35 research outputs found
Top-down Holographic Glueball Decay Rates
We present new results on the decay patterns of scalar and tensor glueballs
in the top-down holographic Witten-Sakai-Sugimoto model. This model, which has
only one free dimensionless parameter, gives semi-quantitative predictions for
the vector meson spectrum, their decay widths, and also a gluon condensate in
agreement with SVZ sum rules. The holographic predictions for scalar glueball
decay rates are compared with experimental data for the widely discussed gluon
candidates f0(1500) and f0(1710).Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables; to appear in the Proceedings of the
XIth Conference Quark Confinement and the Hadron Spectrum, St. Petersburg,
September 8-12, 201
The Glueball in a Chiral Linear Sigma Model with Vector Mesons
We present a two-flavour linear sigma model with global chiral symmetry and
(axial-)vector mesons as well as an additional glueball degree of freedom. We
study the structure of the well-established scalar resonances f0(1370) and
f0(1500): by a fit to experimentally known decay widths we find that f0(1370)
is predominantly a \bar{q}q state and f0(1500) is predominantly a glueball
state. The overall phenomenology of these two resonances can be well described.
Other assignments for our mixed quarkonium-glueball states are also tested, but
turn out to be in worse agreement with the phenomenology. As a by-product of
our analysis, the gluon condensate is determined.Comment: 8 page
Zero temperature properties of mesons in a vector meson extended linear sigma model
A three flavor linear sigma model with vector and axial-vector mesons is
discussed. Preliminary results concerning on the symmetry breaking pattern, the
question of parameterization, as well as the resulting meson masses are
presented.Comment: 4 pages, 0 figures, submitted to the Hot and Cold Baryonic Matter
(HCBM 2010) conference proceeding
Vacuum Properties of Mesons in a Linear Sigma Model with Vector Mesons and Global Chiral Invariance
We present a two-flavour linear sigma model with global chiral symmetry and
vector and axial-vector mesons. We calculate pion-pion scattering lengths and
the decay widths of scalar, vector, and axial-vector mesons. It is demonstrated
that vector and axial-vector meson degrees of freedom play an important role in
these low-energy processes and that a reasonable theoretical description
requires globally chirally invariant terms other than the vector meson mass
term. An important question for meson vacuum phenomenology is the quark content
of the physical scalar f0(600) and a0(980) mesons. We investigate this question
by assigning the quark-antiquark sigma and a0 states of our model with these
physical mesons. We show via a detailed comparison with experimental data that
this scenario can describe all vacuum properties studied here except for the
decay width of the sigma, which turns out to be too small. We also study the
alternative assignment f0(1370) and a0(1450) for the scalar mesons. In this
case the decay width agrees with the experimental value, but the pion-pion
scattering length is too small. This indicates the necessity to
extend our model by additional scalar degrees of freedom.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
Scalar mesons in a linear sigma model with (axial-)vector mesons
The structure of the scalar mesons has been a subject of debate for many
decades. In this work we look for states among the physical
resonances using an extended Linear Sigma Model that contains scalar,
pseudoscalar, vector, and axial-vector mesons both in the non-strange and
strange sectors. We perform global fits of meson masses, decay widths and
amplitudes in order to ascertain whether the scalar states are below
or above 1 GeV. We find the scalar states above 1 GeV to be preferred as
states.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, To appear in the proceedings of the XII. Hadron
Physics Conference, Bento Goncalves, Brasil, April, 22 - 27, 201
Vacuum phenomenology of the chiral partner of the nucleon in a linear sigma model with vector mesons
We investigate a linear sigma model with global chiral symmetry. The mesonic degrees of freedom are the standard scalar and
pseudoscalar mesons and the vector and axial-vector mesons. The baryonic
degrees of freedom are the nucleon, , and its chiral partner, , which
is usually identified with N(1535). The chiral partner is incorporated in the
so-called mirror assignment, where the nucleon mass is not solely generated by
the chiral condensate but also by a chirally invariant mass term, . The
presence of (axial-) vector fields modifies the expressions for the axial
coupling constants of the nucleon, , and its partner,
. Using experimental data for the decays and
, as well as lattice results for we infer
MeV, i.e., an appreciable amount of the nucleon mass originates
