18 research outputs found
Exotic mesons with hidden charm and bottom near thresholds
We study heavy hadron spectroscopy near heavy meson thresholds. We employ
heavy pseudoscalar meson P and heavy vector meson P* as effective degrees of
freedom and consider meson exchange potentials between them. All possible
composite states which can be constructed from the P and P* mesons are studied
up to the total angular momentum J <= 2. We consider, as exotic states,
isosinglet states with exotic J^{PC} quantum numbers and isotriplet states. We
solve numerically the Schr\"odinger equation with channel-couplings for each
state. We found B(*)barB(*) molecule states for I^G(J^{PC}) = 1^+(1^{+-})
correspond to the masses of twin resonances Zb(10610) and Zb(10650). We predict
several possible B(*)barB(*) bound and/or resonant states in other channels. On
the other hand, there are no B(*)barB(*) bound and/or resonant states whose
quantum numbers are exotic.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of The 5th
International Workshop on Charm Physics (Charm 2012
Exotic baryons from a heavy meson and a nucleon
We evaluate a hadronic molecule formed by a heavy meson and a nucleon
respecting heavy quark symmetry. The tensor force of pion exchange potential
plays a dominate role to produce an strong attraction in this system. Solving
coupled channel Schr\"odinger equations for PN and P* N, we find many bound and
resonant states with isospin I=0 while there are few resonances in I=1 state.
The rich structures with I=0 indicate that the spectrum of heavy baryons near
the threshold is influenced by the contributions from such hadron composite
structures.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of The 5th International Workshop on
Charm Physics (Charm 2012
Exotic mesons with double charm and bottom flavor
We study exotic mesons with double charm and bottom flavor, whose quark
configuration is \bar{Q}\bar{Q}qq. This quark configuration has no annihilation
process of quark and antiquark, and hence is a genuinely exotic states. We take
a hadronic picture by considering the molecular states composed of a pair of
heavy mesons, such as DD, DD* and D*D* for charm flavor, and BB, BB* and B*B*
for bottom flavor. The interactions between heavy mesons are derived from the
heavy quark effective theory. All molecular states are classified by I(J^P)
quantum numbers, and are systematically studied up to the total angular
momentum J \leq 2. By solving the coupled channel Schrodinger equations, due to
the strong tensor force of one pion exchanging, we find bound and/or resonant
states of various quantum numbers.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figure
Spin degeneracy in multi-hadron systems with a heavy quark
We study multi-hadron systems with a single heavy quark (charm or bottom) in
the limit of heavy quark mass. The spin degeneracy of the states with quantum
numbers and for , known in a normal
hadron, can be generalized to multi-hadron systems. The spin degeneracy is the
universal phenomena for any multi-hadron systems with a single heavy quark,
irrespective of their internal structures, including compact multi-quarks,
hadronic molecules and exotic nuclei. We demonstrate the spin degeneracy in the
hadronic systems formed by a heavy hadron effective theory;
states with a , meson and a nucleon
, and a meson in nuclear matter.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Possible interpretation of the (10610) and (10650) in a chiral quark model
Motivated by the two charged bottomonium-like resonances (10610) and
(10650) newly observed by the Belle collaboration, the possible molecular
states composed of a pair of heavy mesons, , etc (in S-wave), are investigated in the framework of chiral quark
models by the Gaussian expansion method. The bound states and
with quantum numbers , which are good
candidates for the and respectively, are obtained.
Other three bound states with ,
with are predicted. These
states may be observed in open-bottom or hidden-bottom decay channel of highly
excited . When extending directly the quark model to the hidden color
channel of the multi-quark system, more deeply bound states are found. Future
experimental search of those states will cast doubt on the validity of applying
the chiral constituent quark model to the hidden color channel directly.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, title and some arguments in the abstract and
section 5 are revised, results unchange
QCD and strongly coupled gauge theories : challenges and perspectives
We highlight the progress, current status, and open challenges of QCD-driven physics, in theory and in experiment. We discuss how the strong interaction is intimately connected to a broad sweep of physical problems, in settings ranging from astrophysics and cosmology to strongly coupled, complex systems in particle and condensed-matter physics, as well as to searches for physics beyond the Standard Model. We also discuss how success in describing the strong interaction impacts other fields, and, in turn, how such subjects can impact studies of the strong interaction. In the course of the work we offer a perspective on the many research streams which flow into and out of QCD, as well as a vision for future developments.Peer reviewe