of an I=0 DK molecule. Isospin mixing is expected in hadron molecules, and a dominantly I=0 DK state with some I=1 admixture could explain both the narrow total width of the 2.32 GeV state as well as the observed decay to D_s^+ pi^o. Additional measurements that can be used to test this and related scenarios are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur

    Dynamics of hadron strong production and decay

    Full text link
    We generalize results of lattice QCD to determine the spin-dependent symmetries and factorization properties of meson production in OZI allowed processes. This explains some conjectures previously made in the literature about axial meson decays and gives predictions for exclusive decays of vector charmonia, including ways of establishing the structure of Y(4260) and Y(4325) from their S-wave decays. Factorization gives a selection rule which forbids e+e−→D∗D2e^+e^- \to D^* D_2 near threshold with the tensor meson in helicity 2. The relations among amplitudes for double charmonia production \e^+e^-\to \psi\chi_{0,1,2} are expected to differ from the analagous relations among light flavour production such as \e^+e^-\to \omega f_{0,1,2}.Comment: 13 pages; journal versio

    CLARK: fast and accurate classification of metagenomic and genomic sequences using discriminative k-mers.

    Get PDF
    BackgroundThe problem of supervised DNA sequence classification arises in several fields of computational molecular biology. Although this problem has been extensively studied, it is still computationally challenging due to size of the datasets that modern sequencing technologies can produce.ResultsWe introduce CLARK a novel approach to classify metagenomic reads at the species or genus level with high accuracy and high speed. Extensive experimental results on various metagenomic samples show that the classification accuracy of CLARK is better or comparable to the best state-of-the-art tools and it is significantly faster than any of its competitors. In its fastest single-threaded mode CLARK classifies, with high accuracy, about 32 million metagenomic short reads per minute. CLARK can also classify BAC clones or transcripts to chromosome arms and centromeric regions.ConclusionsCLARK is a versatile, fast and accurate sequence classification method, especially useful for metagenomics and genomics applications. It is freely available at http://clark.cs.ucr.edu/
    • …
    corecore