from sources other than the chiral condensate. We test our model by evaluating
the decay and the s-wave nucleon-pion scattering lengths
.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Meson vacuum phenomenology in a three-flavor linear sigma model with (axial-)vector mesons
We study scalar, pseudoscalar, vector, and axial-vector mesons with
non-strange and strange quantum numbers in the framework of a linear sigma
model with global chiral symmetry. We perform a
global fit of meson masses, decay widths, as well as decay amplitudes. The
quality of the fit is, for a hadronic model that does not consider
isospin-breaking effects, surprisingly good. We also investigate the question
whether the scalar states lie below or above 1 GeV and find the
scalar states above 1 GeV to be preferred as states. Additionally,
we also describe the axial-vector resonances as states.Comment: 29 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables. v2 is the updated version after
referee remarks (dilaton field discussed, a new figure added
Spontaneous breaking of chiral symmetry, and eventually of parity, in a -model with two Mexican hats
A sigma-model with two linked Mexican hats is discussed. This scenario could
be realized in low-energy QCD when the ground state and the first excited
(pseudo)scalar mesons are included, and where not only in the subspace of the
ground states, but also in that of the first excited states, a Mexican hat
potential is present. This possibility can change some basic features of a
low-energy hadronic theory of QCD. It is also shown that spontaneous breaking
of parity can occur in the vacuum for some parameter choice of the model.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Dynamical generation and dynamical reconstruction
A definition of `dynamical generation', a hotly debated topic at present, is
proposed and its implications are discussed. This definition, in turn, leads to
a method allowing to distinguish in principle tetraquark and molecular states.
The different concept of `dynamical reconstruction' is also introduced and
applies to the generation of preexisting mesons (quark-antiquark, glueballs,
>...) via unitarization methods applied to low-energy effective Lagrangians.
Large arguments play an important role in all these investigations. A
simple toy model with two scalar fields is introduced to elucidate these
concepts. The large behavior of the parameters is chosen in order that
the two scalar fields behave as quark-antiquark mesons. When the heavier field
is integrated out, one is left with an effective Lagrangian with the lighter
field only. A unitarization method applied to the latter allows to
`reconstruct' the heavier `quarkonium-like' field, which was previously
integrated out. It is shown that a Bethe-Salpeter (BS) analysis is capable to
reproduce the preformed quark-antiquark state. However, when only the lowest
term of the effective Lagrangian is retained, the large limit of the
reconstructed state is not reproduced: instead of the correct large
quarkonium limit, it fades out as a molecular state would do. Implications of
these results are presented: it is proposed that axial-vector, tensor and
(some) scalar mesons just above 1 GeV obtained via the BS approach from the
corresponding low-energy, effective Lagrangian in which only the lowest term is
kept, are quarkonia states, in agreement with the constituent quark model,
although they might fade away as molecular states in the large limit.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Gauged linear sigma model and pion-pion scattering
A simple gauged linear sigma model with several parameters to take the
symmetry breaking and the mass differences between the vector meson and the
axial vector meson into account is considered here as a possibly useful
template for the role of a light scalar in QCD as well as for (at a different
scale) an effective Higgs sector for some recently proposed walking technicolor
models. An analytic procedure is first developed for relating the Lagrangian
parameters to four well established (in the QCD application) experimental
inputs. One simple equation distinguishes three different cases:1. QCD with
axial vector particle heavier than vector particle, 2. possible technicolor
model with vector particle heavier than the axial vector one, 3. the unphysical
QCD case where both the KSRF and Weinberg relations hold. The model is applied
to the s-wave pion-pion scattering in QCD. Both the near threshold region and
(with an assumed unitarization) theglobal region up to about 800 MeV are
considered. It is noted that there is a little tension between the choice of
bare sigma mass parameter for describing these two regions. If a reasonable
globa fit is made, there is some loss of precision in the near threshold
region.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figure